A business card for De Louie Tice, a store in Ellenville on Canal Street. Their main selling point is their gold watch cases. Archival notes written in pencil on upper left and right corners of the front.
The explosion at the Nyack Aniline Dye Company in January 1919 practically demolished the entire factory complex. The skeletonised structure is surrounded by piles of bricks thrown out by the force of the blast. Photo made from a John Scott slide.
Astrith Deyrup talks about her family and life in Upper Nyack and New York City. Astrith's father, Alvin S. Johnson was the 1st President of the New School for Social research in Manhattan. Her sister Felicia was a prominent artist. Both she and...
This mansard-roofed Victorian house was once the home of writer Carson McCullers. The house is practically surrounded by porches and there's hardly a surface that doesn't have a friendly bay window.
Discussion includes hobo activity in the 1920s, attending the circus; the Mary Powell steamboat; steamboat trips to New York City; family picnics at Kingston Point Park