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  • bottled wine ready for shipping, Bodegas Carrau winery, Montevideo, Uruguay,
    ms70301060.jpg
  • Ferry and the Great Wheel, Elliot Bay, from the Space Needle, Seattle, WA
    ms1409120489.jpg
  • Anacortes - Friday Harbor ferry passes through Lopez Sound at sunset, Washington state, USA
    ms1409130789.jpg
  • rope loops against red background, Yaquina Harbor
    ms080929365.jpg
  • bottled wine ready for shipping, Bodegas Carrau winery, Montevideo, Uruguay, South America
    ms70301064.jpg
  • South America, Uruguay, Canelones, Montevideo, Bodegas Carrau, wine ready for shipping, Chablis
    ms70301041.jpg
  • The Wells Fargo building in downtown Boise, Idaho, looks like the bow of a ship plowing through the ocean
    ms-plowing.jpg
  • Eilean Donan Castle, UK, Scotland. It was here in 1719 that Spanish supporters of the Jacobites held off English ships during the Battle of Glen Shiel.
    ms1507230526.jpg
  • Glen Shiel and the River Shiel. This is the site of the Battle of Glen Shiel which occurred on June 10, 1719. Referred to as the "Little Rising" or "the 19", it is the second major battle in the Jacobite uprising saga, the first being in 1715. Allied with around 200 Spanish forces, the Jacobites (including notables like Rob Roy MacGregor) fought the English (and Dutch and other Scottish clans) but were defeated in this single skirmish lasting around 4 hours. It is also the last close engagement of English and foreign troops on the mainland. The Jacobites had captured Eilean Donan Castle at the west end of Glen Shiel and were using it as a supply base. The Spanish and some Scots were stationed there and refused to surrender when fired upon by English ships. The battle began at 5pm and ended at 9pm when the Jacobites retreated and dispersed. About 21 English soldiers were killed and 100 - 121 wounded, and about 100 Jacobites were killed with  100+ wounded. The next (and final) Jacobite uprising wouldn't occur until 1745 at Culloden, near Inverness.
    ms1507230160.jpg
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