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The Tri-States Monument (also known as Tri-State Rock) is a granite monument that marks the tripoint of the state boundaries of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.It is at the northwestern end of the boundary between New Jersey and New York, the northern end of the boundary between New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and the eastern end of the boundary between New York and Pennsylvania.
A witness monument nearby in the South Dakota corner acknowledges the tri-point being set in 1859. Kansas: Missouri: Oklahoma: Marked with a plaque on a seldom used dead-end road. [23] Kentucky: Tennessee: Virginia
Tri-States Monument, where the U.S. states of New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania converge, just south of where Interstate 84 crosses the Delaware and Neversink rivers south of Port Jervis and east of Matamoras. It also marks the northernmost point in New Jersey. Date: 3 June 2023: Source: Own work: Author: Daniel Case: Permission (Reusing ...
Christopher Columbus Monument (West Orange, New Jersey) D. Delaware Memorial Bridge; E. Empty Sky (memorial) Equestrian statue of George Washington (Morristown, New ...
Ellis Island (part of Statue of Liberty National Monument) [8] May 11, 1965: Jersey City: Hudson: Immigration processing depot from 1892 to 1954. A portion of Ellis Island is in New York. 3: Thomas Edison National Historical Park: September 5, 1962: West Orange: Essex: Inventor Thomas Alva Edison's laboratory and residence, Glenmont 4 ...
Tri-state area [1] [2] is an informal term in the United States which can refer to any of multiple areas that lie across three states.When referring to populated areas, the term implies a shared economy or culture among the area's residents, typically concentrated around a central metropolis.
Wars of America is a colossal bronze sculpture by Mount Rushmore sculptor Gutzon Borglum and his assistant Luigi Del Bianco containing "forty-two humans and two horses", [3] located in Military Park in Newark, New Jersey. The sculpture sets on a base of granite from Stone Mountain.
Mason and Dixon placed a wooden marker on the tri-point on June 6, 1765. [1] It was replaced in 1849 by a stone marker. [1] At one point, the marker went missing, so Lt. Col. James Duncan Graham, of the U.S. Corps of Topographical Engineers, was sent out to replace it. He located the marker, but replaced it in the wrong location.