The Nyack Boat Club clubhouse is pictured through masts and sheets. It has a wide open porch and a model lighthouse on the roof at the left. A number of signal flags are hung on the porch.
This postcard may be a collage. On an impossibly still Hudson River are a steamboat and a sail boat. The Rowing Association building and other buildings hug the shoreline. Hook Mountain looms in the distance.
An image of the river portion of the Nyack Boat Club showing sailboats moored in the river, a dock where small boats are tied up, and a number of boats hauled out on land and covered over.
In 1881, the Nyack Rowing Association held its first promenade concert in aid of the boat fund. The event was help on a Thursday evening at Voorhis Hall.
The ornate, red-roofed Hunter Club Boat House was an imposing presence on Nyack's waterfront for over 50 years. It was also known as the Nyack Rowing Association and Petersen's Boat Yard.
The two-story Piermont Boat Club had a tall tower over the front porch and balcony. It was located on the Hudson River, north of the village. Two men stand on the porch and boats are lined up on the side. The stone Onderdonk House is in the rear.
This is a photograph of a drawing by J. O. Davidson, from a photograph by Van Wagner. The boat-house must have just opened, as it is festooned with flags and filled with spectators gazing out the array of boats on the Hudson River.
Most of our pictures of this building, housing the Nyack Rowing Association, were taken from the south side. This one was taken from the north. A number of men stand on the dock and the balcony.
This view of the Nyack Rowing Association was taken from the south, through a screen of leaves. It was constructed just south of Burd Street and extended into the Hudson River. When it opened in 1882, it provided members with boat storage, smoking...
Nyack Mayor Terry Hekker speaks at the 1997 Opening Day Ceremony of the Nyack Boat Club. Present and former commodores of the club are lined up, wearing white caps. John Ruiz is the fifth from the left.
This large house on the Hudson River was the perfect location for a sailing organization. Perched on a slope above the river, the porches and bay windows afforded delightful views of the sail boats and other craft on the water. In 1914 the Nyack...
This painted brick house has interesting roof elements. There is no history available but it is now the Nyack Boat Club, a sailing organization. It may be connected to the old Nyack Rowing Club. It is on the 1884 Burleigh map, "Nyack on the...
This waterfront image (photocopy of a postcard) shows the long dock and steep stairway of the Nyack Boat Club, which is one of the oldest sailing clubs on the Hudson River. The house that is the clubhouse is just visible in the trees. In the...
The Nyack Rowing Association was one of the finest club houses along the hudson, erected at a cost of over $10,000 when it opened in 1882. It was the scene of many social events. The lower floor was for the storage of boats, etc. On the second...