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WNYR-FM (98.5 MHz) is an adult contemporary music formatted radio station in Waterloo/Geneva, New York. Along with the music, though they also provide Finger Lakes News and events information both through their website and on through the radio. They broadcast throughout the Finger Lakes.
Van Alstyne Homestead is a historic home located at Canajoharie in Montgomery County, New York. It is a long, low rectangular house with a steeply pitched gambrel roof in the Dutch Colonial style. The original fieldstone house was built before 1730 and has three rooms (loft, living area, kitchen cellar) with a garret under the roof.
James Russell Webster House is a historic home located at Waterloo in Seneca County, New York.It is a temple front Greek Revival style residence. When built in 1850-1855 it featured a two-story, three-bay, side hall main block flanked by two symmetrical one story, three-bay center hall wings.
Seneca Meadows – New York State's largest active landfill; Serven – A location overlapping the portions of Border City and East Geneva northeast of the Northern Terminus of 96A. Extends between 96A and Packwood Road along US-20/NY-5. Waterloo – The Village of Waterloo on US-20/NY-5, at the southern town line, partly in the Town of Fayette.
The '76 House, also known as the Old '76 House, is a Colonial-era structure built as a home and tavern in Tappan, New York, in 1754 by Casparus Mabie, a merchant and tavern-keeper. History [ edit ]
The tavern closed in 1832 and was reborn as the Bird and Bottle in 1940. The "Bird" part of the Inn's name is a reference to the wild pheasant that were prevalent in the area. Later in the 60s, the Bird and Bottle was purchased by Skitch Henderson , Johnny Carson’s band leader.
Richardson's Tavern is a historic Erie Canal inn and tavern located in the hamlet of Bushnell's Basin in Perinton, Monroe County, New York.Believed to be the only remaining establishment from the canal's earliest years, [2] it dates to about 1818 when it was a stop on the stage coach route along the Irondequoit Valley and Irondequoit Creek, between Rochester and Canandaigua. [3]
Walling Cobblestone Tavern is a historic tavern located at Sodus in Wayne County, New York. The Federal style, cobblestone building is a two-story, five-bay, gable roofed structure. It was built about 1834 and is constructed of irregularly shaped, multi-colored, field cobbles. It is now a single-family dwelling.