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Huguenot Church, early 20th century. Huguenot is a neighborhood on the South Shore of Staten Island, New York City.Originally named "Bloomingview", it was later named for the Huguenots, led by Daniel Perrin, who settled in the area during the late 17th and early 18th centuries to escape religious persecution.
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Daniel Perrin (1642–1719) was one of the first permanent European inhabitants of Staten Island, New York. Known as "The Huguenot", he arrived in New York Harbor from the Isle of Jersey on July 29, 1665, aboard the ship Philip, under the command of Philip Carteret. He lived in Elizabethtown, part of the Elizabethtown Tract (now Elizabeth, New ...
Huguenot, New York may refer to: Huguenot, Orange County, New York , a hamlet in the town of Deerpark Huguenot, Staten Island , a neighborhood in Staten Island
The station is located on an open cut at Huguenot Avenue and has two side platforms.There is a steel and concrete canopy over the platforms at the stairs and an additional canopy is located about halfway down the northbound platform, [6] features used as part of SIR station upgrades and platform extensions in the 1990s.
As an integral artery of Staten Island, Hylan Boulevard is a commercial corridor and a heavily trafficked roadway. At the northernmost end is Buono Beach, a small park with views of New York Harbor, as well as the Alice Austen House (address: 2 Hylan Blvd.), the historical home of native Island photographer Alice Austen and one of the few remaining Dutch Colonial structures on the Island.
The ZIP Code 10314, which covers much of the Mid-Island area has the largest percentage of Asians of any ZIP Code on Staten Island, at 13.3% Non-hispanic Asian. [ 2 ] The Mid-Island region's character was transformed dramatically in 1973, when the Staten Island Mall opened in New Springville, on a site that was originally used as an airport .
The house's Franklin stove. The cottage is a two-story wood-frame saltbox structure.It began as a simple building 16 feet (4.9 m) wide and 31 feet (9.4 m) deep. In 1804, an additional 18 by 23 feet (5.5 by 7.0 m) wing with a porch was constructed.