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This category includes articles related to the culture and history of Armenian Americans in New York City. Pages in category "Armenian-American culture in New York City" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
The Manhattan address algorithm is a series of formulas used to estimate the closest east–west cross street for building numbers on north–south avenues in the New York City borough of Manhattan. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Holy Cross Armenian Apostolic Church is a significant Armenian Apostolic Church in Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York City at 580 West 187th Street. It occupies the former second location of the Lutheran church of The Lutheran Church of Our Saviour, established in 1897 as a mission church of St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church and built in its second location at West 187th Street.
Beyond the national headquarters of the ANCA located in Washington, there are two regional offices in New York City and Los Angeles, and more than fifty local chapters and thousands of activists, [2] it is cooperating with a large web of regional Armenian National Committees (or Armenian Cause/Hay Tad Offices) in Armenia, Russia, France, the ...
With the onset of World War II, headquarters were moved to New York City, New York. With an annual international budget of over $47 million, [ 1 ] AGBU preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through educational , cultural and humanitarian programs, annually serving some 500,000 Armenians in over 30 countries.
Other states with significant number of Armenian-speakers were New York (8,575) and Massachusetts (8,091). [42] [124] About 2/3 of Armenians speakers call Los Angeles County home. [50] The 2009–2013 American Community Survey estimates put the number of Armenian-speakers at 237,840. [131]
Services were initially conducted at the Adams Memorial Presbyterian Church, but in 1923, a building originally planned as a bank on 34th Street, its current location, was acquired. [2] Rev. Antranig Bedikian served the church for nearly 40 years (1915-1953). It is a member church of the Armenian Evangelical Union of North America.
In 1939 the organization launched its official publication the ARS Quarterly, which later became Hye Sird, and officially changed its name to the Armenian Relief Society. The relatively stable and self-sufficient state of Armenian communities, achieved during the third decade of the ARS, was again shaken, this time by the outbreak of the Second ...