This image, set in the President's office, shows Edward C. Fuller in discussion with a group of students. Dr. Edward C. Fuller, President of Bard from 1947-1950, emphasized student participation in community government. The October 1948 issue of...
The number '10' is mounted on the doorframe of the small gabled house with covered porch. A basket hangs on the house next to the doorway. Above the front entry door is a transom window. The covered porch features decorative brackets at the top of...
A number of men (perhaps firemen) dressed in costumes for the parade honoring the one hundredth anniversary of the Nyack Fire Department. One is in a hula skirt, another in a barrel; most are wearing female garb.
This house/business was for many years the location of Sam's Auto Glass, which was one of the better art supply spots in the county. It has since been any number of ventures, including this as a video store. Today it is a bakery and coffee shop.
James gives thanks that his life was spared in battle and is saddened by the number of men that were left behind at the battle of Chancellorsville. His regiment retreated quickly, but James feels he will be soon be involved in battle again against...
A handwritten letter to the Haverstraw Brick & Clay Co from the Secretary of the Garnerville Railroad written in 1888 in which the brick company is informed that the railroad line will pass over the brick company's land. At the bottom of the page,...
The storefront of this two-story brick building houses a laundromat. Neon lettering along the top of the storefront identify the store as, "Bendix Launder-Rite". Signs are posted in the storefront windows and bags of laundry are inside on the...
This photograph is of a two-level home with a gabled roof, front porch, and a small addition on the right side of the home. The front door is made of wood with long glass panes and displays the house number, '33'. There is a mailbox mounted to the...
Two pine trees grow in the small front yard of this side-gabled home. The clapboard sided house has a front porch the bottom of which is enclosed in siding. The number '36' is affixed to one of the porch pillars. There is a low picket gate at the...
This rambling house on Orchard Street has a number of contrasts: shingles and siding, a traditional dormer and a five-sided dormer, a steep pitched roof and a flat roof. The wide front porch, however, is very inviting.
A sign above the screened front entry door identifies this as a 'Raw Roofing and Sheet Metal Works' company. The first word on the sign is obscured. The telephone number, listed after the company name is '2254'. To the left of the front door,...
This colorful residence has retained a number of its decorative elements. It gleams in the afternoon sun. This appears to be in the 1910 Sanborn Insurance Maps of Nyack, but the house number has been changed.
This compact dwelling on Summit Street is a typical early nineteenth century village house, with a porch and a trio of windows on the second floor. Nyack has a number of these compact and appealing houses.
A snow-covered mountain looms behind these small two-story homes with flat roofs. One house, and the part of another house is across an intersection. On the near side of the intersection, the side of a third house is caught in the photograph. The...
In the late 1800s, a number of similar houses were built for railroad workers and their families on this street which faced the terminus of the railroad in Nyack. This house is very similar to its neighbor, #85 Depot Place, but has vertical boards...