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Verona Beach State Park is a 1,735-acre (7.02 km 2) state park [2] located on the eastern shore of Oneida Lake in the Town of Verona, Oneida County, New York. The park is located on NY 13 northwest of the City of Oneida and south of Sylvan Beach. Oneida Creek enters the Oneida Lake south of the park.
In the 1950s, Sandy Island Beach was opened as a private beach resort by LeGrande and Eva Smith. The resort became very popular. As Jack Major described it, "Overnight, Sandy Pond Beach – renamed Sandy Island Beach – became the place to go". [8] Ed Wyroba recalled that, through the 1960s, "it was the hottest spot on the shoreline.
Taberg–Lee Center, Stokes, Westernville, Gifford Hill, South Hill, Floyd–Steuben, Fuller, Francis and Starr Hill roads CR 72A in Remsen: Split into four segments by three state and locally-maintained sections [fn 3] CR 54: 4.39 7.07 NY 13: Oneida Street and Jug Point Road in Verona: NY 46: CR 54A: 3.25 5.23 CR 80 at the Sylvan Beach village ...
Verona Beach is a hamlet in Oneida County, New York, United States. The community is located along the eastern shore of Oneida Lake and New York State Route 13; the Erie Canal separates the community from neighboring Sylvan Beach. Verona Beach has a post office with ZIP code 13162. [2] [3] Verona Beach State Park is located in the community. [4]
Get the Verona Beach, NY local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Sandy Pond Beach Unique Area IUCN category Ib (wilderness area) South-facing view of the dunes along the Lake Ontario shore at Sandy Pond Beach in spring 2009. Sandy Pond Beach Unique Area Location of Sandy Pond Beach Location Oswego County, New York, USA Nearest city Oswego, New York Coordinates 43°39′36″N 76°11′46″W / 43.66°N 76.196°W / 43.66; -76.196 Area 76 acres ...
Verona (called Te-o-na-ta-le, "pine forest" by the Haudenosaunee [3]) is a town in southwestern Oneida County, New York, United States. The population was 6,293 at the 2010 census. The population was 6,293 at the 2010 census.
Besides sunbathing, the primary recreational activities are fishing, bird-watching and beach walks. Visitors can also take a nature walk on trails through a successional maritime forest behind the beach. An observation deck at one of two old military batteries at the park offers sweeping views of New York Harbor. [2] Gerritsen Beach, Brooklyn