Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Warwick is a town in the southwestern part of Orange County, New York, United States. Its population was 32,027 at the 2020 census . The town contains three villages ( Florida , Greenwood Lake , and Warwick ) and eight hamlets ( Amity , Bellvale , Edenville, Little York, Wisner, New Milford, Pine Island , and Sterling Forest ).
MapQuest (stylized as mapquest) is an American free online web mapping service. It was launched in 1996 as the first commercial web mapping service. [1] MapQuest's competitors include Apple Maps, Here, and Google Maps. [2] [3]
Version 2.0 of Google Maps Mobile was announced at the end of 2007, with a stand out My Location feature to find the user's location using the cell towers, without needing GPS. [201] [202] [203] In September 2008, Google Maps was released for and preloaded on Google's own new platform Android. [204] [205]
MapQuest offers online, mobile, business and developer solutions that help people discover and explore where they would like to go, how to get there and what to do along the way and at your destination.
They eventually began growing the pungent, highly prized black dirt onion on the land, taking advantage of the relative proximity of New York City as a market. By the late 20th century, the region produced an average of 30,000 lb/acre of onion (3.4 kg/m 2). Today, due to changing popular tastes in onions and different economic realities, that ...
Greenwood Lake is an interstate lake approximately seven miles (11 km) long, straddling the border of New York and New Jersey. It is located in the Town of Warwick and the Village of Greenwood Lake, New York (in Orange County) and West Milford, New Jersey (in Passaic County). It is the source of the Wanaque River.
The Warwick Valley Railroad was organized March 8, 1860, by a group of local dairymen and business owners led by Grinnell Burt (1822–1901) as a means of connecting the mainline of the New York and Erie Rail Road at Greycourt, New York, southwest to Warwick, New York. It opened in 1862 and was operated as a branch of the broad-gauged Erie.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 2.2 sq mi (5.7 km 2), all land. The former Warwick Lehigh and Hudson River Railway station. NY 94 and NY 17A intersect in the center of the village and connect Warwick to the villages of Florida and Greenwood Lake. County Routes 1A, 1B, and 13 lead into the village also.