Two photographs of the Flood of 1903. The first photograph is of four men in a canoe looking towards Ramapo Village. The second photograph is of Hillburn Bridge.
The roof was raised in the front of this sandstone to create the three-windowed dormer. There are two center front doors, probably leading into different rooms. An addition is hidden by a tree.
Only a part of the Cornelius Smith house is visible in this picture. The center portion is sandstone. On both the left and the right are wood frame sections of the residence.
A farmer, his wife, and his horse are in the center of the photo. A foal is nearby. In the background is another woman and a flock of sheep. Two dogs complete the scene.
Abe Stern peers out of his convertible coupe and his hound appears just behind him. He is identified as a Spring Valley policeman and the chief of the Ramapo police in the 1930's.
The scene - a young girl standing by a stone pillar and an early automobile chugging up the dirt lane - is much older than the 1940 postmark on the card. Vanderbilt Waldron ran a general store in Sloatsburg in the 1920s.
In this nineteenth century view, three women (two with bicycles) pose outside of Coe's Tavern in Kakiat, across from the English Church. This is the intersection of Route 45 and New Hempstead Road. A well is on the right. The tavern was removed in...
This unusual house, built on a hilltop in the Wesley Hills area of Rockland County, resembles an Egyptian temple.When the house was built in 1915, it was called the Temple of Luxor. The first owner, Joseph M. Goldberg, was influenced by Egyptian...
Maggie and Gilbert Pitt sit in the sunlight outside their log cabin in the Ramapo Mountains.Their cabin was located in the present Harriman State Park.