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The Hartman Stock Farm Historic District was a historic district in Columbus, Ohio. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places from 1974 to 2022. [1] [2] The district is the site of Hartman Farm, a 5,000-acre farm founded by Samuel B. Hartman in 1903.
Sailors' Snug Harbor, also known as Sailors Snug Harbor and informally as Snug Harbor, is a collection of architecturally significant 19th-century buildings on Staten Island, New York City. The buildings are set in an 83-acre (34 ha) park along the Kill Van Kull in New Brighton , on the North Shore of Staten Island. [ 4 ]
Snug Harbor Restuarant operating partners Jeff Yaniak and Bryan Carey pose in front of a bar at Snug Harbor. Snug Harbor is currently open 5-9 p.m. Friday, 12-9 p.m. Saturday and 11:30 a.m. to 8 p ...
Hartman Stock Farm Historic District: Hartman Stock Farm Historic District. October 9, 1974 (#74001492) February 10, 2022: South of downtown Columbus on U.S. Route 23
Snug Harbor can refer to: Snug Harbor (jazz club) Sailors' Snug Harbor, former home for seamen on Staten Island; Sailors Snug Harbor of Boston, former home for seamen in Boston; Snug Harbour, a community in Carling, Ontario; Snug Harbour, a former community near Norman's Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador; Snug Harbor 18, an American sailboat design
The last of nearly 100 tanker truckloads of treated sanitary sewer waste were applied May 7 to the soil of the historic, 122-acre Hickory Bluff Farms tucked just inside the northwest corner of ...
As a sailor, himself, Captain Randall understood the difficulty of life as a sailor. Upon his death in 1801, Randall's will, drawn by Alexander Hamilton, directed an array of political, religious, and civic leaders in the city with the task of erecting an "Asylum or Marine Hospital, to be called the Sailors' Snug Harbor for the purpose of maintaining and supporting aged, decrepit, and worn-out ...
Darby Dan Farm is a produce, livestock, and thoroughbred horse breeding and training farm founded in 1935 near the Darby Creek in Galloway, Ohio by businessman John W. Galbreath. [1] Named for the creek and for Galbreath's son, Daniel M. Galbreath (1928–1995), it was expanded from an original 85-acre (340,000 m 2 ) farm into a 4,000 acre (16 ...