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List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Suffolk County, New York. This list is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Register of Historic Places in Suffolk County, New York. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 29, 2024. [1]
Buildings, sites, districts, and objects in New York listed on the National Register of Historic Places: There are over 6,000 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in New York State. Some are listed within each one of the 62 counties in New York State.
1893 home of "Sugar King of Brooklyn" is excellent example of Shingle style estate 13: Jacob Ockers House: Jacob Ockers House: July 10, 1992 : 965 Montauk Highway: Oakdale: 14: Priscilla (Long Island Sound Oyster Sloop)
Huntington, Long Island: c. 1750 Ireland-Gardiner Farm: Greenlawn, Long Island: c. 1750 Isaac Losee House: Huntington, Long Island: c. 1750 One of the oldest private residences on Long Island Henry Smith Farmstead: Huntington Station, Long Island: 1750 Built about 1750 and remodelled in the 1860s Steenburgh Tavern: Rhinebeck: 1750
Historical Society of Islip Hamlet: 4: ISLIP DEPOT: Islip Avenue at Parking Field 9 Islip: South Side Railroad 1867–1876. LIRR acquired 1880. 2nd Track 1908. Station house south side 1868–1950. North 1959. Restored 1997. Historical Society of Islip Hamlet: 5: L.I. MOTOR PARKWAY 1908-1938 [6] 2017: Lakeland Fire Department on Long Island ...
Part of the Long Island campus of St. John's University [57] Burrwood 1898–1899 Carrère and Hastings: Long Island: One of the Gold Coast Mansions, has been torn down more images: Henry W. Poor House (also known as Poor's Palace and Woodland) 1899: Jacobean: T. Henry Randall: Tuxedo Park: Later owned by Henry Morgan Tilford [58] more images ...
Sherwood-Jayne House is a historic home and related buildings located at East Setauket in Suffolk County, New York. The property encompasses a two-story dwelling, as well as five accessory buildings, mature planting, split-rail and picket fences, and other landscape features. The construction dates of the house spans from about 1730 to 1940.
Winfield Hall, like many other Long Island mansions, has ghostlore associated with it. [5] It is said that on the evening of May 2, 1917, as Edna Woolworth Hutton, Frank Woolworth's middle daughter, took her own life at The Plaza Hotel in New York City, while her father was at Winfield Hall hosting a party, a somewhat bizarre and unexplained incident occurred.