Lyle Style Photography

Lyle Style Photography Specializing in landscape/food photography and everything in between. Prints are available for purchase. Please contact me for more information.

A new 9 frame HDR exposure shot out in Homewood today. I think I'm starting to have a thing for trains.
11/14/2017

A new 9 frame HDR exposure shot out in Homewood today. I think I'm starting to have a thing for trains.

Abandoned barn sunset
07/15/2017

Abandoned barn sunset

Clouds & Corn
07/15/2017

Clouds & Corn

Amazing place! Wow, just wow!
05/17/2017

Amazing place! Wow, just wow!

04/17/2017

A series of off-stream waterfalls have been constructed along the Chicagoland waterways to improve the waterway quality....
04/17/2017

A series of off-stream waterfalls have been constructed along the Chicagoland waterways to improve the waterway quality. One of these waterfalls is this popular area. The "Harry 'Bus' Yourell Off-Stream Aeration Pool’s" park-like setting attracts many wedding parties for photo shoots, bike riders, joggers, and anyone who likes to relax by the water's edge. On any given day, one can find people reading a book beneath a shade-giving Weeping Willow, or strumming a guitar in time with the water fall’s natural music.

I took a trip to take some photos of the Old Joliet Prison yesterday, and to finally get out to test my new camera. Each...
01/31/2017

I took a trip to take some photos of the Old Joliet Prison yesterday, and to finally get out to test my new camera. Each one of these photos is actually nine of the same pictures that are taken at different exposures and then combined into one, resulting in the photos you see, similar to a beautiful painting. I hope you enjoy them and I will give you all a little history lesson about the prison below.........

Joliet Correctional Center was a prison in Joliet, Illinois, America from 1858 to 2002. It is featured in the motion picture The Blues Brothers as the prison from which Jake Blues is released at the beginning of the movie. It is also the location for the first season of Fox Network's Prison Break television show and the movie Let's Go to Prison.

Joliet Correctional Center, which was a completely separate prison from Stateville Correctional Center in nearby Crest Hill, opened in 1858. The prison was built with convict labor leased by the state to contractor Lorenzo P. Sanger and warden Samuel K. Casey. The limestone used to build the prison was quarried on the site.[1] . The first 33 inmates arrived from Alton in May 1858 to begin construction; the last prisoners were transferred in July 1860. Both criminals and prisoners of war were confined there during the Civil War. The first corrections officer to be killed there was Joseph Clark in 1865. By 1872 the population had reached 1,239, a record number for a single prison. From the 1870s the prison had work contracts with local businesses.

The prison was slow to modernize. There was no running water or toilets in the cells in 1910. The construction of the nearby Stateville Correctional Center began in 1917 and opened in March 1925 was meant to lead to the swift closure of Joliet. This did not happen, and both prisons operated simultaneously for the rest of the 20th Century.

A women's prison was added across the road from the main structures in 1896 but closed in 1932 when the female prison in Dwight, Illinois was opened. It then became an annex for the male prison and later the male reception unit for northern Illinois.

In 1924, Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb were given life sentences to be served at Joliet (after their successful defense—from the death penalty—by Clarence Darrow). Their case was known as "the crime of the century" at the time after kidnapping and murdering Robert Franks.

From at least the early 1960s, the prison included a reception and classification center for northern Illinois, holding new prisoners for less than a month before their final assignments and processing over 20,000 a year. In addition to the prisoners temporarily held in the R&C unit, Joliet maintained a large population of permanent inmates.

In 1975, members of the Almighty Black P. Stone Nation and other Chicago street gangs took over a cell block and held several corrections officers hostage. The warden at the time, Fred L. Finkbeiner, spoke to the inmates through a bullhorn and promised they would not be harmed. Their primary grievance was the fact that they were being transferred to other prisons because they had too much control over other inmates at Joliet. One former gang member, Herbert "Cadillac" Catlett, had reformed and been cooperating with the administration to bring about positive change. He tried to reason with the rioting inmates and was murdered. Warden Finkbeiner was standing in Catlett's blood as he spoke to the inmates, and the hostage situation was resolved. The warden later eulogized Catlett at an African-American church in Chicago Heights.[citation needed]

The number of inmates peaked at 1,300 in 1990 and was still 1,156 in 2000, although capacity had been raised to 1,300 over 1999–2000, from 1,180 previously. In 2000 there were 541 staff.

Joliet Correctional Center closed as a holding prison in 2002. Budget cuts and the obsolete and dangerous nature of the buildings were the cited reasons. All inmates and most staff were transferred to Stateville Correctional Center.

As of 2014 the Joliet Area Historical Museum is seeking to establish guided tours of the penitentiary for Route 66 travellers

Grand Haven Pier, Michigan9 shot exposure and processed and post edited in Photomatix and Lightroom
01/16/2017

Grand Haven Pier, Michigan

9 shot exposure and processed and post edited in Photomatix and Lightroom

Another one of my all time favorites.
01/16/2017

Another one of my all time favorites.

Graffiti
01/13/2017

Graffiti

01/10/2017
Last years Valent-ICE event
12/07/2016

Last years Valent-ICE event

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