55 WestchesterHills (Free Synagogue) 400 Saw Mill River Road Hastings-On-Hudson, NY 10706 914-478-1767 8:00-4:00 Cemetery Office and at Congregation 1921
There are numerous Jewish cemeteries in the Newark and Elizabeth, NJ area, as well as other Jewish cemeteries in Long Island, Staten Island, New Jersey, Westchester and southern Connecticut.
42 King Solomon Memorial Park Dwasline Avenue and Allwood Road Clifton, NJ 07012 201-473-5646 9:00-3:00 Cemetery Office
55 WestchesterHills (Free Synagogue) 400 Saw Mill River Road Hastings-On-Hudson, NY 10706 914-478-1767 8:00-4:00 Cemetery Office and at Congregation 1921
There are numerous Jewish cemeteries in the Newark and Elizabeth, NJ area, as well as other Jewish cemeteries in Long Island, Staten Island, New Jersey, Westchester and southern Connecticut.
42 King Solomon Memorial Park Dwasline Avenue and Allwood Road Clifton, NJ 07012 201-473-5646 9:00-3:00 Cemetery Office
In Green-Wood Cemetery, Prospect Park, the Cemetery of the Evergreens, Westchester County, and Washington Heights, one can walk on the very hills where the battles took place.
These markers and structures set in the densely developed urban fabric can evoke the patchwork of fields, hills, and marshes as it appeared in the eighteenth century.
A 250-acre tract of farmland located in the hamlet of Valhalla in Westchester County was carefully selected, approved for use as a cemetery, and developed to take advantage of the natural features of the landscape.
In 1889, at a time when cemeteries in New York City were reaching full capacity, the Kensico Cemetery founders sought to establish a cemetery consistent with the new, rural concept of the time.
By 1915 Kensico Cemetery had expanded to its present size of 461 acres, making it the largest in New York State.
Continue on Saw Mill River Road, WestchesterHillsCemetery is the THIRD Cemetery on your RIGHT.
Continue on Cypress Avenue to Cooper Avenue and Knollwood Park Cemetery is on your LEFT, on the corner of Cypress Avenue and Cooper Avenue.
Go through the Sharon Gardens/Kensico Cemeteries to the traffic light, turn LEFT onto the Taconic State Parkway (NORTH) and proceed to the very next exit, Commerce Street, and Turn RIGHT onto Commerce Street and Mount Eden Cemetery will be the FIRST cemetery on your RIGHT.
Continue on Saw Mill River Road, WestchesterHillsCemetery is the THIRD Cemetery on your RIGHT.
Mount Hope Cemetery is on the Corner of Saw Mill River Road and Jackson Avenue.
Go through the Sharon Gardens/Kensico Cemeteries to the traffic light, turn LEFT onto the Taconic State Parkway (NORTH) and proceed to the very next exit, Commerce Street, and Turn RIGHT onto Commerce Street and Mount Pleasant Cemetery will be the SECOND cemetery on your RIGHT.
In Green-Wood Cemetery, Prospect Park, the Cemetery of the Evergreens, Westchester County, and Washington Heights, one can walk on the very hills where the battles took place.
The portion of this ridge at the western end of Long Island includes the hills of todays Prospect Park and was called Gowanus Heights.
These markers and structures set in the densely developed urban fabric can evoke the patchwork of fields, hills, and marshes as it appeared in the eighteenth century.
Nestled amid the green hills of Westchester, Mount Hope overlooks the historic and peaceful valleys of the Saw Mill River, with glimpses of the majestic Palisades beyond the Hudson.
Mount Hope is landscaped meticulously on behalf of its lot owners, and a permanent maintenance fund supports the care of Mount Hope in perpetuity.
Mount Hope offers indoor and outdoor inurnment in a variety of settings, each equally resplendent and respectful as traditional interment.
Nestled amid the green hills of Westchester, Mount Hope overlooks the historic and peaceful valleys of the Saw Mill River, with glimpses of the majestic Palisades beyond the Hudson.
Mount Hope is landscaped meticulously on behalf of its lot owners, and a permanent maintenance fund supports the care of Mount Hope in perpetuity.
Mount Hope offers indoor and outdoor inurnment in a variety of settings, each equally resplendent and respectful as traditional interment.
New Fairfield is known for its excellent schools, reasonable taxes, good recreational facilities, and great commuting routes to Westchester and lower Fairfield County.
At the beginning of July, 1926, there was a rural valley stretching 10 miles between the rolling hills of Brookfield and New Fairfield to the east and west and bounded by Danbury, New Milford and Sherman to the south and north.
New Fairfield's Beaver Bog Cemetery Records A through S (file size 23325)
Sullivan placed guards at several passes through a range of hills on Long Island, which extend from the Narrows to Jamaica; and late in August he had a line of defences extending from the vicinity of Greenwood Cemetery to the Navy Yard, a distance of a mile and a half.
A small detachment was placed on Governor's Island near the city; another was sent over to Paulus's Hook, where Jersey City now stands, and a body of New York militia, under General James Clinton, took post in Westchester county to oppose the landing of the British from vessels on Long Island Sound.
It was even proposed by Jay to lay Long Island waste, burn the city of New York, and retire to the rugged fastnesses of the Highlands.
Nestled amid the green hills of Westchester, Mount Hope overlooks the historic and peaceful valleys of the Saw Mill River, with glimpses of the majestic Palisades beyond the Hudson.
The Seventy-first Regiment National Guard of New York State and the Confederate Veterans are just two of the many interesting and important organizations whose legacy is etched indelibly into Mount Hope's hallowed grounds.
But if you visit for the tall trees, you will see they are home to red-tailed hawks, pileated woodpeckers and the lovely, diminutive bluebirdthe state bird of New York.
New Fairfield is known for its excellent schools, reasonable taxes, good recreational facilities, and great commuting routes to Westchester and lower Fairfield County.
At the beginning of July, 1926, there was a rural valley stretching 10 miles between the rolling hills of Brookfield and New Fairfield to the east and west and bounded by Danbury, New Milford and Sherman to the south and north.
New Fairfield's Beaver Bog Cemetery Records S through Z (file size 11412)
New Fairfield is known for its excellent schools, reasonable taxes, good recreational facilities, and great commuting routes to Westchester and lower Fairfield County.
At the beginning of July, 1926, there was a rural valley stretching 10 miles between the rolling hills of Brookfield and New Fairfield to the east and west and bounded by Danbury, New Milford and Sherman to the south and north.
New Fairfield's Beaver Bog Cemetery Records A through S (file size 23325)