Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1800s–1840s. 1802 – Episcopal Church (Northfield) built. ... McNally & Co.'s Handy Guide to New York City, Brooklyn, Staten Island, and other districts included ...
From 1800 to 1858, Staten Island was the location of the largest quarantine facility in the United States. Angry residents burned down the hospital compound in 1858 in a series of attacks known as the Staten Island Quarantine War. [35] In 1860, parts of Castleton and Southfield were made into a new town, Middletown. The Village of New Brighton ...
The Staten Island Quarantine War was a series of attacks on the New York Marine Hospital in Staten Island—known as "the ... and the first patients arrived in 1800. [2]
Eltingville Store/Print Shop, c.1860, relocated from Eltingville [1] The Britton Cottage, c. 1670 with additions c. 1755, 1765, 1800. Relocated from New Dorp. [1] Historic Richmond Town is a town and farm museum complex in the neighborhood of Richmondtown, Staten Island, in New York City.
Richmondtown, Staten Island: 1700 Tysen-Neville House: New Brighton, Staten Island: 1700 John Wood House: Huntington Station, Long Island: 1704 Built by a Dutch merchant then remodeled in the Gothic Revival Style in 1844 Mabee House: Rotterdam: 1705 The oldest house in the Mohawk Valley Jan Van Loon House: Village of Athens: 1706
Staten Island Historical Society is an organization devoted to the history of Staten Island and its neighboring communities, from the colonial period to the present day. The Society operates and interpreting Historic Richmond Town , the largest and most comprehensive historic village in New York City .
Richard Adams Locke (1800–1871) – editor of The New York Sun; presumed author of the "Great Moon Hoax"; lived on Staten Island Laurence Manning (1899–1972) – science fiction author Edwin Markham (1852–1940) – poet, school administrator, namesake of Markham Intermediate School (I.S. 51)
From 1800 to 1858, Staten Island was the location of the largest quarantine facility in the United States. Angry residents burned down the hospital compound in 1858 in a series of attacks known as the Staten Island Quarantine War. Although there were no deaths as a result of the attack, the arsonists completely destroyed the hospital compound. [9]