Comes with original base. Cast iron, original maufa Great piece of history. He looks sharp and is ready for immediate display inside or ou Cast iron, all original except for stainless steel bolts securing the base the originals rusted out and had to be replaced original paint, with original ring. Local pick up only Less. Antique cast iron lawn jockey. All ready for display in garden, porch or wherever you want to showcase him.
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This little guy is in great shape. He is probably between and yrs old and could still Heavy crazing present throughout with expected loss. Very Heavy, we have it on a small pallet and have a forklift to help load it. This original "jocko" was rescued from a Ct.
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Orignal Cast Iron Lawn Jockey. From the late 's to early 's. Original paint as far as I know. Matching pair hand tooled. Nice item for a garden setting. This can be laid flat or tilted as shown using the original hardware that is still in place. Matched pair, perfect condition. Measure 24"W x 48"H x 10" at thickest portion, 6" at splay portion.
Whitewash will clean off easily.
Common length of 5', average " tread depth x 9" rise Originally in an embankment setting for an 's country house. Measures 92"L x 30"W x 9" thick Great foot worn surface.
From an Eastern Connecticut farmstead Measures generally 20" x 28" x 9" thick Weighs about pounds. These stones are from Eastern Connecticut. The eight stones measure: The stones are 16"" in width X 7"-8" thickness. Massachusetts origin, concave surface to assemble wagon wheels. I owned one of these over 5 years ago but gave only seen them in museum settings. Measures 6'" diameter x 16" thick with a 14" center hole. Great size for many applications having a nice flat top surface Generally measures 36" x 42" x 4" thick with a 19" hole Stone has an old season crack.
Two pallets of Blocks which generally measure 12"" L x 8" x 6" Sold as one lot only. Ideal for creating early firebox to your specifications. Measures 7'-4" L x 24"W x 8" thick Chamfered as it should be. Generally measure 12" x 14" x 12" H. Each end of the triangle is 10" wide with the center point being 27" wide. Some rim loss but still very presentable.
Measures 16" x 16" x 12"H, 8" bowl depth, with a drain hole. Chamfered edges to "kick" over a wheel if it got too close.
Lawn Jockeys
Granite finely finished and detailed. Vintage Brownstone Medium Scale Blocks. Circa Granite Foundation Top Stones. Eastern Connecticut origin, linear feet available Top edges are perfectly straight, lower edges vary as shown 12"" width x 5"-8" thicknesses. About 25 years old from Sterling, Connecticut Bowl measures 18" diameter x 5" H Base and bowl together is 26" H Top and base will separate. Measures 40" diameter x 23" From upstate New York this was used to mash down pulp wood in the paper making process.
From a 19th century barn foundation Measures 24" x 67" x 5" Match to other listing, whitewashed but will easily clean. Great for patio setting due to it's perfectly smooth surface. Post is "beefy" at 9" x 18" and 8' overall length.
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Finished portion is 5' above grade. Wonderful early country look. Matching pair of hitching stones. Has one finished face so they could be oriented by choice. I have a college degree, parents willing to foot a bill or two, and when I'm trekking up to your house, I don't trip any alarms of racial prejudice. But, like the Beats, I'm worried that to be "free" in America is at risk of becoming meaningless.
Where to find Brian Drake online
I'm not just talking about the NSA converting our private lives to data or the prison system absorbing a shocking percentage of our population. I'm talking about the fact that our choices are increasingly limited to just two: When I'm not traveling, I work food service jobs in Chicago, which, along with food stamps, helps me support my decadent hobby of freelance journalism.
Sure, I could probably land some office job, working for the handful of people who own everything. But I'd rather not. To some, I might seem the poster boy for American freedom, making just enough money to write and travel and seek my fortune. But once the hope for eventual stability is taken out of this formula, which is the reality for more and more Americans, all that's left is the striving. And that doesn't look good for our brand of freedom. Too often our lives are at the mercy of someone else's interests. A guy who took me from Douglas to Casper, Wyoming opened up about an awfully familiar dissonance in his life.
He was around my age, two years of community college behind him, and working for one of the few employers in the desert: The problem was, he confided, "I know all about Gasland ," the documentary that helped turn public sentiment against the environmentally destructive gas extraction process known as fracking, now his livelihood.