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(71st) Seventy-first New York Volunteers / Park Avenue Armory (1904–1906) 7 – Park Avenue (between East 33rd and East 34th streets), Midtown South (42nd) Forty-Second Division / West 14th Street Armory (1971) 5 – 125 West 14th Street (between Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue), Chelsea; Notes: 1.
Yaphank is a station in the hamlet of Yaphank, New York on the Main Line (Greenport Branch) of the Long Island Rail Road. It is located on Park Street near Suffolk County Road 21 (Yaphank Avenue). It is also accessible from streets in and around Suffolk County. The distance between Yaphank and the next station, Riverhead, is the longest ...
In 1890–1891, the 14th Regiment Armory Commission made plans for a new armory building in the present-day neighborhood of Park Slope, along Eighth Avenue between 14th and 15th Streets, near Prospect Park. The lot measured 200 feet (61 m) on Eighth Avenue and 550 feet (170 m) on the side streets.
Sills Road & Patchogue–Yaphank Road Long Island Avenue in Yaphank: Includes an unbuilt extension to CR 46 in Upton CR 102: CR 21 in Yaphank: East Main Street Extension I-495 exit 68 / CR 46 in East Yaphank: Unbuilt route CR 103: CR 51 Cedar Swamp Road in Riverhead: CR 58 or I-495: Unbuilt route CR 104: 7.44 11.97 CR 80 in Quogue
NY 27 west (Sunrise Highway) / CR 21 (Yaphank Avenue) – New York: 15.55: 25.03: CR 56 east (Victory Avenue) Western terminus of CR 56; access to South Haven County Park: Brookhaven: 15.63: 25.15: NY 27 (Sunrise Highway) – New York, Montauk: No eastbound access to NY 27 west; exits 57S-N on NY 27: 15.90 [4] 25.59: CR 80 (Montauk Highway ...
Yaphank (/ ˈ j æ p æ ŋ k /) is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Suffolk County, New York, United States. The population was 5,945 at the time of the 2010 census. [4] Yaphank is located in the south part of the Town of Brookhaven.
The buildings provided service and hospitality for rail passengers and for cultural and social events for Attica's citizens. They include the Williams Opera House (1879), Wyoming House (1878), Hotel Liberty or Attica Hotel (c. 1880), The Railroad Store (c. 1885), Erie House (1880), Spann Block (1874), Western Hotel (1832), and Erie Depot (1879).
War Workers of the Young Women's Christian Association at Hostess House, Camp Upton, Long Island. Camp Upton, with a capacity of 18,000 troops, was one of three transient embarkation camps directly under control of the New York Port of Embarkation during World War I. [1] The camp was named after Emory Upton, a Union general of the Civil War.