Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The center's previous logo Sign at main entrance to museum campus. The Wild Center, formerly known as the Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks, [1] is a natural history center in Tupper Lake, New York, near the center of New York state's Adirondack Park.
The museum offers special events, traditional workshops, demonstrations by artisans-in-residence, and school field trips (free for schools in the Adirondack Park). The museum contains a research library which is accessible year-round; its publication program has produced 65 books of Adirondack history, art histories, and museum catalogs.
Beth Joseph Synagogue is a Jewish congregation and historic synagogue, located in Tupper Lake, Franklin County, New York, in the United States. The synagogue is open only in the summer months; and it houses a small Jewish museum. The congregation has traditionally practiced in the Ashkenazi rite.
The New York Supreme Court ultimately sided with the railroad on September 26, 2017, annulling the rail trail plan. [12] [13] However, in the subsequent Adirondack Park Act, the term "travel corridor" was redefined to include a trail in place of a rail line, reviving the option of a rail trail. [14] The tracks on the 34-mile (55 km) Tupper Lake ...
Adirondack region town and state parks to view the April 8 eclipse. Arrowhead Park- 160 State Route 28, Inlet. Cumberland Bay State Park- 152 Cumberland Head Road, Plattsburgh. Fern Park- 9 Loomis ...
Mount Morris is a 3,117-foot-tall (950 m) mountain located in Adirondack Mountains of New York. It is located in the south-southwest of the village of Tupper Lake in Franklin County, and is "the highest peak immediately east of Tupper Lake." It is named after the town in which it was then located.
Tupper Lake is located in the state of New York in the United States. [1] The lake is in the Adirondack Park and crosses the county lines of St. Lawrence County and Franklin County. Tupper Lake was discovered by Native Americans indigenous to the area around the 16th century. The first European to see it was Ansel Tupper, a land surveyor.
With a 1.1-mile hike gaining 560 feet of elevation from New York Route 30 that provides 360-degree views, Coney Mountain is a popular hiking attraction during the summer and fall and snowshoeing site in the winter. [4] The trail was constructed in 2009 to replace a shorter but much steeper bushwhack to the summit.