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Contents: Counties in New York Albany – Allegany – Bronx – Broome – Cattaraugus – Cayuga – Chautauqua – Chemung – Chenango – Clinton – Columbia – Cortland – Delaware – Dutchess (Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck) – Erie – Essex – Franklin – Fulton – Genesee – Greene – Hamilton – Herkimer – Jefferson – Kings – Lewis – Livingston – Madison – Monroe ...
Grove–Linden–St. John's Historic District is a national historic district in Ridgewood, Queens, New York. It includes 51 contributing buildings built between 1908 and 1910. They consist of three story brick tenements with two apartments per floor. There are also a number of two- and three-story row houses with one apartment per floor.
Central Ridgewood Historic District is a national historic district in Ridgewood, Queens, New York. It includes 990 contributing buildings built between 1895 and 1927. They consist mainly of two-story, brick rowhouse dwellings with one apartment per floor. Buildings feature rounded bay front facades and the use of several shades of speckled brick.
David Conklin House: Huntington, Long Island: c. 1750 Ireland-Gardiner Farm: Greenlawn, Long Island: c. 1750 Isaac Losee House: Huntington, Long Island: c. 1750 One of the oldest private residences on Long Island Henry Smith Farmstead: Huntington Station, Long Island: 1750 Built about 1750 and remodelled in the 1860s Steenburgh Tavern ...
Babka three ways. With one dough recipe, make hazelnut chocolate babka with amaretti filling and chocolate glaze; cherry chocolate babka with black sesame and chocolate filling; and a black and ...
[5] [6] The Long Island Rail Road provides freight access via the Montauk Branch, the Rockaway branch of that line took that right-of-way which runs diagonally through the neighborhood from northwest to southeast. There was a Long Island Rail Road station named Richmond Hill on Hillside Avenue and Babbage Street along the Montauk Branch ...
A 1901 article in the Brooklyn Eagle already uses the full name Queens Village, [14] a name that had been used as late as the 1880s for Lloyd's Neck in present-day Suffolk County. [15] In 1923, the Long Island Railroad added "Village" to its station's name to avoid confusion with the county of the same name, and thus the neighborhood became ...
Prior to consolidation, Lloyd Neck, which was then part of the Town of Oyster Bay and had earlier been known as Queens Village, seceded from Queens County and became part of the Town of Huntington in Suffolk County in 1885. [10] [11] Town of Flushing, chartered 1645 as Vlissingen [12] Village of College Point, incorporated within Flushing in ...