fbpx
Wikipedia

Lightship Nantucket

40°37′02″N 69°37′06″W / 40.61722°N 69.61833°W / 40.61722; -69.61833

The location of the Nantucket Shoals lightship station at the southern edge of the shoals.

The station named Nantucket or Nantucket Shoals was served by a number of lightvessels (also termed lightships) that marked the hazardous Nantucket Shoals south of Nantucket Island. The vessels, given numbers as their "name," had the station name painted on their hulls when assigned to the station. Several ships have been assigned to the Nantucket Shoals lightship station and have been called Nantucket. It was common for a lightship to be reassigned and then have the new station name painted on the hull. The Nantucket station was a significant US lightship station for transatlantic voyages. Established in 1854, the station marked the limits of the dangerous Nantucket Shoals. She was the last lightship seen by vessels departing the United States, as well as the first beacon seen on approach. The position was 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Nantucket Island, the farthest lightship in North America, and experienced clockwise rotary tidal currents.[1]

History edit

Lightships and their crews were exposed to many dangers. In addition to the obvious hazards posed by the weather and sea conditions, vessels marking shipping lanes on occasion were struck by the very traffic they existed to protect. Ships would home on their radio beacons at night and in fog, but were expected to post lookouts and to turn away in time.

Lightship 11 edit

Lightship 11 was built in 1853 by Tardy & Auld of Baltimore, Maryland for $13,462.00. Lightship 11 was built of white oak and equipped with two lanterns and a hand-operated 1,050-pound (480 kg) bell fog signal. Each of the lanterns contained eight constant-level oil lamps. Lightship 11 was blown ashore in 1855 and rebuilt at the New York Navy Yard for further service at Brenton Reef, Rhode Island.

Lightship 1 edit

Lightship 1 was built in 1855 at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard for $48,000.00. Lightship 1 was built of white oak and live oak and equipped with two lanterns and a hand-operated bell fog signal. Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors. Lightship 1 was rebuilt in 1860 and the main anchor was replaced with a mushroom in 1881 and then a stockless mushroom anchor in 1886. Lightship 1 was transferred to Martins Industry, South Carolina in 1892.

Lightship 54 edit

Lightship 54 was built in 1892 at West Bay City, Michigan for $53,325.00. Lightship 54 was built of iron and equipped with two lanterns, a 12-inch steam chime whistle, and a hand-operated 1,000-pound (450 kg) bell fog signal. Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors. Twenty-five tons[vague] of pig iron ballast were added in 1893; and Lightship 54 was transferred to Boston, Massachusetts in 1894.

Lightship 58 edit

Lightship 58 was built in 1894 by Craig Shipbuilding of Toledo, Ohio for $50,870.00. Lightship 58 was built of an iron-plated steel frame and equipped with two lanterns, a 12-inch steam chime whistle, and a hand-operated bell fog signal. Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors. Lightship 58 was transferred to Fire Island, New York in 1896.

Lightship 66 edit

Lightship 66 was built in 1896 by Bath Iron Works of Bath, Maine for $69,282.00. The vessel was built on a wood-sheathed steel frame and equipped with a 12-inch steam chime whistle, and a cluster of four electric lens lanterns mounted in galleries at each mast head. She carried a Baird evaporator and distilling apparatus. Breaking adrift required replacement of seven mushroom anchors and 565 fathoms (1,033 m) of chain between 1896 and 1900. Experimental wireless telegraph equipment was installed in 1901 [2] and the vessel became the first United States lightship with permanent radio equipment in 1904. Lightship 66 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 85 in 1907.

Lightship 85 edit

Lightship 85, a wooden lightship, was built in 1907 at Camden, New Jersey for $99,000.00. Lightship 85 was transferred to the U.S. Navy by Executive Order on 11 April 1917, along with the entire Lighthouse Service. While in the Navy during World War I she continued her former peacetime routine warning shipping away from Nantucket Shoals and also aided in guarding nearby waters against German U-boats. Sailors from the Lightship aided in the rescue of people after the Boston Molasses Disaster, partly because it was docked nearby. After peace was restored in 1919, Lightship 85 was returned to the U.S. Commerce Department. Lightship 85 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 106 in 1923.

Lightship 106 edit

Lightship 106 was built in 1923 by Bath Iron Works of Bath, Maine for $200,000.00. Lightship 106 was built on a steel hull and equipped with a 12-inch steam chime whistle, a hand-operated bell, a submarine bell,[clarification needed] a submarine oscillator,[clarification needed] a radio beacon, and a 375 mm (14.8 in) electric lens lantern at each mast head. Lightship 106 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 117 in 1931, returned to Nantucket when Lightship 117 was sunk in 1934, and returned to relief service when replaced by Lightship 112 in 1936.

Lightship 117 edit

 
RMS Olympic passes Nantucket Lightship 117 in early 1934.

Lightship 117 at Nantucket was sideswiped by the SS Washington in early 1934, and four months later, on 15 May 1934, she was rammed and sunk by the British White Star ship RMS Olympic homing in on its radio beacon in dense fog.[3] Four men went down with the ship and seven survivors were picked up by the Olympic. Three survivors later died of injuries sustained from the collision. The sunken wreck now lies hidden in 200 feet (60 m) of water 50 miles (80 km) south of Nantucket Island, Massachusetts.

Lightship 112 edit

 
LV-112 in Boston harbor

In 1936, Pusey & Jones of Wilmington, Delaware built Lightship 112, the largest lightship ever, for $300,956.00. This ship was paid for by the British government as reparation for the deadly collision between Olympic and Lightship 117.[4]

During World War II, Lightship 112 was withdrawn from the Nantucket Shoals station and used as an examination vessel in Portland, Maine. On 5 January 1959, she was blown 80 miles (130 km)[vague] off-station in hurricane-force winds accompanied by fifty-foot seas. This event effectively put her out of communication for several days due to water-damaged electronics. Lightship 112 outlasted all other lightships assigned to that station, having marked it for 39 years.

On 10 May 2010, Lightship LV-112, the largest lightship ever built in the US, returned to Boston for renovation and preservation.[5]

 
WLV-612 at World Financial Center

Lightship 612 edit

Built in 1950 at Curtis Bay, Maryland by the United States Coast Guard Yard for $500,000, Lightship 612 was the last ship to serve a full tour of duty on the Nantucket Shoals station and was also the last US lightship in commission. In 1975 Lightship Ambrose, the Nantucket's sister ship, was renamed Lightship Nantucket II and the two ships spelled one another, relieving each other approximately every 21 days.

At 2:30 a.m. on 20 December 1983 the Lightship 613 relieved Lightship 612 until 8:00 a.m. when she was relieved by a Large Navigational Buoy, making Lightship 613 the last Lightship on station in the US and on Nantucket Station.

In December 1983 the Lightship 613 was sold to the New England Historic Seaport to become a museum ship in Boston and Lightship 612 was reassigned to cutter duty.

Finally, after being decommissioned on 29 March 1985 and ending the 165 year era of United States Lightship service, Lightship 612 was sold to the Boston Educational Marine Exchange and shortly thereafter was taken over by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In March 2000, she was purchased by William and Kristen Golden, restored as the only fully operational Lightship in the United States and converted to a luxury yacht that was berthed at Rowes Wharf in Boston. In the summer of 2007 she was available for charter in Nantucket harbor and Newport. The Nantucket Lightship WLV612 was chartered for one year by the 5 star Delamar Hotel in Greenwich Connecticut in 2008, served as the mothership for the New York Yacht Club summer cruise and was chartered from November 2008 through 31 May 2009 at The North Cove Marina at the World Financial Center in Manhattan, New York. During the summers of 2009 and 2010, Lightship WLV612 was docked in Martha's Vineyard on Charter in Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, Newport and Long Island Sound, returning in the fall of 2010 for charters Newport. On 26 August 2009, after the death of Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy, the lightship honored him by illuminating his schooner at the Kennedy Compound.[6][failed verification]

Lightship 613 edit

Built at the United States Coast Guard Yard in Curtis Bay, Baltimore, Maryland in 1952. It was the last lightship ever built and launched in the United States, and the last lightship commissioned in service. Commissioned in September 1952 as the WAL-613 with a conventional mast, it was refit in 1953 with a "large cylindrical lantern housing installed on tripod foremast with a duplex revolving high intensity light of British design... rated at 5.5 million candlepower."[7] On December 20, 1983, the WLV-613 relieved WLV-612 at 2:30 AM, remaining on the Nantucket station until approximately 8 AM when the WLV-613 was replaced at the Nantucket Shoals station with a Large Navigation Buoy.[8] Likewise, with its last five-and-a-half hours of service, the WLV-613 was the last lightship on Nantucket Shoals and the last lightship in service in the United States. The WLV-613 is currently owned by William and Kristen Golden, who also own the WLV-612.

Name and station assignments edit

Lightship 85:

  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1907–23)
  • Relief, 1st District (1923–42)
  • Examination vessel, World War II (1942–44)
  • Relief, 1st District (1944–51)
  • Boston, Boston, MA (1951–62)

Lightship 117:

  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1931–34)

Lightship 112:

  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1936–42)
  • Examination Vessel, World War II (1942–45)
  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1945–58)
  • Relief, 1st District (1958–60)
  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1960–75)

Lightship 612:

  • San Francisco, San Francisco, CA (1951–69)
  • Blunts Reef, Blunts Reef, CA (1969–71)
  • Portland, Portland, ME (1971–75)
  • Nantucket, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1975–83)

Lightship WLV-613:

  • Ambrose, Ambrose Channel, NY (1952–67)
  • Relief, MA (1967–79)
  • Nantucket-II, Nantucket Shoals, MA (1979–83)
  • Nantucket-II relieved 612 for one day then was relieved by a Large Navigational Buoy, therefore 613 was last Lightship on station in US.

References edit

  1. ^ Le Lacheur, Embert A. (April 1924). "Tidal currents in the open sea: Subsurface tidal currents at Nantucket Shoals Light Vessel". Geographical Review. 14 (2): 282–286. doi:10.2307/208104. JSTOR 208104.(subscription required)
  2. ^ "Francis J. Higginson correspondence". 21st Century Books. 11 May 1899. Retrieved 14 February 2014."
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2004-10-10. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  4. ^ "History of U.S. Lightships". palletmastersworkshop.com. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  5. ^ Schworm, Peter (12 May 2010). "Oldest US Lightship Comes Home to Boston". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  6. ^ Henry, Ray (27 August 2009). "Kennedy to lie in repose in Boston for 2 days". Detroit News. Associated Press. Retrieved 2009-08-27. On Wednesday night, the Lightship Nantucket—the vessel that marked limits of the dangerous Nantucket Shoals in Massachusetts for more than 150 years—pulled up outside the Kennedy compound as dusk fell and illuminated the late senator's schooner as a tribute.
  7. ^ "U.S. Coast Guard Lightships & Those of the U.S. Lighthouse Service". uscg.mil. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
  8. ^ Nantucket Shoals LB "N", National Data Buoy Center, NOAA

Further reading edit

  • United States Coast Guard, Aids to Navigation, (Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1945).
  • Price, Scott T. "U. S. Coast Guard Aids to Navigation: A Historical Bibliography". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office.
  • Putnam, George R., Lighthouses and Lightships of the United States, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1933).

External links edit

  • Lightship Nantucket
  • Lighthouse Friends Lightship Nantucket II WLV 613, MA
  • Newsreel footage covering the 1934 ramming of Lightship 117 by the liner RMS Olympic (1934) from British Pathé (Record No:5303) at YouTube

Resources edit

  • U.S. Coast Guard: Lightship (LV 112)
  • U.S. Coast Guard Lightship Sailors

lightship, nantucket, 61722, 61833, 61722, 61833, location, nantucket, shoals, lightship, station, southern, edge, shoals, station, named, nantucket, nantucket, shoals, served, number, lightvessels, also, termed, lightships, that, marked, hazardous, nantucket,. 40 37 02 N 69 37 06 W 40 61722 N 69 61833 W 40 61722 69 61833 The location of the Nantucket Shoals lightship station at the southern edge of the shoals The station named Nantucket or Nantucket Shoals was served by a number of lightvessels also termed lightships that marked the hazardous Nantucket Shoals south of Nantucket Island The vessels given numbers as their name had the station name painted on their hulls when assigned to the station Several ships have been assigned to the Nantucket Shoals lightship station and have been called Nantucket It was common for a lightship to be reassigned and then have the new station name painted on the hull The Nantucket station was a significant US lightship station for transatlantic voyages Established in 1854 the station marked the limits of the dangerous Nantucket Shoals She was the last lightship seen by vessels departing the United States as well as the first beacon seen on approach The position was 40 miles 64 km southeast of Nantucket Island the farthest lightship in North America and experienced clockwise rotary tidal currents 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Lightship 11 1 2 Lightship 1 1 3 Lightship 54 1 4 Lightship 58 1 5 Lightship 66 1 6 Lightship 85 1 7 Lightship 106 1 8 Lightship 117 1 9 Lightship 112 1 10 Lightship 612 1 11 Lightship 613 2 Name and station assignments 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External links 5 1 ResourcesHistory editLightships and their crews were exposed to many dangers In addition to the obvious hazards posed by the weather and sea conditions vessels marking shipping lanes on occasion were struck by the very traffic they existed to protect Ships would home on their radio beacons at night and in fog but were expected to post lookouts and to turn away in time Lightship 11 edit Lightship 11 was built in 1853 by Tardy amp Auld of Baltimore Maryland for 13 462 00 Lightship 11 was built of white oak and equipped with two lanterns and a hand operated 1 050 pound 480 kg bell fog signal Each of the lanterns contained eight constant level oil lamps Lightship 11 was blown ashore in 1855 and rebuilt at the New York Navy Yard for further service at Brenton Reef Rhode Island Lightship 1 edit Lightship 1 was built in 1855 at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard for 48 000 00 Lightship 1 was built of white oak and live oak and equipped with two lanterns and a hand operated bell fog signal Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors Lightship 1 was rebuilt in 1860 and the main anchor was replaced with a mushroom in 1881 and then a stockless mushroom anchor in 1886 Lightship 1 was transferred to Martins Industry South Carolina in 1892 Lightship 54 edit Lightship 54 was built in 1892 at West Bay City Michigan for 53 325 00 Lightship 54 was built of iron and equipped with two lanterns a 12 inch steam chime whistle and a hand operated 1 000 pound 450 kg bell fog signal Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors Twenty five tons vague of pig iron ballast were added in 1893 and Lightship 54 was transferred to Boston Massachusetts in 1894 Lightship 58 edit Main article United States lightship LV 58 Lightship 58 was built in 1894 by Craig Shipbuilding of Toledo Ohio for 50 870 00 Lightship 58 was built of an iron plated steel frame and equipped with two lanterns a 12 inch steam chime whistle and a hand operated bell fog signal Each of the lanterns contained eight oil lamps with reflectors Lightship 58 was transferred to Fire Island New York in 1896 Lightship 66 edit Lightship 66 was built in 1896 by Bath Iron Works of Bath Maine for 69 282 00 The vessel was built on a wood sheathed steel frame and equipped with a 12 inch steam chime whistle and a cluster of four electric lens lanterns mounted in galleries at each mast head She carried a Baird evaporator and distilling apparatus Breaking adrift required replacement of seven mushroom anchors and 565 fathoms 1 033 m of chain between 1896 and 1900 Experimental wireless telegraph equipment was installed in 1901 2 and the vessel became the first United States lightship with permanent radio equipment in 1904 Lightship 66 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 85 in 1907 Lightship 85 edit Lightship 85 a wooden lightship was built in 1907 at Camden New Jersey for 99 000 00 Lightship 85 was transferred to the U S Navy by Executive Order on 11 April 1917 along with the entire Lighthouse Service While in the Navy during World War I she continued her former peacetime routine warning shipping away from Nantucket Shoals and also aided in guarding nearby waters against German U boats Sailors from the Lightship aided in the rescue of people after the Boston Molasses Disaster partly because it was docked nearby After peace was restored in 1919 Lightship 85 was returned to the U S Commerce Department Lightship 85 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 106 in 1923 Lightship 106 edit Lightship 106 was built in 1923 by Bath Iron Works of Bath Maine for 200 000 00 Lightship 106 was built on a steel hull and equipped with a 12 inch steam chime whistle a hand operated bell a submarine bell clarification needed a submarine oscillator clarification needed a radio beacon and a 375 mm 14 8 in electric lens lantern at each mast head Lightship 106 was placed in relief service following replacement by Lightship 117 in 1931 returned to Nantucket when Lightship 117 was sunk in 1934 and returned to relief service when replaced by Lightship 112 in 1936 Lightship 117 edit Main article United States lightship LV 117 nbsp RMS Olympic passes Nantucket Lightship 117 in early 1934 Lightship 117 at Nantucket was sideswiped by the SS Washington in early 1934 and four months later on 15 May 1934 she was rammed and sunk by the British White Star ship RMS Olympic homing in on its radio beacon in dense fog 3 Four men went down with the ship and seven survivors were picked up by the Olympic Three survivors later died of injuries sustained from the collision The sunken wreck now lies hidden in 200 feet 60 m of water 50 miles 80 km south of Nantucket Island Massachusetts Lightship 112 edit Main article Nantucket Lightship LV112 nbsp LV 112 in Boston harbor In 1936 Pusey amp Jones of Wilmington Delaware built Lightship 112 the largest lightship ever for 300 956 00 This ship was paid for by the British government as reparation for the deadly collision between Olympic and Lightship 117 4 During World War II Lightship 112 was withdrawn from the Nantucket Shoals station and used as an examination vessel in Portland Maine On 5 January 1959 she was blown 80 miles 130 km vague off station in hurricane force winds accompanied by fifty foot seas This event effectively put her out of communication for several days due to water damaged electronics Lightship 112 outlasted all other lightships assigned to that station having marked it for 39 years On 10 May 2010 Lightship LV 112 the largest lightship ever built in the US returned to Boston for renovation and preservation 5 nbsp WLV 612 at World Financial Center Lightship 612 edit Main article United States Lightship Nantucket WLV 612 Built in 1950 at Curtis Bay Maryland by the United States Coast Guard Yard for 500 000 Lightship 612 was the last ship to serve a full tour of duty on the Nantucket Shoals station and was also the last US lightship in commission In 1975 Lightship Ambrose the Nantucket s sister ship was renamed Lightship Nantucket II and the two ships spelled one another relieving each other approximately every 21 days At 2 30 a m on 20 December 1983 the Lightship 613 relieved Lightship 612 until 8 00 a m when she was relieved by a Large Navigational Buoy making Lightship 613 the last Lightship on station in the US and on Nantucket Station In December 1983 the Lightship 613 was sold to the New England Historic Seaport to become a museum ship in Boston and Lightship 612 was reassigned to cutter duty Finally after being decommissioned on 29 March 1985 and ending the 165 year era of United States Lightship service Lightship 612 was sold to the Boston Educational Marine Exchange and shortly thereafter was taken over by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts In March 2000 she was purchased by William and Kristen Golden restored as the only fully operational Lightship in the United States and converted to a luxury yacht that was berthed at Rowes Wharf in Boston In the summer of 2007 she was available for charter in Nantucket harbor and Newport The Nantucket Lightship WLV612 was chartered for one year by the 5 star Delamar Hotel in Greenwich Connecticut in 2008 served as the mothership for the New York Yacht Club summer cruise and was chartered from November 2008 through 31 May 2009 at The North Cove Marina at the World Financial Center in Manhattan New York During the summers of 2009 and 2010 Lightship WLV612 was docked in Martha s Vineyard on Charter in Martha s Vineyard Nantucket Newport and Long Island Sound returning in the fall of 2010 for charters Newport On 26 August 2009 after the death of Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy the lightship honored him by illuminating his schooner at the Kennedy Compound 6 failed verification Lightship 613 edit Main article United States Lightship WLV 613 Built at the United States Coast Guard Yard in Curtis Bay Baltimore Maryland in 1952 It was the last lightship ever built and launched in the United States and the last lightship commissioned in service Commissioned in September 1952 as the WAL 613 with a conventional mast it was refit in 1953 with a large cylindrical lantern housing installed on tripod foremast with a duplex revolving high intensity light of British design rated at 5 5 million candlepower 7 On December 20 1983 the WLV 613 relieved WLV 612 at 2 30 AM remaining on the Nantucket station until approximately 8 AM when the WLV 613 was replaced at the Nantucket Shoals station with a Large Navigation Buoy 8 Likewise with its last five and a half hours of service the WLV 613 was the last lightship on Nantucket Shoals and the last lightship in service in the United States The WLV 613 is currently owned by William and Kristen Golden who also own the WLV 612 Name and station assignments editLightship 85 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1907 23 Relief 1st District 1923 42 Examination vessel World War II 1942 44 Relief 1st District 1944 51 Boston Boston MA 1951 62 Lightship 117 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1931 34 Lightship 112 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1936 42 Examination Vessel World War II 1942 45 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1945 58 Relief 1st District 1958 60 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1960 75 Lightship 612 San Francisco San Francisco CA 1951 69 Blunts Reef Blunts Reef CA 1969 71 Portland Portland ME 1971 75 Nantucket Nantucket Shoals MA 1975 83 Lightship WLV 613 Ambrose Ambrose Channel NY 1952 67 Relief MA 1967 79 Nantucket II Nantucket Shoals MA 1979 83 Nantucket II relieved 612 for one day then was relieved by a Large Navigational Buoy therefore 613 was last Lightship on station in US References edit Le Lacheur Embert A April 1924 Tidal currents in the open sea Subsurface tidal currents at Nantucket Shoals Light Vessel Geographical Review 14 2 282 286 doi 10 2307 208104 JSTOR 208104 subscription required Francis J Higginson correspondence 21st Century Books 11 May 1899 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Title unknown Archived from the original on 2004 10 10 Retrieved 2012 10 04 History of U S Lightships palletmastersworkshop com Retrieved 2012 10 04 Schworm Peter 12 May 2010 Oldest US Lightship Comes Home to Boston The Boston Globe Retrieved 2012 10 04 Henry Ray 27 August 2009 Kennedy to lie in repose in Boston for 2 days Detroit News Associated Press Retrieved 2009 08 27 On Wednesday night the Lightship Nantucket the vessel that marked limits of the dangerous Nantucket Shoals in Massachusetts for more than 150 years pulled up outside the Kennedy compound as dusk fell and illuminated the late senator s schooner as a tribute U S Coast Guard Lightships amp Those of the U S Lighthouse Service uscg mil Retrieved 2015 09 14 Nantucket Shoals LB N National Data Buoy Center NOAAFurther reading editUnited States Coast Guard Aids to Navigation Washington DC U S Government Printing Office 1945 Price Scott T U S Coast Guard Aids to Navigation A Historical Bibliography United States Coast Guard Historian s Office Putnam George R Lighthouses and Lightships of the United States Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1933 External links editLightship Nantucket Lighthouse Friends Lightship Nantucket II WLV 613 MA Newsreel footage covering the 1934 ramming of Lightship 117 by the liner RMS Olympic 1934 from British Pathe Record No 5303 at YouTube Resources edit National Register Number 89002464 U S Coast Guard Lightship LV 112 U S Navy USS Nantucket U S Coast Guard Lightship Sailors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lightship Nantucket amp oldid 1193764523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.