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Chazy / ʃ eɪ ˈ z i / is a town in northeastern Clinton County, New York, United States. The population was 4,096 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] The closest city is Plattsburgh , 14 miles (23 km) to the south.
Chazy is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Chazy, Clinton County, New York, United States. The population was 565 at the 2010 census, [ 2 ] out of a total town population of 4,284.
West Chazy is located in the southwestern part of the town of Chazy along the Little Chazy River, which flows northeastward to Lake Champlain. New York State Route 22 passes through the hamlet, leading south 10 miles (16 km) to Plattsburgh, the county seat, and north 10 miles (16 km) to Mooers.
Chazy River is the name of two tributaries of Lake Champlain in Clinton County, New York in the United States. The more northerly river is the Great Chazy River , which empties into Lake Champlain at King Bay in the Town of Champlain .
The Alice T. Miner Museum, also known as Alice T. Miner Colonial Collection, is located at Chazy in Clinton County, New York [2] on the Adirondack Coast. Opened in 1924, the museum was created by Alice T. Miner, a pioneer in the colonial revival movement and wife of William H. Miner, railroad industrialist.
Chazy may refer to: Chazy, New York, a town at Lake Champlain, New York Chazy (CDP), New York, a hamlet in the town; Chazy Formation, a mid-Ordovician limestone deposit in northeastern North America; Chazy River, the name of two tributaries of Lake Champlain, New York; Jean Chazy (1882–1955), French mathematician Chazy equation, a ...
The William H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute is a private, not-for-profit educational research institution with an operational dairy farm and Morgan horse herd located in Chazy, New York on the Adirondack Coast of Lake Champlain. [1]
The Chazy Reef Formation is a mid-Ordovician limestone deposit in northeastern North America. It consists of some of the oldest reef systems built by a community of organisms [ 1 ] rather than the deposit of a limited range of similar organisms, such as Stromatolite mounds deposited by ancient cyanobacteria.