This view of the grounds of Trinity School shows the extent of the operation. At its height, the facility included a gymnasium, barn, steam laundry, orchard, garden and vineyard on its ten acre site. James Starr Clark saw to it that the...
Chester produce was often sold in New York City by wholesalers for local farmers on a commission basis. This statement on an illustrated billhead documents one such transaction.
Church schools; Churches; Clippings;Cycling; Farm life; Floods; Homicides; War;
Newspaper clipping with stories of the first one hundred years of the Chester Presbyterian Church and its ministers. Clipping also includes other short unrelated articles of local interest.
A wide Main Street is crowded with businesses but not with traffic. On the left side two signs can be read, Fabbrini Fruits and Schmitts Candy and Ice Cream.
Postcards; Indians of North America; Celebrations;
The Hudson Fulton Celebration Commission Official Post Card No. 9 depicted a Native American ceremony for the summer, known as the Season of Fruits. Two important crops were celebrated by the festivals "Ha-men-da-yo," or the Berry Festival, and...
For the 1912 Columbus Day celebration, Main Street in Nyack is ablaze with lights and festooned with banners and flags.Two business signs can be read: Schmitt's Candy and Ice Cream and Fabbrini Fruits.
Two men in ties, vests, and white aprons face the camera. In front of them and behind them are neat displays of fruits, vegetables, and canned goods. Asparagus is standing upright, wrapped in white paper. The store was at 81 Main Street.
The interior of Ferrera and Boasi's Market is filled with fruits and vegetables in bins and baskets, with canned goods on shelves. Bananas are hanging in the rear. Facing the camera are Mary Ferrera, her son Anthony, Virginia Boasi and John Boasi.
An early morning in Nyack - carriages and horses and several groups of men are arrayed along the street. Several businesses can be clearly identified: G. Krueger, Fabbrini Fruits, and Schmitt's Candy and Ice Cream. In front of Fabbrini's is a...