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The Hoosick Falls Historic District is located in the downtown section of the village of that name in New York, United States. It is an eight-acre (3.2-ha) area concentrated along Church, Classic and John streets ( NY 22 ) south of the Hoosick River .
Hoosick Falls is a village in Rensselaer County, New York, United States. The population was 3,501 at the 2010 census. [ 2 ] During its peak, in 1900, the village had a population of approximately 7,000.
Breese Hollow Road in Hoosick: NY 7: 356719: CR 101: 1.03 1.66 Hoosick Falls village line Ball Street Extension in Hoosick: CR 102 356721: CR 102: 4.94 7.95 NY 22: Johnson Hill and East Hoosick roads in Hoosick: NY 7: 356722: CR 103: 8.42 13.55 NY 7 in Hoosick: Buskirk–West Hoosick and Pine Valley roads Washington County line in Hoosick ...
Hoosick Falls: Intact 1889 Isaac Perry-designed armory. Home to units that have fought in the Mexican Border Campaign and Battle of Saipan. [19] Part of the Army National Guard Armories in New York State Multiple Property Submission (MPS) 58: Hoosick Falls Historic District: Hoosick Falls Historic District: December 3, 1980 : Central Ave. and ...
Hoosick Junction – A location northwest of Hoosick Falls; North Hoosick (formerly "St. Croix") – A hamlet north of Hoosick Falls on Route 22; Potterville – A hamlet in the southwestern part of the town on Route 7; Southwest Hoosick – A hamlet near the western town line and south of West Hoosick; Trumanville – A former community, now ...
[13] [14] The last change to NY 40's routing came in 1973 when it was truncated on its southern end to the junction of Hoosick Street and 10th Street in Troy. As a result, NY 40 was also realigned slightly to use 10th Street and Oakwood Avenue between Hoosick and 15th Streets. NY 40's former routing on Winter Street was redesignated as NY 405. [15]
The Estabrook Octagon House, built in 1853 by Ezra Robinson Estabrook, [3] is a historic octagonal house located at 8 River Street in Hoosick Falls, New York.It was constructed in strict accordance with the theories of Orson Squire Fowler, author of A Home for All.
The U.S. Post Office in Hoosick Falls, New York, is located on Main Street a block south of downtown. It is a brick building erected in the mid-1920s, serving the 12090 ZIP Code, which covers the village of Hoosick Falls and surrounding portions of the Town of Hoosick. It took the government nine years to build after the land was acquired.