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・ Birds (Bic Runga album)
・ Birds (disambiguation)
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・ Bird's Eye View (album)
・ Bird's eye view (disambiguation)
・ Bird's Eye View (TV series)
・ Bird's foot
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Bird's Point, Missouri
・ Bird's Point, Saskatchewan
・ Bird's Rock (disambiguation)
・ Bird's Shadow
・ Bird's-eye primrose
・ Bird's-eye view
・ Bird's-nest fern
・ Bird-and-flower painting
・ Bird-Brain
・ Bird-Brain Bird Dog
・ Bird-Brains
・ Bird-cage lantern
・ Bird-cherry ermine
・ Bird-class minesweeper
・ Bird-class patrol vessel


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Bird's Point, Missouri : ウィキペディア英語版
Bird's Point, Missouri
Bird's Point (or Birds Point) is an unincorporated community in Mississippi County, Missouri. It lies on an island or former island in the Mississippi River, near the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers and is situated directly across from Cairo, Illinois. This is the point where the U.S. Route 60 bridge connects with Cairo, Illinois.
==History==
Bird's Point was a strategic site during the Civil War. The Battle of Charleston was fought in the vicinity on August 19, 1861. Union cavalry under David P. Jenkins guarded the region for the early part of the war, deterring Confederate attempts to regain control of the supply routes. Once secured, Bird's Point was transformed into an important supply and repair site, as well as a training camp and military post, for the Union army and navy. Following the war, many of the military buildings were converted to civilian usage, including the boat yard.
In the 1880s, the area was an important railroad and river terminus for cotton distribution, and a series of ferries facilitated movement of cargo and passengers from the island to the Illinois riverbank. The narrow gauge Texas and St. Louis Railway built into Bird's Point in 1882. When the remainder of the railroad was completed, it stretched from Bird's Point to Gatesville, Texas. An incline was used to transfer railcars onto car floats for the cross-Mississippi trip from Birds Point to Cairo, Illinois. The narrow-gauge Texas and St. Louis went bankrupt and the new company was the St. Louis Arkansas and Texas Railway. That railroad standard gauged the rail line so the railroads shippers would not have to break bulk by transferring to a different gauge railroad. When the St. Louis, Arkansas and Texas Railway went bankrupt it was taken over by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway, nicknamed the Cotton Belt. The railroad ran from Bird's Point through Pine Bluff, Arkansas, Texarkana, Texas and to Gatesville, Texas, offering planters a convenient route to transfer their cotton bales to the Mississippi for water transport to markets in the Midwest. The Cotton Belt moved most of its car ferry operations to a new incline and car float at Gray's Point, Missouri in 1898.
In September 1908, the river bank caved in and essentially destroyed the boat yard and surrounding facilities. The railroad incline was destroyed in a flood in April 1909.
Bird's Point today is marked by several large grain elevators and storage facilities.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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