This form was used to keep track of each railroad car as it was in each depot, loading, unloading plus the cause for any delay. Reports sent daily to both headquarters and division offices.
Newspaper clipping relates an early history of the fresh milk dairy industry. Believe written by Edward Harold Mott, famed author of “Between the Ocean and the Lakes; The Story of Erie.”
Stone buildings; Doors & doorways; Women; Buildings; Pitchers;
"The Bevier-Elting House began as the one-room home of Louis and Marie Bevier, and its orientation to the street is reminiscent of northern European town architecture. Louis' son Samuel inherited the house in 1720 and enlarged it in two phases...
Stone buildings; Doors & doorways; Women; Buildings; Pitchers;
"The Bevier-Elting House began as the one-room home of Louis and Marie Bevier, and its orientation to the street is reminiscent of northern European town architecture. Louis' son Samuel inherited the house in 1720 and enlarged it in two phases...
A letter to Rachel from her father, written while he waits for his connecting train to Detroit, enroute to Davenport, Iowa. He will be stopping with family or friends along the way. Although he has had a chance to see Niagara Falls, he wasn’t...
The Clarksville Inn Historical marker. This historic Inn built by Thomas Warner in 1840 was a stopping place for stage coaches and travelers to and from the Port of Nyack. It was a center of social life for more than a century and the scene of...
Dedication of the Historical maker for the Clarksville Inn. The people in the picture are all dressed in historical costumes. This historic Inn built by Thomas Warner in 1840 was a stopping place for stage coaches and travelers to and from the...
The Clarksville Inn historical marker: Clarksville: This historic Inn built by Thomas Warner in 1840 was a stopping place for stage coaches and travelers to and from the Port of Nyack. It was a center of social life for more than a century and...
The Hotel St. George was the destination in Nyack in 1910. Only 28 miles from New York City, it was a stopping place for automobilists. Fine meals were served, a la carte, cuisine francaise. Felix Fieger was the proprietor.
The two-story brick Lenox Hotel faced Burd Street, one block south of Main Street in Nyack. The writer of the card covered travels and politics in a few words, "Hello Duke - On my way back from Montreal, stopping in this town tonight, 25 miles...