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Middletown's Hillside Cemetery was designed by the British architect and landscape designer Calvert Vaux, who worked with Frederick Law Olmsted to design Central Park in New York City. The J. W. Chorley Elementary School, designed by the American architect Paul Rudolph , was built in the 1960s and demolished in 2013.
Alden is a village in Erie County, New York, United States. The population was 2,605 in the 2010 census. It is part of the Buffalo–Niagara Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area. The village is centrally located within the town of Alden. Its principal street is Broadway (U.S. Route 20).
The Broadway Historic District is located along Broadway in Saratoga Springs, New York, United States. It has a twofold character. It has a twofold character. The southern section is the commercial core of the city, with many of its important public and private buildings, most intact from its peak days as a resort town in that era.
The town of Alden, which had previously been part of Clarence, was established on March 27, 1823, and codified in the Laws of the State of New York, Sess.46, ch. 89 (1823). [3] Part of Alden was later given up to form the town of Marilla in 1853. Ewell Free Library in Alden was built in 1913.
The Alden Advertiser is an American, English language newspaper serving Alden, Marilla, Darien and the surrounding communities of Erie County in New York. [1] Founded in 1914 as a weekly, [2] the paper has a circulation of approximately 3,400. [1] [3] Leonard A. Weisbeck Jr. is the owner and editor of the paper. [1]
Get the Alden, NY local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
ZIP code: 14004. Area code: 716: GNIS feature ID: 942256 [1] Alden Center is a small hamlet in the town of Alden in Erie County, New York, United States. [1] References
NY 239 as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to an alignment extending from NY 35 in the village of Alden to NY 98 in the village of Attica by way of the hamlet of Cowlesville. The east–west road linking NY 239 near Cowlesville to Two Rod Road (then NY 358) north of Marilla was initially unnumbered. [2]