The printed title on this postcard says "Conrwall Savings Bank". The bank can barely be seen, because it is behind the bandstand and to the right of the three-story Mattiessen Hall building.
This three story building was erected in 1870 by the Cornwall Library Building Company at a cost of $28,000 for land and construction. The first floor contained a bank, drug store, and post office; on the second floor were offices, a billiard room...
This elaborate house was owned by Josiah G. Clark who sold it to Mr. Barnet L. Solomon in 1869. It was located at Land's End which is the point of Storm King Mountain on the east where it meets the Hudson River.
This high school is on Willow Avenue. It was one of two high schools in Cornwall and Cornwall-on-Hudson in the 1900s to the 1940s. The building was built in 1906 with three floors and a basement. It was built in the colonial style of red brick...
This is a front view of Idlewilde from across what appears to be a field of corn. Idlewilde was built in 1852 by Nathaniel Parker Willis, a well-known 19th century author.
A Victorian style house originally owned by Mrs. Clementine Talmadge, a daughter of Catherine Sands Ring. The Sands-Ring family was among the earliest settlers in Cornwall.
This house is often called The Sands-Ring Homestead, the oldest house in Cornwall, New York. David Sands was a Quaker and his family was well known in the area.
The last house on the right as you leave Cornwall-on-Hudson on Route 218 (or: Bay View Avenue). Parts of the house date to before the American Revolution.
This fire house is located on Hudson Street in the village of Cornwall-on-Hudson, NY. It was built in 1903 by contractor George Stevenson, Jr. for $4,740.00. The first floor had space for the hose cart and engine. Upstairs there were three rooms...
A view of the Moodna Creek just before it joins the Hudson River, near Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York. There are four men and a rowboat on the south side of the creek. The water is calm, so there is no wind, so the men may be going fishing or just...