Camera Maker | Canon | Camera Model | Canon PowerShot G5 |
Aperture | f/4 | Color Space | sRGB |
Exposure Value | 0 EV | Exposure Time | 1/250 sec |
Flash | No Flash | Focal Length | 7.1875 mm |
ISO | 200 | Date/Time | 2004:06:26 18:27:01 |
Copyright | © 2004 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved. | Orientation | 1: Normal (0 deg) |
Resolution Unit | Inch | X Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit |
Y Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit | Compression | Jpeg Compression |
Exposure Mode | 0 | Keywords | historic marker The Hollow John Marshall VA attraction display education historical marker Historical Site information landmark marker Place of Interest sign Tourist Destination Travel Destination Virginia attractive destination educating historic markers historic site info signage tourist attraction appealing history no people text tourism travel South attract historic nobody word daytime displays historical markers landmarks markers signs appeal color image educate historical outdoor vertical day destinations historic sites tourist attractions US colour image outside day time USA day-time U.S. words color images daylight outdoors U.S.A. verticals colour images Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org natural light outsides United States United States of America Fauquier County sign with text |
Caption | THE HOLLOW In 1765, John Marhsall, then nine, moved with his family from his birthplace 30 miles southeast to a small, newly constructed frame house one-quarter mile east known as The Hollow. The house built by his father, Thomas Marhsall, was his home until 1773, when the family moved five miles east to Oak Hill. After the American Revolution began, Thomas Marshall and his sons, John Marshall, James Markham Marshall, and Thomas Marshall, Jr. fought in numerous Revolutionary War battles including Great Bridge and Yorktown. John Marhsall later served as chief justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1801 to 1835. Department of Historic Resources, 1998. |