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The Newburgh History Blog
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Buildings
Alan Crawford

Straightening The Curves of Our Roads: By Alan Crawford (Town of Newburgh Historian)

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Spread the love     As our Town has grown and expanded, various changes were needed. One of the changes many people are not aware of, and know

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Alan Crawford January 9, 2023 No Comments
Cemeteries
Alan Crawford

The John Robinson Cemetery: By Alan Crawford

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Spread the loveI love exploring, looking for details of those long gone, and locating remnants of a previous life. So, when Glenn and I were

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Alan Crawford October 3, 2022 No Comments
The Hazard Boys
Landmarks
Joe Santacroce

The “Acceptable Losses” at Orange Mills (aka Algonquin Park): by Joe Santacroce

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Spread the loveThe Department of Labor was formed in March of 1913. Its purpose was to help workers, job seekers, and retirees by creating standards

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Joe Santacroce February 25, 2022 1 Comment
Broadway
Mary McTamaney

When the Klan Walked Boldly – by Mary McTamaney (Newburgh City Historian)

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Spread the loveWhen the Klan Walked Boldly While my generation and my parents’ can recall how bad things were before equality was more codified in

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Mary McTamaney August 24, 2020 No Comments
Archie and Mary at Airport
Landmarks
Joe Santacroce

Stewart Field: From My Point of View – by Archie Stewart

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Spread the loveThe Brothers Wright made their historic flight at Kitty Hawk in September 1903 some eighteen months after my birth. I cannot recall a

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Joe Santacroce May 4, 2020 No Comments
1856 Balmville Mansion
Buildings
Anthony Musso

Balmville mansion was designed by architect famed for Gothic NYC churches

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Spread the loveIn 1856, architect Frederick Clarke Withers designed a 14-room, 5,545-square-foot Victorian-style mansion at 60 Grand Ave. (now Balmville Road) in the Newburgh hamlet

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Anthony Musso March 1, 2020 No Comments
NFA Madrigals at Washington's Headquarters
Buildings
Michael Aaron Green

Mary Elizabeth Monell: The Forgotten Poet of Grand Street – By Michael Aaron Green

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Spread the loveMary Elizabeth Monell: The Forgotten Poet of Grand Street – By Michael Aaron Green On a crisp, sunny spring day in 2016, the

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Michael Aaron Green July 4, 2019 No Comments
The Madrigal Choir at WHQ
Buildings
Joe Santacroce

Washington’s Headquarters: 169 Years Ago – July 4, 1850 by Joe Santacroce

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Spread the loveAn Ode In April of 2016 a group of students at Newburgh Free Academy, The Madrigal Choir, came together at Washington’s Headquarters to

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Joe Santacroce July 4, 2019 No Comments
Heart&HandSocietyBldg-2019
Buildings
Mary McTamaney

A Society For Heart and Hand – by Mary McTamaney

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Spread the loveA Society For Heart and Hand Just north of the intersection of Route 9W and Fostertown Road is a sad little building of

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Mary McTamaney January 11, 2019 2 Comments
Bloomer_Dailey_House
Buildings
Anthony Musso

Historic Bloomer-Dailey house had Balmville Tree as neighbor

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Spread the loveOn the west side of Balmville Road in the Newburgh hamlet of Balmville is a mid-18th-century structure known as the Bloomer-Dailey house. It sits

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Anthony Musso December 28, 2018 No Comments
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Recent Posts

  • The “Wings of West Point” and the Evolution of Stewart International Airport
  • Newburgh’s K.V. Barnekov – Old World Aristocrat; New World Composer by Michael A. Green, with Albert Garzon
  • “We Don’t Know What We Have Forgotten”: A Talk Given by Michael Aaron Green
  • The Old Gardnertown Cemetery: By Alan Crawford (Town Historian)
  • The Making of Quilts As A Fundraiser: By Alan Crawford (Town Historian)

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  • Discover Newburgh's East End Historic District on The Rise and Fall of a Mercantile Town: Family, Land and Capital in Newburgh, New York 1790-1844 (Part 1), by Mark C. Carnes
  • Debbie Carson on The “Acceptable Losses” at Orange Mills (aka Algonquin Park): by Joe Santacroce
  • reggie young on A Society For Heart and Hand – by Mary McTamaney
  • Joe Santacroce on A Society For Heart and Hand – by Mary McTamaney

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New Blog Posts!

  • The “Wings of West Point” and the Evolution of Stewart International Airport
  • Newburgh’s K.V. Barnekov – Old World Aristocrat; New World Composer by Michael A. Green, with Albert Garzon
  • “We Don’t Know What We Have Forgotten”: A Talk Given by Michael Aaron Green
  • The Old Gardnertown Cemetery: By Alan Crawford (Town Historian)
  • The Making of Quilts As A Fundraiser: By Alan Crawford (Town Historian)

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