A low house has a two-part stairway leading to a stone wall and the Hudson River. Beyond are a boathouse and dock. There is little that would help to determine the exact location of the scene.
A pleasure craft and a barge are tied up at the foot of Burd Street in Nyack. The dock was the property of the North River Steam Ship Company. The sloop was the "Spray," in which Joshua Slocum sailed alone around the world. The letters PRAY are...
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.
At Nyack's Memorial Park, remains of former Hudson River activities line the waterfront. Close in are the timbers of an old dock. Further out is a concrete barge, once used on the Erie Canal, which seems out of place on the Nyack waterfront. The...
At the foot of Main Street in Nyack, cars emerge from the ferry at the dock, while two rows of automobiles wait to roll onto the Tarrytown-bound boat. A billboard on the left advertises "Champion Dependable Spark Plugs.' On the right are signs...
Boats fill the water and the dock is crowded with onlookers: women in long dresses and wide-brimmed hats, men in suits and hats. It's a windy day. This was a Decoration day event.The Tappan Zee Yacht was on Piermont Avenue in Grand View. The...
Crumbie's Beach in Upper Nyack, with Hook Mountain in the background, had a wide expanse of sand and gravel at low tide. At the base of the mountain is the quarry dock where crushed stone was loaded onto boats.
Fifteen workingmen, all in hats and some holding tools, pose in front of a large steam engine at the people's dock in Nyack. A large pile of firewood is to the left of the huge engine.
Fisherman and author Ray Bergman poses on a wooden dock with his rod and reel and a large-mouthed fish. Bergman was born in Nyack in 1891 and died in 1966. He wrote for "Outdoor Life" magazine and was the author of several books on fishing. "Trout"...
From the public dock at Clermont Condos in Nyack, one sees abandoned pilings, the dock of Nyack Boat Club, the apartments at 101 Gedney Street and the Rivercrest Condominiums. In the distance is Hook Mountain.
Halfway up the steep slope of Hook Mountain in Upper Nyack are the buildings of the quarrying business. Below is a house. At the water's edge in the foreground is a dock. In the background is a large pier where ships can load the stone.
Hook Mountain is in the distance, with the dock for the stone crushing operation beneath it. Another dock - probably a private one - is in the middle distance. The photograph was taken when the tide in the Hudson River was low.
Hook Mountain is viewed from a dock at Rivercrest on Gedney Street in Nyack. Peterson's Boatyard, an Upper Nyack business, is directly in front of the mountain.
In 1960, this industrial area of Nyack was the site for a proposed apartment complex. The West Shore Apartments on Gedney Street were built between Ackerman Lane and Second Avenue. Rivercrest was built on site of the Graney dock, pictured in...
In this very dark copy of a photograph can be seen a large bent line in the air, a waterspout. It occurred at "The Moorings" dock in Upper Nyack, then owned by Joseph Hilton.
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.