Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dwight has an off-campus sport facility called the Dwight School Athletic Center, or DSAC, for short. DSAC is located on 109th street on the Upper East Side/Harlem. DSAC is equipped with a full-sized swimming pool, a full sized basketball and volleyball court, a smaller weight-lifting room, and has turf on the roof for soccer.
The Historical Society on 11th Street in the late 19th century. The Historical Society was founded on November 20, 1804, largely through the efforts of John Pintard. [12] He was for some years secretary of the American Academy of Fine Arts, as well as the founder of New York's first savings bank.
Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School; Dwight School; French-American School of New York in Scarsdale, Larchmont, and Mamaroneck, New York; Garden School in Jackson Heights, Queens; Little Red School House and Elisabeth Irwin High School; Loyola School; Lycée Français de New York; Rudolf Steiner School; St. Hilda's & St. Hughes; Trevor Day ...
89th Street is a one-way street running westbound from the East River to Riverside Drive, overlooking the Hudson River, in the New York City borough of Manhattan. The street is interrupted by Central Park. It runs through the Upper West Side, Carnegie Hill and Yorkville neighborhoods.
Historical society museums in New York City (9 P) Pages in category "Historical societies in New York City" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
Dwight F. Davis – Olympic tennis player; three-time U.S. Open doubles champion; founder of the Davis Cup; International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee [2] [5] [7] W. Palmer Dixon – two-time winner of national squash championship (1925, 1926) [27] Matt Freese – professional soccer player with the New York City FC
The Fort Washington Avenue Armory, also known as the Fort Washington Armory, The Armory, and the 22nd Regiment Armory, is a historic 5,000-seat arena [3] and armory building located at 216 Fort Washington Avenue, between West 168th and 169th Streets, in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.
Louise Mirrer is an American historian who is president and CEO of the New-York Historical Society. [1] Under Mirrer’s direction, the New-York Historical Society has launched a series of exhibitions, including Slavery in New York; New York Divided: Slavery and the Civil War; A New Light on Tiffany: Clara Driscoll and the Tiffany Girls; French Founding Father: Lafayette’s Return to ...