Camera Maker | Canon | Camera Model | Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III |
Aperture | f/5.6 | Exposure Value | 0 EV |
Exposure Program | Manual | Exposure Time | 1/250 sec |
Flash | No Flash | Focal Length | 28 mm |
ISO | 400 | Metering Mode | Pattern |
Date/Time | 2008:09:13 12:50:58 | Resolution Unit | Inch |
X Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit | Y Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit |
Exposure Mode | 1 | Keywords | historic marker Brooklyn Formerly Mortlake settled 1703 town 2nd Thursday May 1786 home General Israel Putnam general revolution town landmarks Meeting House green 1771 First Ecclesiastical Society Unitarian Church 1816 Samuel J. May minister Old Trinity Church Episcopal Church Street erected Godfrey Malbone former Windham travel United States of America United States America USA US Connecticut Ct history historical historical marker famous highway popular place of interest tourist attraction tourist destination travel destination tour tourism tourist attraction destination sign American day daytime vertical education historical site outdoors outside road roadside roadsign nobody no people signs and symbols text information displayed letters historic attractions display first Unitarian Church Windham County Courthouse trial Prudence Crandall Canterbury defying law restriction Negro education Brooklyn Fair Nation's oldest continuous agricultural fair agricultural fair annually since 1852 1852 landmark County Courthouse 1820 Town Hall 1833 |
Caption | Brooklyn - Formerly Mortlake, first settled 1703, made a town on 2nd Thursday of May, 1786. Home of General Israel Putnam prior to and after the Revolution. Town landmarks include: Meeting House on the Green, built 1771 by First Ecclesiastical Society of Brooklyn, became Connecticut's first Unitarian Church 1816, with Samuel J. May as minister: Old Trinity Church (Episcopal) on Church Street, erected by Godfrey Malbone 1771; former Windham County Courthouse, built 1820, afterward Town Hall site in 1833 of trial of Prudence Crandall of Canterbury for defying law restricting Negro education. Brooklyn Fair is the Nation's oldest continuous agricultural fair, held annually since 1852. |