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The Onondaga Historical Association's main building at 321 Montgomery St., Syracuse, NY. The Onondaga Historical Association (OHA) is a private nonprofit entity that operates as a research center on the history of Onondaga County, with museums, educational centers, retail operations, and exhibits at multiple locations throughout Onondaga County.
Syracuse also hosted the NBA All Star Game in 1961. [14] Three of the Syracuse Nationals players were on the team. The Onondaga County War Memorial was home to the annual NYSPHSAA wrestling tournament in 1968, from 1970 to 1972, and then for 29-straight years, 1974–2003. [ 15 ]
210 Montgomery St., 237-43 E. Genesee St. Syracuse: Site of Daniel Webster's 1851 "Syracuse Speech" in which he equated resistance to the Fugitive Slave Law with treason. In response, crowds in the area freed an escaped slave from the custody of federal marshals, galvanizing opposition to slavery in Central New York.
Other such surgeries with Montgomery as lead physician occurred at Johns Hopkins during the decade. [8] [9] In 2003, Montgomery was the inaugural recipient of the Margery K. and Thomas Pozefsky Professorship in Kidney Transplantation. In 2016, he accepted a position as the inaugural Director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute in New York.
321 Montgomery Street: 5 story office building; steel frame; brick and terra-cotta; 8 Pomeroy Building ca. 1930 Mission style 327 Montgomery Street: 2 stories; stucco 9 Carnegie Library: 1902-05 Beaux Arts 335 Montgomery Street: Previously known as the Syracuse Public Library; limestone and granite 10 YMCA 1905 Federal 340 Montgomery Street
The Central New York Telephone and Telegraph Building, also known as the Onondaga Historical Association Building, [2] designed by Henry W. Wilkinson, [3] was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and is part of the Montgomery Street-Columbus Circle Historic District, listed in 1979. [2]
The Carnegie Building in Syracuse, New York, previously known as the Syracuse Public Library, is a historic Carnegie library on Montgomery Street at Jefferson Circle in downtown Syracuse. It was built by the City of Syracuse in 1905-06, and came into County of Onondaga ownership in 1976.
Acting as a private citizen, Towler donated these materials to the new Syracuse University on condition that the trustees immediately establish an AMA-approved medical school. Thus the Syracuse University College of Medicine came into being on December 4, 1871, with Frederick Hyde as dean. [1] Syracuse Medical College class of 1897 (pictured in ...