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Go: The visitor's center is at 381 North Broadway, Sleepy Hollow, NY, 10591; 914-631-8200; visitsleepyhollow.com The Headless Horseman awaits your visit to Sleepy Hollow, New York. Lancaster
Sleepy Hollow is a village in the town of Mount Pleasant in Westchester County, New York, United States. The village is located on the east bank of the Hudson River , about 20 miles (32 km) north of New York City , and is served by the Philipse Manor stop on the Metro-North Hudson Line .
New Jersey's state park system includes properties as small as the 32-acre (0.13 km 2) Barnegat Lighthouse State Park and as large as the 115,000-acre (470 km 2) Wharton State Forest. The state park system comprises 430,928 acres (1,743.90 km 2)—roughly 7.7% of New Jersey's land area—and serves over 17.8 million annual visitors.
The museum has three exhibit rooms and a sales area. A video production, Morristown: Where America Survived (New Jersey Network, 2009) is shown. The Ford Mansion is shown only by guided tour, which begins in the museum. The New Jersey Brigade Encampment Site is located south of Jockey Hollow in Bernardsville in Somerset County.
Two of the three members of the Sleepy Hollow Project, Gina Carey and Megan Isenstadt, which created the Sleepy Hollow Mermaid Festival, give a tour of the beach at Kingsland Point Park where ...
Cross Estate Gardens, containing both formal and native plant gardens, is located at 61 Jockey Hollow Road in the borough of Bernardsville in Somerset County, New Jersey. It is part of the New Jersey Brigade Encampment Site of the Morristown National Historical Park. [1] The property was acquired in 1975 by the National Park Service. [2]
The main character of Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is named Ichabod Crane. While Washington Irving did not expressly admit that the character is named after Colonel Crane, the two men had met in 1814 at Fort Pike located on Lake Ontario in Sackets Harbor, New York.
Jockey Hollow is the name of an area in southern Morris County, New Jersey, which was farmed in the 18th century by the Wick, Guerin, and Kemble families. The origin of the name is still uncertain, but it was a farming property during the American Revolution .