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African-American recruits at Manhattan Beach Coast Guard Training Station, ca. 1941 - ca. 1945. It was developed in the last quarter of the 19th century as a resort by Austin Corbin, later president of the Long Island Rail Road, for whom the street Corbin Place, which marks the boundary between Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach, was named. [4]
In 1900, the bank acquired the National Union Bank of New York which had been founded in 1893 by the directors of the New York Guaranty and Indemnity Company and its successor, the Guaranty Trust, and was associated with the Mutual Life Insurance Company (Mutual Life's president, Richard A. McCurdy, was a director of National Union).
The National Title Guaranty Company Building is located at 185 Montague Street in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City, New York. [2] It occupies a narrow land lot near the western end of the block bounded by Court Street to the east, Montague Street to the south, Clinton Street to the west, and Pierrepont Street to the north. [3]
The Texas Department of Banking issued a charter to Guaranty State Bank on January 20, 1913. [11] [14] The bank's name changed to Guaranty Bond State Bank in 1927.[11]In 1979, the bank added trust powers.The following year, [11] Guaranty created Guaranty Bancshares Inc., its holding company. [11]
The West Side Yard (officially the John D. Caemmerer West Side Yard) is a rail yard of 30 tracks owned by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority on the west side of Manhattan in New York City. Used to store commuter rail trains operated by the subsidiary Long Island Rail Road, the 26.17-acre (10.59 ha) yard sits between West 30th Street ...
The New York, Bay Ridge and Jamaica Railroad, New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad, and Long Island City and Manhattan Beach Railroad merged on August 27, 1885 to form the New York, Brooklyn and Manhattan Beach Railway. [4] This company was merged into the LIRR on June 19, 1925, [35] and the Glendale and East River Railroad was absorbed in 1928.
The store was slightly renovated, and re-opened as a Bloomingdale's in 1995. The Bloomingdale's store at Roosevelt Field had a major renovation, which was finished by the summer of 2009. A 1957 picture of Macy's at Roosevelt Field by the Long Island Lighting Company. The former Gimbels anchor was a Stern's between 1987 and 2001.
Franklin Square is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in the Town of Hempstead in Nassau County, on Long Island, New York, United States. The population was 30,903 at the time of the 2020 census. The area was originally known as Trimming Square [2] and then as Washington Square after President George Washington.