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The castle, clearly visible from the shore of the river, served as a giant advertisement for his business. On the side of the castle facing the western bank of the Hudson, Bannerman cast the legend "Bannerman's Island Arsenal" into the wall. [2] [3] Bannerman's Island Arsenal, signage is below the crenellations at the top.
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Bannerman's Castle, also known as Bannerman's Island Arsenal, Hudson River, Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, built 1901–18. The structure was built as a military surplus warehouse in the style of a Romanesque castle by businessman Francis Bannerman. An explosion in 1920 destroyed a portion of the complex.
The Bannerman Castle on Pollepel Island viewed from atop Breakneck Ridge. The Hudson River in New York and New Jersey is full of islands, though some have been filled in to connect to the shore. Some of the islands have the Hudson on one side and have another river or creek on the other side.
Francis Bannerman VI (1851–1918), Irish-American Businessman, built Bannerman's Castle on Pollepel Island; Helen Bannerman (1862–1946), British writer, author of Little Black Sambo; Hugh Bannerman (1887–1917), New Zealand cricketer, journalist and soldier; Ian Bannerman, Australian actor who portrayed Deadly Earnest on TEN-10 from 1966 to ...
Boldt Castle is a major landmark and tourist attraction in the Thousand Islands region of the U.S. state of New York. Open to guests seasonally between mid-May and mid-October, it is located on Heart Island in the Saint Lawrence River .
Bannerman (surname) Bannerman, a San Francisco-based, technology enabled, security guard company. Bannerman, a loose translation of hatamoto, a direct vassal of the Tokugawa shogunate in Japan; A man who belonged to the Eight Banners of the Qing Dynasty; An alternative name of Manchu people
Caird died at his Perthshire estate, Belmont Castle near Meigle, which he had purchased after the death of its previous owner Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. [4] The baronetcy became extinct upon his death. He is buried with his father in Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh just west of the central roundel, under a modest stone. [citation needed].