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The Montgomery–Grand–Liberty Streets historic district was the first of two to be designated in the city of Newburgh, New York, United States.It runs along the three named north-south streets in the northeast quadrant of the city and includes 250 buildings in its 1,010 acres (4.1 km 2).
Newburgh: 9: Black Walnut Island 2: Black Walnut Island 2: August 12, 2024 : Address Restricted: Pine Island vicinity: Archeological site at area used by local Munsee people as fields and meeting place for several thousand years 10: John Blake House: John Blake House: December 20, 1984 : 924 Homestead Ave.
The Eugene A. Brewster House is a historic house located at 264 Grand Street in Newburgh, New York.Built in 1865, the year Newburgh incorporated as a city, it was designed by English immigrant architect Frederick Clarke Withers for attorney Eugene Augustus Brewster. [2]
The city's phone and email services will be fully restored beginning at 9 a.m. Monday, and offices at City Hall and 123 Grand St. will reopen for point-of-contact business operations at that time.
The City Club, known also as the William Culbert House, is a historic ruin at the corner of Grand and 2nd Streets in Newburgh, New York.Designed in the early 1850s by Calvert Vaux and Andrew Jackson Downing, the house survived Urban Renewal efforts but succumbed to fire in 1981.
The Old Town Cemetery is located in the city of Newburgh, New York, behind Calvary Presbyterian Church on South Street.It was established in 1713 by Palatine German refugees from the Rhineland-Palatinate who were transported from England in 1710 and settled on the site of the present city of Newburgh.
On December 28, 2022, after 50 million dollars in renovations, Resorts World Hudson Valley Casino opened in the Newburgh Mall at the site of the former Bon-Ton department store. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The casino occupies 50 thousand square feet, and features over 1200 slot machines and video lottery terminals (only the ninth official video lottery ...
The district is roughly bounded by Robinson Avenue to the west, Water Street and Bay View Terrace on the east, Monument and Renwick streets to the south and LeRoy Place and Broadway to the north. This area of Newburgh, combined with the other district, represents the core of the settled city by the end of the 19th century. [2]