This small neat sandstone house has a gambrel roof and a front porch that does not cover the front of the house. The lower story front has large shuttered windows.
This photo is very fuzzy and does not show the graceful lines of this gambrel-roofed sandstone house. An interesting feature are the brick lintels for the door and front windows.
On the left, the Harmony Music Center occupied a house slated to be removed for Urban Renewal. Pictured is the area on the north side of Burd Street, between Liberty Street and Franklin Avenue. The area is now a parking lot and the back of the...
Spectators gasp in amazement as folk singer Pete Seeger does the Lindy in Memorial Park. This was the first Nyack fund raiser for the sloop "Clearwater."
Nyack Brook passes in front of businesses in upper Main Street. For most of its journey through the Village of Nyack, the brook is either behind buildings or underground, but it does occasionally surface.
On a Nyack stage is a gathering of historical figures, Native Americans and cowboys, miners and businessmen, an African-American and Lady Liberty. The huge flag in the background has 44 stars. This may be the stage in the old Liberty Street School...
Carroll Scott Waldron at Work
A great deal of mystery and legend surrounds the life of Carroll Scott Waldron (1837-1921). His self-styled biography, for example, announces that he was born in a log cabin in Henderson County, Illinois. Carroll...
When built in the nineteenth century, this house was a residence, far from the center of Nyack. In the late twentieth century, it was a florist's shop and was surrounded by strip malls. It does appear - clearly - on the 1884 Burleigh map, "Nyack on...
Gene Brown, author of Birds over Bear Mountain and a life-long resident of Upper Nyack, talks about his childhood, his education at the Upper Nyack School and the games and recreational activities children played in the Van Houten's Landing...
This beautiful scene does not appear to be specifically Nyack, but was one of a series of postcards produced to feature the beauty of the Hudson Valley region. The card required a one-cent stamp.
This beautiful scene does not appear to be specifically Nyack, but was one of a series of postcards produced to feature the beauty of the Hudson Valley region. The card required a one-cent stamp.
This beautiful scene does not appear to be specifically Nyack, but was one of a series of postcards produced to feature the beauty of the Hudson Valley region. The card required a one-cent stamp.
This beautiful scene does not appear to be specifically Nyack, but was one of a series of postcards produced to feature the beauty of the Hudson Valley region. The card required a one-cent stamp.
This beautiful scene does not appear to be specifically Nyack, but was one of a series of postcards produced to feature the beauty of the Hudson Valley region. The card required a one-cent stamp.