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Evergreen Acres is a historic home and farm complex located at Cazenovia in Madison County, New York. The frame farmhouse was built about 1814 in the Federal style and enlarged and altered about 1860. Also on the property are a barn, carriage house, two corn cribs, a silo, and two hen houses. [2]
It was conducted by the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) in the early years of the 20th-century. Experimental Station No. 1 was built up in the North Shore pine barrens at Wading River by the Wading River station (1905-1928), and Station No. 2, cleared from the middle Long Island scrub-oak wastes at Medford by the Medford station (1907-1927). [1] [2]
Evergreen Farm, Millbrook: This 15-acre farm offers Douglas Fir, Fraser Fir, Spruce and Concolor Fir trees, as well as handmade holiday wreaths. Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 24 to Nov. 26 ...
Mulford Farm in East Hampton, Long Island, New York, is one of America's most significant, intact English colonial farmsteads. The farmhouse was built in 1680 by High Sheriff Josiah Hobart, an important early official of the first New York Royal Province government. Samuel "Fish Hook" Mulford bought the property in 1712 after Hobart's death
The Queens County Farm Museum, also known as Queens Farm, is a 47-acre (190,000 m 2) farm in the Floral Park and Glen Oaks neighborhoods of Queens in New York City.The farm occupies the city's largest remaining tract of undisturbed farmland (in operation since 1697), and is still a working farm today.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture recognized 14 dairy farms in Stearns County, two in Benton County and one in Sherburne County for low somatic cell counts. ... Evergreen Acres Dairy LLC #7 ...
On January 20, 1966, when the New York state government purchased the Long Island Rail Road, the Bay Ridge Branch and the Evergreen Branch (excluding the G&ER portion) remained part of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Subsequently, they became part of Penn Central and Conrail. The Evergreen Branch still served a few customers until the 1970s.
The significance of the district is attributed to its historic use as a livestock farm. [2] The contributing buildings include the Show Barn (c. 1906), the Stallion Barn (c. 1910), the Mare Barn (c. 1910), wind mill (c. 1925), chicken coop (c. 1925), and the farmyard. There were two different houses on the farm, and both have been removed.