Gansett Cruises - Harbor Tours and sightseeing in Newport RI
For tickets or more information
Gansett Cruises offers one and a half hour harbor boat tours and sunset cruises on Narragansett Bay. Cruise in comfort as you enjoy a scenic tour of Newport and Jamestown. Choose from a selection of wine, beer, and signature cocktails while you nibble on classic, appetizing New England bites.
The Newport Harbor Hotel & Marina - Newport, RI
©2009 JLS Creative Solutions, LLC
Welcome to the Newport Harbor Hotel and Marina, on the harbor, on the town, and right in the center of it all. Ideally situated, the hotel allows you to effortlessly immerse yourself in the town's colorful and fascinating seafaring history. Each of the 133 guest rooms feature king and double beds and are highlighted by breathtaking views of either the marina or Queen Anne Square.
Producer/Director: Justin Holt
Cinematographer/Editor: Dan McBride
Here We Are... with Luci & Staci in Newport, Rhode Island
Trailer for the weekend travel show, Here We Are... with Luci & Staci featuring things to do, places to see, where to stay, and things to bring home when in Newport, Rhode Island. This fun & quirky hosting duo show you a few of the must do sites, including clips of: the famous Bed & Breakfast, the Francis Malbone House; The Breakers Mansion; Rue de France home decor store (now closed), Skater Island skate park; the Cliff Walk; Thames Glass; Thames & Kosmos Science Center (now located in Providence, RI). LUCIMAC Productions, All Rights Reserved.
Newport Rhode Island with Bon Voyage
Newport was and still is a glamorous holiday destination. The rich and famous built chateau-like summer homes, which with perhaps a hint of irony, they referred to as cottages. The names of these palaces have become synonymous with the Rhode Island lifestyle at the turn of the 20th century and the families, most notably the Vanderbilts, that built them. Bon Voyage has been arranging holidays to Newport since 1979 and would love to discuss your Newport holiday plans. Call us on 0800 316 3012 or visit us
Bentley-Scheck Newport Annual.wmv
Grace Bentley-Scheck is a pioneer in the development of the collagraph as a form of printmaking. Here, she talks about her award-winning collagraph, Chelsea Rising—Orange Boogie (Homage to P. Mondrian), which received an Honorable Mention Prints/Pastels/Drawings/Mixed Media in the 2010 Newport Annual Members' Juried Exhibition. The Newport Annual is the largest, most comprehensive exhibition of regional art in Rhode Island and is presented by the Newport Art Museum in Newport, Rhode Island. The 2010 Newport Annual Guest Juror was Mónica Ramírez-Montagut, Curator of The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut.
1976 Tall Ships
In Newport, RI harbor for the Tall Ships in 1976
Wade Tours - Newport, RI Lighthouse Tour
You will also view over 30 miles of breathtaking coastline, sail under the Jamestown & Newport Bridges, passing Fort Adams, Hammersmith Farm and the USS Saratoga ending the cruise in famous Newport Harbor filled with beautiful sailboats, mega yachts and much, much more.
Newport, Rhode Island Marina
This is my home for the summer.
SouthShore home, Beautiful! Gated, Newport Or. Tour #4
Please Contact:
CeCe Kelly/Windermere/541-272-0008
Mls# 08-3682 Cape Cod Style Home
Windermere West Coast Properties, CeCe Kelly, Real Estate Broker, Agent
Southshore - Newport, Oregon
Desirable neighborhood. Southshore Subdivision. South Beach 3 bedroom,
2.5 bath home SF. MLS. Built in 2000. Vacation Home, retreat, get away.
Close to beach, shopping, art galleries, entertainment. Beautiful sunsets.
Cape cod style home for sale. Buyers Dream Home.
Beavertail, RI (Clip 2)
Another clip from the test footage for THE RED TREE trailer we shot at Beavertail (Conanicut Island, RI) on Sunday. For the first 20 seconds or so, the wind plays bloody havoc with the mike, but afterwards you can hear the waves. This clip was shot about .4 miles northeast of the first clip. Filmed by Kathryn Pollnac.
Home: A Trade & Technical School Graduation Story at IYRS in Newport, RI
IYRS School of Technology & Trades in Newport, Rhode Island
Welcome to Graduation 2018! Follow the story of Frankie Sisneroz, Jaime Carvalho, and Ben Clifford as they share their thoughts and emotions right before graduation.
Founded in 1995 in Newport, Rhode Island, IYRS is a private, not-for-profit, experiential learning school dedicated to teaching highly technical and deeply craft-oriented career skills in a variety of fields, from digital manufacturing to traditional boatbuilding and restoration. Through its hands-on education model, IYRS equips its students with skills that are transferrable across industries and applications, making IYRS graduates in demand and highly desirable for a 21st century workforce.
The school attracts students of all ages from across the United States and around the world. IYRS students consist of men and women with varied backgrounds which not only include career changers, but also high school and college graduates, military veterans, and others from the international community – all with diverse backgrounds and experiences in their personal and professional lives.
Building with our hands or through the use of technology is the essence of creativity, productivity, and the human spirit. At IYRS, students learn to make, restore and maintain objects with a sense of purpose. In the process, they build meaningful careers and lives, inspired in the knowledge that they have the power to build almost anything.
Bowen's Wharf, newport rhode island
Travel Talk (Rhode Island)
Needs a new nickname
The Baltimore Inner Harbor Cruise Complete Tour Part 1
This is an in depth complete tour of the Baltimore inner harbor. There is some wind which starts towards the middle and ends towards the end of the cruise. So you will only hear it a lot towards the middle of the cruise. Sorry about that.
Part 2:
The Inner Harbor is a historic seaport, tourist attraction, and landmark of the city of Baltimore, Maryland, USA. It was described by the Urban Land Institute in 2009 as “the model for post-industrial waterfront redevelopment around the world.”The Inner Harbor is located at the mouth of Jones Falls, creating the wide and short northwest branch of the Patapsco River. The district includes any water west of a line drawn between the foot of President Street and the American Visionary Art Museum.
The name Inner Harbor is used not just for the water but for the surrounding area of the city, with approximate street boundaries of President Street to the east, Lombard Street to the north, Greene Street to the west, and Key Highway on the south. The harbor is within walking distance of Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium. A water taxi connects passengers to Fells Point, Canton, and Fort McHenry.
While Baltimore has been a major U.S. seaport since the 18th century, the historically shallow water of the Inner Harbor (prior to manipulation through dredging) was not conducive to large ships or heavy industry. These were concentrated in Locust Point, Fell's Point, and Canton.
In the mid-20th century, Baltimore suffered from the economic decline of restructuring common to many industrial cities in the United States. Old harbors were abandoned with the arrival of container ships after World War II. Later, the old harbors were adapted as focal points to reconnect cities with their waterfronts, and develop public spaces, tourism, business, and housing.
The Inner Harbor neighborhood is centered on a tourism-friendly plaza that surrounds part of the harbor.
During the 1940s, John H. Threadgill, the head of the Steamship Trade Association, initiated a study for a cross-harbor bridge. A bridge across the Inner Harbor of Baltimore was one idea that was discussed frequently. In his capacity as head of the association, Threadgill ultimately recommended that the idea for a cross-harbor bridge be abandoned, due to the fact that Baltimore relied heavily on a shipping trade and fears that the bridge would negatively impede the flow of shipping traffic at the Port of Baltimore.Threadgill was named head of Baltimore's Port Commission during the 1950s.
In the 1950s, economic changes ended both the freight and passenger use of the Inner Harbor, such as the Old Bay Line's steamers. Rotting warehouses and piers were eventually torn down and replaced by open, grass-covered parkland that was used for recreational purposes and occasional large events.
The waterfront was gradually transformed with award-winning parks and plazas surrounded by office buildings, hotels and leisure attractions, which reversed the city's decline and became a model for urban renaissance in cities around the world. The renewal of Baltimore's Inner Harbor area began with the adoption of the 33-acre (13 ha) Charles Center project by the City Council and Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro in March 1958. Between 1958 and 1965, Baltimore renewed the center of its business district by rebuilding Charles Center with office buildings, hotels, and retail shops.
At the beginning of mayor Theodore R. McKeldin's second term in 1963, the redevelopment program was expanded to include 240 acres (97 ha) surrounding the Inner Harbor. Corporate headquarters and hotels were built around the shoreline of the Inner Harbor. A public park and promenade were added for leisure activity and community gatherings.
On July 4, 1976, following the rendezvous of Tall Ships in New York for the U.S. Bicentennial, eight ships from other nations visited Baltimore, where they attracted a huge number of tourists. This interest helped spur the development of other tourist attractions – including the National Aquarium, Maryland Science Center, and the Harborplace festival marketplace (operated by The Rouse Company), which opened on July 4, 1980. The nearby Baltimore Convention Center and Hyatt Regency Baltimore Hotel added to the services and resulted in population density and visitors.
With the success of the Inner Harbor in the 1970s and 1980s, Baltimore became a worldwide tourist destination and model of urban planning and development. It influenced more than 100 other cities and won more than 40 national or international awards, including a citation by the American Institute of Architects in 1984 as “one of the supreme achievements of large-scale urban design and development in U.S. history.”
Lighthouses of Newport, Rhode Island
Photos from Sandra and my trips to New England several years ago set to a new piece of music composed by me.
Newport, RI, US - Part 1
Please visit for full video and more free videos. You will find full description on the web site.
Newport is a beautiful seaside city in Rhode Island that is famous for its mansions, shopping, and scenery. Newport is also known for hosting the Newport Folk Festival and the Newport Jazz Festival and many other Festivals and Fairs.
Cobblestone streets and brick sidewalks accent an upscale touristy downtown area with many shops, galleries and great restaurants and its all located along water.
Newport sits on the southern end of Aquidneck Island and features several fine beaches, rocky cliffs and much history including an old fort.
Seals in Newport Rhode Island
Took a little boat ride to go see the seals next to the New Port bridge.
Rose Island Lighthouse
Newport, RI
Vlog #5 (Blizzard of Newport R I 2015)
This Vlog is about the Blizzard that happen on Jan. 27, 2015 Outside my place in Newport R.I
NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND - MUST VISIT DESTINATION
Newport was founded in 1639. During the American Revolution, Newport was the scene of much activity. One of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, William Ellery, came from Newport. It was in Newport in 1791 that the Rhode Island General Assembly, acting under pressure from the merchant community of Providence, voted to ratify the Constitution and become the 13th state.