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New York City Subway service to Sheepshead Bay is provided by the BMT Brighton Line (B and Q trains), with local stops at Avenue U and Neck Road, and express/local stops at the Kings Highway and Sheepshead Bay stations. New York City Bus routes in the area include the B3, B4, B36, B44, B44 SBS, B49 and B68 local buses and the BM3 express bus. [71]
Coney Island Creek is a 1.8-mile-long (2.9 km) [1] tidal inlet in Brooklyn, New York City.It was created from a series of streams and inlets by land filling and digging activities starting in the mid-18th century which, by the 19th century, became a 3-mile-long (4.8 km) continual strait and a partial mudflat connecting Gravesend Bay and Sheepshead Bay, separating Coney Island from the mainland.
New York 246 75.0 816 1899 W City of Lalona: 126686 prop 1890 Seattle 48 14.6 19 12 1894 O City of Latona: 126686 stern tug 1891 Lake Union: 60 18.3 19 12 1920 A City of Mukilteo: 226675 prop ferry 1927 Seattle 104 31.7 1932 B City of Olympia: 127272 prop tug 1898 Olympia 56 17.1 51 29 C-G, R [R 25] City of Quincy: 125701 stern psgr 1878 ...
The New York Bight, the triangle of water with Montauk at one apex, the Jersey Shore at the second apex, and New York Harbor in the middle, is known for its abundance of marine life, [11] thus providing a large amount of prey for sharks. The exact migration pattern is not completely known and currently being studied, but the general belief is ...
People from Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn (46 P) Pages in category "Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
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Lundy's Restaurant, also known as Lundy Brothers Restaurant, was an American seafood restaurant in the Sheepshead Bay neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City, along the bay of the same name. Lundy's was founded in 1926 by Irving Lundy as a restaurant on the waterfront of Sheepshead Bay; five years later, the original building was condemned to ...
One of the first documented team boats in commercial service in the United States was "put in service in 1814 on a run between Brooklyn and Manhattan." [1] It took "8 to 18 minutes to cross the East River and carried an average of 200 passengers, plus horses and vehicles." [1] Team boats served New York City for "about ten years, from 1814-1824 ...