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Bethpage State Park is a 1,477-acre (5.98 km 2) New York state park on the border of Nassau County and Suffolk County on Long Island. The park contains tennis courts, picnic and recreational areas and a polo field, but is best known for its five golf courses, including the Bethpage Black Course , which hosted the 2002 and 2009 U.S. Open Golf ...
Bethpage (formerly known as Central Park) is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) located within the Town of Oyster Bay in Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States. The population was 16,658 at the 2020 United States Census .
It begins at a trumpet interchange with the Southern State Parkway in North Massapequa and serves Boundary Avenue, NY 24, and Central Avenue before terminating at a traffic circle with Plainview Road and a local park road in Bethpage State Park. The parkway is designated as New York State Route 907E (NY 907E), an unsigned reference route.
The Bethpage Black Course is a public golf course at Bethpage State Park on Long Island, New York. The course was designed by Joseph H. Burbeck [ 4 ] and was assisted by noted golf architect A. W. Tillinghast .
In the 1930s, the New York State Department of Transportation built the Bethpage State Parkway to help residents of nearby New York City access Long Island parks. In the 1970s, the Department of Transportation built the original 6.8-mile path from the Massapequa Preserve to the Bethpage State Park playground and parking area to connect the preserve and Massapequa. [1]
Bethpage State Park, a park on Long Island with five golf courses, including the Bethpage Black Course, Long Island, hosted the 2002 and 2009 U.S. Open Golf Championships; Bethpage Ballpark, a baseball park in Central Islip, New York that serves as the home of the Long Island Ducks; Bethpage (LIRR station), on the Main Line of the Long Island ...
Trail View State Park is a 454-acre (1.84 km 2) state park located on Long Island on the Nassau–Suffolk county border in New York. The linear park, created in September 2002, runs between Bethpage State Park and Cold Spring Harbor State Park .
On May 20, 1961, a new parkway was proposed by the Long Island State Park Commission to connect the Northern State Parkway to the proposed Caumsett State Park, the site of a wildlife refuge and arboretum. The parkway would be constructed as a northern extension of the Bethpage State Parkway, using filled land to traverse Cold Spring Harbor.