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The Long Path Guide. The current Long Path guidebook now has information on nearby post offices, motels and other things useful for those contemplating a thru-hike. On May 24, 2005, trail runner David O'Neill, the founder of Charity Runners Inc., finished the first thru-run of the Long Path, as a benefit for the Trail Conference. He had started ...
In March 1901 the Trustees of the Nyack Library decided to petition Andrew Carnegie for funds for a library building. [1] On December 21, 1901, Andrew Carnegie offered to give $15,000 for the erection of a library building in Nyack, if the village provided a suitable site and pledged by resolution to support the library with no less than $1,500 a year.
The trail intersects the Old Erie Path at Depot Square in Sparkill. [1] The trail follows the right-of-ways of two former railroads. From the southern trailhead in Tappan to Sparkill, it follows the Northern Branch, which was constructed in 1859 by the Northern Railroad of New Jersey from Nyack to Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City.
The Raymond G. Esposito Trail is a 1.1 mile north-south rail trail located in the village of South Nyack, Rockland County, New York.It begins at Franklin Street Park at the corner of Cedar Hill Road and Franklin Avenue on the border of Nyack and South Nyack, which was the site of the original Nyack station, and continues as the Old Erie Path upon crossing the border into Grand View-on-Hudson. [1]
Haitian Heritage Month in the Lower Hudson Valley kicked off Saturday with a poetry reading and book launch at Nyack library.
Nyack Library – 59 South Broadway - the 1903 Carnegie Library building. Nyack Post Office – 48 South Broadway - The 1932 building is a rare example of an American post office constructed between the world wars in the Classical Revival architectural style. The post office is located on South Broadway in the center of the village.
The Old Erie Path is a 3.4 mile north-south rail trail in the town of Orangetown, Rockland County, New York.It begins at the southern edge of South Nyack at the end of the Raymond G. Esposito Trail, spanning Grand View-on-Hudson and Piermont before terminating at the junction of the Joseph B. Clarke Rail Trail in Sparkill. [1]
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