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Marion Carll was a schoolteacher who moved onto the property in 1885. She also served as Commack's District's Treasurer and Census Taker. [2] When Marion Carll died in 1968, she willed to the Commack School District to be used as a historical museum for educational purposes. [3] However, the property was not maintained and fell into disrepair.
Carll S. Burr Mansion is a historic home located at Commack in Suffolk County, New York. It is an imposing 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, seven bay shingled residence. The decorative roofline features a flat roofed belvedere with a bracketed cornice and a mansard roof. It was built about 1830 and remodeled in the Second Empire style between 1881 and 1885.
Havemeyer purchased 500 acres in Commack, Long Island, neighboring the racetrack of Carll S. Burr, who was engaged in breeding and training of trotting horses. Havemeyer was an avid hunter of ducks and other game birds. He owned a large stable of trotting horses and established a pheasant shooting preserve on land nearby. [57]
Carll Burr Jr. House is a historic home located at Commack in Suffolk County, New York.It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, shingle and clapboard residence with a sweeping gable roof.It was built about 1895 and features a 3-story, three-bay tower with a tent roof.
Commack (/ ˈ k oʊ m æ k / KOH-mak) is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in the towns of Huntington and Smithtown in Suffolk County, on Long Island, in New York. The CDP's population was 36,124 at the 2010 census.
In some cases estates like Mooreland, Justamere Farm, Nutwood Farm were sliced in half while Mansion's like Tannenbum, Greystone Manor or Hoyt's Estate were so close you could now wave to passing motorist from their bedroom windows [523] and still others even less fortunate like Hillandale, Winden and Kingwood were eventually demolished.
Commack United Methodist Church and Cemetery is a historic Methodist church meeting house and cemetery located at 486 Townline Road in Commack, Suffolk County, New York.It was built in 1789 and is a relatively large, two story, two bay shingled building with a broad, overhanging gable roof.
Coindre Hall, originally called West Neck Farm, is a 40-room, 80,000-square-foot (7,400 m 2) mansion in the style of a medieval French château completed in 1912 for pharmaceutical magnate George McKesson Brown.