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Mead House is a historic home located at Galway in Saratoga County, New York. It was built about 1825 and is a 2-story, five-by-two-bay timber framed residence. It has a rectangular main block with an attached 2-story gable-roofed wing and 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story kitchen wing. It center hall plan with vernacular Federal-style interior decoration.
The middle school was built in 1999. The growing population began the expansion of the middle school. A new high school was built in 1952 to replace the previous Galway Union Free School which had served for over half a century. Also, prior to 1952, Galway had many one-room school houses scattered throughout the town, many of which still exist.
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According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.3 square mile (0.7 km 2), all land.. Galway is at the junction of County Road 45 (East Street/West Street) and New York State Route 147 (North Street/South Street) in the central part of the town.
Just in time for Pi Day (March 14), Google revealed a map of the most uniquely searched pies in every state. Do you agree with your state's pick?
Dayton's Corners School; Delphi Village School; District 10 Schoolhouse; District Number 7 School; District School 2 (Coventryville, New York) District School 4 (Coventry, New York) District School No. 3 (Castleton-on-Hudson, New York) District School No. 3 (Chaumont, New York) District School No. 9; District School No. 19; District School No. 20
The demand for her pies led to the formation of the company "Mrs. Smith's Delicious Home Made Pies, Inc." in 1925. [1] There were four Mrs. Smith's Pies bakeries serving the Northeast United States by 1930, including 2 bakeries in Pennsylvania: one in York, and one in the Logan neighborhood of Philadelphia.