
Straightening The Curves of Our Roads: By Alan Crawford (Town of Newburgh Historian)
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Spread the loveMary Elizabeth Monell: The Forgotten Poet of Grand Street – By Michael Aaron Green On a crisp, sunny spring day in 2016, the
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
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
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