National Register of Historic Places listings in Rockland County, New York
List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Rockland County, New York
This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the
National Historic Landmarks
.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted April 5, 2024.[2]
Albany (Albany) – Allegany – Bronx – Broome – Cattaraugus – Cayuga – Chautauqua – Chemung – Chenango – Clinton – Columbia – Cortland – Delaware – Dutchess (Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck) – Erie (Buffalo) – Essex – Franklin – Fulton – Genesee – Greene – Hamilton – Herkimer – Jefferson – Kings – Lewis – Livingston – Madison – Monroe (Rochester) – Montgomery – Nassau – New York (Below 14th Street, 14th to 59th Streets, 59th to 110th Streets, Above 110th Street, Islands) – Niagara (Niagara Falls) – Oneida – Onondaga (Syracuse) – Ontario – Orange – Orleans – Oswego – Otsego – Putnam – Queens – Rensselaer – Richmond – Rockland – St. Lawrence – Saratoga – Schenectady – Schoharie – Schuyler – Seneca – Steuben – Suffolk – Sullivan – Tioga – Tompkins – Ulster – Warren – Washington – Wayne – Westchester (Northern, Southern, New Rochelle, Peekskill, Yonkers) – Wyoming – Yates |
Listings county-wide
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Maj. John Andre Monument
|
November 8, 2006 (#06001001) |
42 Andre Hill 41°01′17″N 73°57′19″W / 41.021389°N 73.955278°W | Tappan | Site of Major John André's hanging and burial | |
2 | Bear Mountain Bridge | November 23, 1982 (#82001266) |
NY 6/202 41°19′12″N 73°58′49″W / 41.32°N 73.980278°W | Stony Point | First crossing of Hudson north of New York City; built 1924 by Harriman family and later turned over to state | |
3 | Bear Mountain Inn | September 20, 2002 (#02001048) |
Seven Lakes Drive 41°18′47″N 73°59′25″W / 41.313056°N 73.990278°W | Bear Mountain |
1915 rustic lodge was among first improvements to Bear Mountain State Park | |
4 | Big House | July 12, 1990 (#90001008) |
US 9W near the junction with Closter Rd. 41°00′45″N 73°54′47″W / 41.0125°N 73.913056°W | Palisades | ||
5 | Blauvelt House | March 28, 1985 (#85000659) |
20 Zukor Rd. 41°10′16″N 73°59′13″W / 41.171°N 73.987°W | New City | ||
6 | Blauvelt–Cropsey Farm | January 31, 2017 (#100000614) |
230 S. Little Tor Rd. 41°07′57″N 74°00′03″W / 41.13262°N 74.00094°W | New City | 1790s sandstone farmhouse that incorporates Dutch and English building traditions; has remained a working family farm despite suburbanization of surrounding area | |
7 | Brick Church Complex | September 7, 1984 (#84002947) |
Brick Church Rd. and NY 306 41°08′25″N 74°03′55″W / 41.140278°N 74.065278°W | New Hempstead | ||
8 | Brook Chapel | February 14, 2010 (#09001287) |
6th St. 41°07′29″N 74°10′35″W / 41.124722°N 74.176389°W | Hillburn | ||
9 | Brookside | July 10, 2012 (#12000408) |
406 N. Broadway 41°06′20″N 73°55′05″W / 41.10563°N 73.918163°W | Upper Nyack | ||
10 | Camp Hill School | August 8, 2019 (#100004244) |
100 Ladentown Road 41°10′58″N 74°03′18″W / 41.1827°N 74.0549°W | Pomona | Two-room schoolhouse built in 1923 remained in use until the 1960s; now Pomona's village hall | |
11 | Christ Church | May 18, 2011 (#11000291) |
416 Valentine Ave. 41°01′48″N 73°55′34″W / 41.03°N 73.926111°W | Sparkill | ||
12 | Cliffside | July 12, 1990 (#90001012) |
Lawrence Ln. south of River Rd. 41°00′28″N 73°54′14″W / 41.007778°N 73.903889°W | Palisades | ||
13 | Closter Road-Oak Tree Road Historic District
|
July 12, 1990 (#90001014) |
Roughly, north side of Closter Rd. and south side of Oak Tree Rd. approximately 0.5 miles (0.80 km) west of US 9W 41°00′43″N 73°55′03″W / 41.011944°N 73.9175°W | Palisades | ||
14 | Abner Concklin House | August 6, 1987 (#87001358) |
Closter Rd. 41°00′26″N 73°55′14″W / 41.007222°N 73.920556°W | Palisades | ||
15 | Contempora House | April 29, 2009 (#09000260) |
88 S. Mountain Rd. 41°10′58″N 74°01′03″W / 41.182828°N 74.017481°W | New City | ||
16 | De Wint House | October 15, 1966 (#66000568) |
Livingston Ave. and Oak Tree Rd. 41°01′11″N 73°56′47″W / 41.019722°N 73.946389°W | Tappan | Oldest house in county. Headquarters of George Washington: August 1780, September–October 1780, May 1783. Site of John André spy trial during American Revolutionary War. | |
17 | John A. DeBaun Mill | September 2, 1993 (#93000852) |
NY 59, N side, opposite Highview Ave. 41°06′45″N 74°06′16″W / 41.1125°N 74.104444°W | Tallman | ||
18 | Peter DePew House | July 3, 2008 (#08000596) |
101 Old Route 304 41°10′13″N 73°58′39″W / 41.170278°N 73.9775°W | New City | ||
19 | Dederer Stone House-Stonehurst | December 31, 2002 (#02001650) |
82 Rockland Rd. 41°01′53″N 73°55′20″W / 41.031389°N 73.922222°W | Orangetown | ||
20 | English Church and Schoolhouse | November 23, 1977 (#77000980) |
484 New Hempstead Rd. 41°08′59″N 74°01′58″W / 41.149722°N 74.032778°W | New City | 1827 congregation established in New York west of Hudson a century earlier is second-oldest church in county. 1863 schoolhouse was in use as a public school building for over a century.
| |
21 | William Ferdon House | May 18, 2011 (#11000292) |
270 Ferdon Ave. 41°02′06″N 73°55′08″W / 41.035°N 73.918889°W | Piermont | ||
22 | First Methodist Episcopal Church of Nyack | February 20, 1998 (#98000132) |
North Broadway, south of the junction of North Broadway and Birchwood Ave. 41°06′12″N 73°55′04″W / 41.103333°N 73.917778°W | Upper Nyack | ||
23 | First Reformed Church | November 9, 2015 (#15000777) |
361 Ferdon Ave. 41°02′12″N 73°55′11″W / 41.0368012°N 73.9197852°W | Piermont | Wren-Gibbs Colonial Revival Church, built 1946, is home to oldest congregation in Piermont | |
24 | Fraser-Hoyer House | April 22, 1976 (#76001270) |
Treason Hill off U.S. 9W 41°12′41″N 73°59′17″W / 41.211389°N 73.988056°W | West Haverstraw | ||
25 | John Green House | June 7, 2017 (#100000615) |
23 Main St. 41°05′26″N 73°54′58″W / 41.090472°N 73.915979°W | Nyack | 1819 stone house is believed to be the oldest in the village | |
26 | Gurnee–Sherwood House | July 19, 2011 (#11000451) |
29 Spook Rock Road 41°09′34″N 74°05′48″W / 41.15957°N 74.09659°W | Wesley Hills | ||
27 | Haddock's Hall | June 20, 1991 (#91000103) |
300 Ferdon Ave. 41°02′07″N 73°55′08″W / 41.035278°N 73.918889°W | Piermont | ||
28 | Haring-Eberle House | July 12, 1990 (#90001010) |
US 9W north of Oak Tree Rd. 41°00′43″N 73°54′45″W / 41.011944°N 73.9125°W | Palisades | ||
29 | The Homestead | November 10, 1983 (#83004154) |
143 Hudson Ave. 41°11′36″N 73°58′00″W / 41.193333°N 73.966667°W | Village of Haverstraw | Farmhouse built ca. 1800 is one of oldest buildings in Haverstraw; residence of former mayor and other officials | |
30 | Houser-Conklin House | October 1, 2010 (#10000808) |
246 Route 306 41°08′05″N 74°04′00″W / 41.134722°N 74.066667°W | Monsey | ||
31 | Edward Hopper Birthplace and Boyhood Home | April 6, 2000 (#00000352) |
82 North Broadway 41°05′35″N 73°55′06″W / 41.093056°N 73.918333°W | Nyack | ||
32 | Hopson-Swan Estate | November 23, 1992 (#92001562) |
US 9W east of Sparkill, Tallman Mountain State Park 41°01′37″N 73°54′59″W / 41.026944°N 73.916389°W | Sparkill | ||
33 | Kings Daughters Public Library | August 9, 1991 (#91000950) |
Jct. of Main and Allison Sts. 41°11′47″N 73°57′39″W / 41.196389°N 73.960833°W | Village of Haverstraw | Recently renovated 1903 building was home to oldest chartered public library in county (now a branch) | |
34 | Ladentown United Methodist Church | September 7, 2005 (#05000990) |
Ladentown Rd. 41°11′07″N 74°04′05″W / 41.185278°N 74.068056°W | Pomona | ||
35 | Little House | July 12, 1990 (#90001009) |
US 9W north of Oak Tree Rd. 41°00′43″N 73°54′45″W / 41.011944°N 73.9125°W | Palisades | ||
36 | M/V COMMANDER | September 27, 1984 (#84002951) |
Haverstraw Marina 41°13′52″N 73°58′32″W / 41.231111°N 73.975556°W | Village of Haverstraw | ||
37 | Main School | August 5, 2015 (#15000516) |
45 Mountain Ave. 41°07′30″N 74°10′11″W / 41.125002°N 74.169739°W | Hillburn | Early 20th century wooden school was site of New York's biggest school desegregation battle | |
38 | Carson McCullers House | July 14, 2006 (#06000562) |
131 S. Broadway 41°05′09″N 73°55′11″W / 41.0858°N 73.9197°W | South Nyack | ||
39 | John D. McKean (fireboat) | July 28, 2023 (#100009157) |
Panco Petroleum Dock, 23 Grassy Point Rd. 41°13′31″N 73°57′58″W / 41.2252°N 73.9660°W | Stony Point | ||
40 | Robert W. and Mary F. McCready House | October 4, 2011 (#11000708) |
139 Orange Turnpike 41°09′51″N 74°11′34″W / 41.16425°N 74.19284°W | Sloatsburg | Eclectic 1889 Victorian home of Irish immigrant builder whose firm was instrumental in the development of Sloatsburg during that era | |
41 | Mount Moor African-American Cemetery | August 29, 1994 (#94001001) |
Dexter Rd., off NY 59A 41°05′47″N 73°57′33″W / 41.0964°N 73.9592°W | West Nyack | On the grounds of the Palisades Center mall. | |
42 | Neiderhurst | July 12, 1990 (#90001011) |
Ludlow Ln. south of River Rd. 41°00′35″N 73°54′29″W / 41.009722°N 73.908056°W | Palisades | ||
43 | North Main Street School | February 28, 2008 (#08000105) |
185 N. Main St. 41°07′22″N 74°02′36″W / 41.122778°N 74.043333°W | Spring Valley | One of the earliest modern school buildings in the county, built in 1916 and expanded several times since. Now a satellite campus of Rockland Community College. | |
44 | Old Sloatsburg Cemetery | July 23, 1999 (#99000807) |
Richards Rd. 41°09′13″N 74°11′48″W / 41.153611°N 74.196667°W | Sloatsburg | Graves from late 18th to mid-20th centuries, including Sloat family members. Landscaping reflects different eras of cemetery design. | |
45 | Onderdonk House | September 28, 2006 (#06000890) |
748 Piermont Ave. 41°02′51″N 73°55′09″W / 41.0475°N 73.919167°W | Piermont | ||
46 | Palisades Interstate Park
|
October 15, 1966 (#66000890) |
W bank of the Hudson River 40°57′19″N 73°55′54″W / 40.955278°N 73.931667°W | Fort Lee | Extends through several NY and NJ counties. | |
47 | Henry M. Peck House | November 2, 2000 (#00001279) |
US 9W at Helen Hayes Hospital 41°12′44″N 73°59′18″W / 41.212222°N 73.988333°W | West Haverstraw | Destroyed by fire in 2002. | |
48 | Jacob P. Perry House | July 3, 2003 (#03000594) |
15 Sickeletown Rd. 41°03′16″N 73°59′28″W / 41.054444°N 73.991111°W | Pearl River | House dating from turn of 19th century is one of the last built in pre-Revolutionary Dutch Colonial style. | |
49 | Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel Number 15 | June 8, 2001 (#01000583) |
1000 Palisades Center 41°05′48″N 73°57′22″W / 41.096667°N 73.956111°W | West Nyack | Formerly located in the Palisades Center but was removed in the summer of 2009.[5] | |
50 | Piermont Railroad Station
|
December 3, 2008 (#08001146) |
50 Ash Street 41°02′30″N 73°55′06″W / 41.041539°N 73.918464°W | Piermont | ||
51 | Pig Knoll School | July 8, 2019 (#100004183) |
584 NY 306 41°10′13″N 74°04′03″W / 41.1703°N 74.0676°W | Pomona | Rustic 1915 Arts and Crafts by Robb Wilder of Mead, McKim and White is today Pomona Cultural Center | |
52 | Henry Varnum Poor House | December 11, 2007 (#07001258) |
S. Mountain Rd. 41°11′01″N 74°00′59″W / 41.183611°N 74.016389°W | New City | ||
53 | Richard Pousette-Dart House and Studio | December 23, 2019 (#100004802) |
932 Haverstraw Road 41°09′54″N 74°05′41″W / 41.1649°N 74.0947°W | Suffern vicinity | 1916 carriage house was later home to influential abstract expressionist painter Pousette-Dart | |
54 | House at 352 Piermont Avenue | January 27, 2015 (#14001218) |
352 Piermont Ave. 41°02′13″N 73°55′11″W / 41.037035°N 73.9196681°W | Piermont | Well-preserved 1780 stone house is one of few of its design in county | |
55 | Rockland County Courthouse and Dutch Gardens | January 3, 1991 (#90002104) |
Jct. of S. Main St. and New Hempstead Rd. 41°08′47″N 73°59′27″W / 41.146389°N 73.990833°W | New City | ||
56 | Rockland Print Works | October 23, 2013 (#13000362) |
55 W. Railroad Ave. 41°12′32″N 73°59′32″W / 41.2089024°N 73.9921388°W | Garnerville | Surviving factory complex from area's industrial past | |
57 | Rockland Road Bridge | December 7, 2005 (#05001391) |
Rockland Rd., (bounded by Piermont and Ferdon Aves.) 41°02′06″N 73°55′10″W / 41.035°N 73.919444°W | Piermont | ||
58 | Rockland Road Bridge Historic District | September 29, 2011 (#11000709) |
Ferdon Ave., Rockland Rd. & S. Piermont Ave. 41°02′06″N 73°55′10″W / 41.035°N 73.919444°W | Piermont | ||
59 | William H. Rose House | April 15, 1999 (#99000459) |
110 Tomkin Ave. 41°14′00″N 73°59′04″W / 41.233333°N 73.984444°W | Stony Point | Picturesque house of local businessman built ca. 1862 moved from original nearby location | |
60 | Ross-Hand Mansion | September 8, 1983 (#83001787) |
122 S. Franklin St. 41°05′12″N 73°55′23″W / 41.0867°N 73.9231°W | South Nyack | ||
61 | St. Paul's United Methodist Church | March 12, 2001 (#01000251) |
S. Broadway and Division St. 41°05′13″N 73°55′22″W / 41.086944°N 73.922778°W | Nyack | ||
62 | St. Paul's Episcopal Church | July 2, 2008 (#08000593) |
26 S. Madison Ave. 41°06′32″N 74°02′45″W / 41.108925°N 74.045886°W | Spring Valley | ||
63 | Edward Salyer House | September 4, 1986 (#86002178) |
241 S. Middletown Rd. 41°03′04″N 74°00′51″W / 41.051111°N 74.014167°W | Pearl River | Rare surviving Dutch Colonial frame house, built in 1765. Believed to be oldest house in Pearl River. | |
64 | Michael Salyer Stone House | December 31, 2002 (#02001654) |
Blue Hill Rd. 41°03′07″N 73°59′16″W / 41.051944°N 73.987778°W | Orangetown | 1790 house has clapboard infill at gambrel roof's apex, much more common for Huguenot influence during construction.
| |
65 | Seaman–Knapp House | May 24, 2012 (#12000311) |
35 Ladentown Rd. 41°11′12″N 74°03′33″W / 41.186616°N 74.059163°W | Pomona | ||
66 | Seven Oaks Estate | July 12, 1990 (#90001013) |
End of Ludlow Ln. 41°00′26″N 73°54′33″W / 41.007222°N 73.909167°W | Palisades | ||
67 | Shadowcliff | April 7, 2014 (#14000131) |
521 N. Broadway 41°06′32″N 73°55′06″W / 41.1089285°N 73.9183376°W | Upper Nyack | ||
68 | Sloat House | November 5, 1974 (#74001301) |
19 Orange Tpke. 41°09′02″N 74°11′38″W / 41.150556°N 74.193889°W | Sloatsburg | Original 1755 home of Sloat family, added onto in 1810s. Has bullet holes from accidental shooting of John Sloat | |
69 | Sloat's Dam and Mill Pond | April 6, 2000 (#00000344) |
Off of Station Rd. 41°09′28″N 74°11′22″W / 41.157778°N 74.189444°W | Sloatsburg | Only surviving dam of three on the upper Ramapo River dates to 1792. Powered Jacob Sloat's mills; used until 1955 | |
70 | Jacob Sloat House | December 22, 2006 (#06001144) |
15 Liberty Rock Rd. 41°09′19″N 74°11′43″W / 41.155278°N 74.195278°W | Sloatsburg | Also known as Harmony Hall. 1848 retirement home of local textile merchant who gave village its name illustrates transition from Greek Revival to Picturesque in American architecture. | |
71 | Sparkill Creek Drawbridge | March 28, 1985 (#85000658) |
Bridge St. over Sparkill Creek 41°02′14″N 73°54′58″W / 41.037222°N 73.916111°W | Piermont | ||
72 | H. R. Stevens House | January 14, 2005 (#04001480) |
234 Congers Rd. 41°09′02″N 73°58′24″W / 41.150556°N 73.973333°W | New City | 1775 house of locally quarried sandstone shows convergence of Dutch and English vernacular building traditions. Frame Federal style expansion done in 1820s. | |
73 | Stony Point Battlefield | October 15, 1966 (#66000567) |
North of Stony Point on | Stony Point | ||
74 | Stony Point District School No. 4 | January 4, 2012 (#11001005) |
Central Dr. at Cedar Flats Rd. 41°14′16″N 74°01′17″W / 41.237814°N 74.021378°W | Stony Point | ||
75 | Stony Point Lighthouse
|
May 29, 1979 (#79001626) |
Stony Point Battlefield 41°14′29″N 73°58′20″W / 41.241389°N 73.972222°W | Stony Point | ||
76 | Tallman–Budke and Vanderbilt–Budke–Traphagen Houses | July 3, 2017 (#100001266) |
131 Germonds Road 41°06′59″N 73°59′12″W / 41.11648°N 73.98660°W | Clarkstown | 1790 sandstone house, believed to be one of the oldest of that material in the county, and 1820s wooden farmhouse on same property. | |
77 | Tappan Historic District | April 26, 1990 (#90000689) |
Roughly bounded by Main St./Kings Hwy., Andre Ave. and New York Central RR 41°01′18″N 73°56′58″W / 41.021667°N 73.949444°W | Tappan | ||
78 | Tappan Zee Playhouse | July 21, 1983 (#83001788) |
20 S. Broadway 41°05′24″N 73°55′09″W / 41.09°N 73.919167°W | Nyack | Demolished 2004.Cinema Treasures | |
79 | Terneur-Hutton House | April 23, 1973 (#73001263) |
160 Sickelton Rd. 41°04′58″N 73°58′23″W / 41.0828°N 73.9731°W | West Nyack | ||
80 | Torne Brook Farm | May 19, 1988 (#88000611) |
Torne Brook Rd. 41°08′25″N 74°09′48″W / 41.140278°N 74.163333°W | Ramapo | ||
81 | Upper Nyack Firehouse | September 23, 1982 (#82004781) |
330 N. Broadway 41°06′06″N 73°55′04″W / 41.101667°N 73.917778°W | Upper Nyack | ||
82 | US Post Office-Haverstraw
|
November 17, 1988 (#88002497) |
86 Main St. 41°11′46″N 73°57′39″W / 41.196111°N 73.960833°W | Village of Haverstraw | High level of ornament on 1934 building may be due to influence of native James Farley, then Postmaster General | |
83 | US Post Office-Nyack
|
May 11, 1989 (#88002387) |
48 S. Broadway 41°05′19″N 73°55′11″W / 41.088611°N 73.919722°W | Nyack | Rare Classical Revival post office built after World War I
| |
84 | US Post Office-Pearl River
|
November 17, 1988 (#88002399) |
35 S. Main St.[6] 41°03′29″N 74°01′20″W / 41.058056°N 74.022222°W | Pearl River | Unique 1935 post office with highly restrained Colonial Revival design showing a strong modernist influence. Officially renamed in 2005 for local Vietnam War MIA | |
85 | US Post Office-Spring Valley
|
May 11, 1989 (#88002432) |
7 N. Madison Ave. 41°06′47″N 74°02′46″W / 41.113056°N 74.046111°W | Spring Valley | Colonial Revival design of 1936 post office, unique in state, emphasizes Greek Revival precedents of style | |
86 | US Post Office-Suffern
|
May 11, 1989 (#88002435) |
15 Chestnut St. 41°06′59″N 74°09′10″W / 41.116389°N 74.152778°W | Suffern | 1930s building combining elements of Colonial Revival styles; inside features relief of Communication as a semi-nude woman shooting a flaming arrow.
| |
87 | The USCO Church | May 3, 2016 (#16000225) |
21 Church St. 41°12′24″N 73°59′42″W / 41.206792°N 73.995076°W | Garnerville | 19th-century wooden former Methodist church used by late-1960s art collective USCO
| |
88 | Van Houten's Landing Historic District | August 20, 2004 (#04000877) |
North Broadway, School St., Ellen St., Castle Heights Ave., Van Houten St. 41°06′02″N 73°55′00″W / 41.100556°N 73.916667°W | Upper Nyack | ||
89 | Washington Avenue Soldier's Monument and Triangle | July 26, 2006 (#06000646) |
Washington Avenue Triangle (Jct. of Washington and Lafayette Aves.) 41°06′53″N 74°09′01″W / 41.114722°N 74.150278°W | Suffern | Memorial to local World War I dead on site where Washington and Lafayette camped features small cannon left over from Revolution | |
90 | Washington Spring Road-Woods Road Historic District
|
July 12, 1990 (#90001015) |
Roughly, area along Washington Spring Rd. from Highland Ave. to the Hudson River and north approximately 0.5 miles (0.80 km) along Woods Rd. 41°00′42″N 73°54′26″W / 41.011667°N 73.907222°W | Palisades | ||
91 | Former Wayside Chapel | April 6, 2000 (#00000346) |
24 River Rd. 41°04′24″N 73°55′14″W / 41.0733°N 73.9206°W | Grand View-on-Hudson | ||
92 | J. Garner West House | March 17, 2022 (#100007379) |
168 Filors Ln. 41°13′09″N 74°00′22″W / 41.2192°N 74.0060°W | Stony Point |
Former listing
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Henry Garner Mansion | August 14, 1973 (#73001262) | April 24, 1979 | 18 Railroad Ave. | West Haverstraw | Demolished on June 10, 1976.[7] |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Rockland County, New York.
References
- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ PALISADES CENTER REPLACES HISTORIC CAROUSEL - New York Post - August 27, 2009
- ^ Address based on USPS website. Accessed March 2, 2016.
- Newspapers.com.