Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tipperary Hill Heritage Memorial, dedicated in 1997, [1] is located on Tipperary Hill in Syracuse, New York.The memorial was erected in honor of early citizens who, in the opinion of local residents, were brave sons of Ireland who stood up to City Hall and won the battle of the "Green over Red" traffic light.
Oakwood Cemetery is a 160-acre (65 ha) historic cemetery located in Syracuse, New York.It was designed by Howard Daniels and built in 1859. Oakwood Cemetery was created during a time period in the nineteenth century when the rural cemetery was becoming a distinct landscape type, and is a good example of this kind of landscape architecture.
Bucky Lawless – professional boxer based in Syracuse from the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s; Simon Le Moyne – Jesuit priest who, in 1655, founded a mission known as Sainte Marie de Gannentaha, and for whom Le Moyne College is named; Jermain Loguen – key contributor to the Underground Railroad who helped make Syracuse a leading abolitionist city
Newcomer was born in Mount Joy, Pennsylvania, to Clarence S. and Clara Charles Newcomer.He graduated from Mount Joy High School in 1941. [2]Newcomer entered the V-12 Navy College Training Program, and was a United States Naval Reserve Lieutenant of an amphibious landing craft in the Pacific Theater during World War II, from 1943 to 1946.
Get a daily dose of cute photos of animals like cats, dogs, and more along with animal related news stories for your daily life from AOL.
A house collapsed in Syracuse, New York, on Tuesday, injuring at least 11 people, officials said. Firefighters responded to multiple 911 calls of what sounded like an explosion at a two-story ...
Newcomer may refer to: Newcomer (surname) Newcomer (Lenape), chief of the western Lenape and founder of Newcomerstown, Ohio; Newcomer, Missouri, a community in the ...
As the area was growing rapidly, eight Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia came to Syracuse in March 1860 to teach at Assumption School and St. Joseph's in Utica. Later that year, they became a separate community, the Sisters of St. Francis of Syracuse. Working out of St. Anthony's Convent, they soon began to provide at-home care for the sick.