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Dolge Company Factory Complex, also known as Alfred Dolge and Sons Felt and Sounding Board Factories and Daniel Green Factory Complex, is a national historic district located at Dolgeville in Herkimer County, New York. The district contains 10 contributing buildings and one contributing structure.
Perspective map of Dolgeville in 1890. Dolgeville is located in east-central Herkimer County and western Fulton County at (43.102233, -74.772294 According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 1.83 square miles (4.75 km 2), of which 1.79 square miles (4.64 km 2) is land and 0.04 square miles (0.11 km 2), or 2.38%, is water.
Thousands of 2025 Major League Baseball games are available on broadcast television, ... New York Mets 2025 ... The pre-game show, Fox MLB Studio, features host Kevin Burkhardt with analysts Derek ...
The Northern New York League was a Minor League Baseball circuit that operated in a span of six seasons between 1900 and 1905. League franchises were located in New York and Vermont . For the majority of its existence it operated as an independent league, except in 1902, when was classified as Class D circuit.
Warren Scott Brusstar (born February 2, 1952) is an American former professional baseball pitcher, who played nine years in Major League Baseball (MLB), for the Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago White Sox, and Chicago Cubs. He is currently [as of?] the pitching coach at Napa Valley College. Brusstar was inducted into the Napa Valley College ...
It was built in 1893, and is an asymmetrically massed, 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story Queen Anne–style single family dwelling over a cut-stone foundation. Also on the property is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, gable-roofed carriage house/garage.
APBA (pronounced "APP-bah") is a game company founded in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.It was created in 1951 by trucking firm purchaser J. Richard Seitz (1915-1992). [1] The acronym stands for "American Professional Baseball Association", the name of a board game league Seitz devised in 1931 with eight high school classmates. [2]
Oneonta, located just 30 minutes from the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, first appeared on the baseball map in 1890 with the Oneonta Indians and was a mainstay in the New York–Penn League (NYPL) for more than 40 years, beginning with the arrival of the Oneonta Red Sox in 1966. [2]