National Register of Historic Places listings in Rensselaer County, New York: Difference between revisions

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| Roughly bounded by Grand St., Fifth Ave. and Third, Adams, and First and River Sts.<br/><small>{{coord|42|43|41|N|73|41|31|W|name=Central Troy Historic District}}</small>
| Roughly bounded by Grand St., Fifth Ave. and Third, Adams, and First and River Sts.<br/><small>{{coord|42|43|41|N|73|41|31|W|name=Central Troy Historic District}}</small>
| [[Troy, New York|Troy]]
| [[Troy, New York|Troy]]
| {{convert|96|acre|m2|adj=on}} commercial section of downtown Troy with many buildings, including two National Historic Landmarks, from 1787-1940.
| {{convert|96|acre|adj=on}} commercial section of downtown Troy with many buildings, including two National Historic Landmarks, from 1787-1940.
|--
! {{NRHP color}} | <small>43.5</small>
| [[Chapel and Cultural Center]]
| <!---Image goes here--->
| {{dts|2011|2|22}}
| 2125 Burdett Ave
| [[Troy, New York|Troy]]
| New listing; refnum 11000041
|--
|--
! {{NRHP color}} | <small>14</small>
! {{NRHP color}} | <small>14</small>

Revision as of 20:30, 15 July 2011

Municipal breakdown of Rensselaer County

This is the list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Rensselaer County, New York. It is intended to be a complete compilation of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Rensselaer County, New York, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below) may be seen in a Google map by clicking on "Map of all coordinates".[1] Five of the properties are further designated National Historic Landmarks.

Rensselaer County sits east of the Hudson River in New York's Capital District and borders both Massachusetts and Vermont on the east. The area was originally inhabited by the Mohican Indian tribe until it was bought by the Dutch jeweler and merchant Kiliaen van Rensselaer in 1630 and incorporated in his patroonship Rensselaerswyck (which, in turn, was part of the Dutch colony New Netherland). The land passed into English hands in 1664 until the Dutch regained control for a year in 1673, but the English took it back in 1674. Until 1776, the year of American independence, it was under English or British control.[2] However, the county didn't actually exist as a legal entity until 1791 when it was created from land that was originally part of Albany County.

Rensselaer County consists of two cities: Rensselaer and Troy; and fourteen towns: Berlin, Brunswick, East Greenbush, Grafton, Hoosick, Nassau, North Greenbush, Petersburgh, Pittstown, Poestenkill, Sand Lake, Schaghticoke, Schodack, and Stephentown; and contains six villages: Castleton, East Nassau, Hoosick Falls, Nassau, Schaghticoke, and Valley Falls.
          This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted May 3, 2024.[3]

Listings county-wide

Landmark name Image Date listed Location City or Town Summary
1 Aiken House December 31, 1974 NE corner of Riverside and Aiken Aves.
42°38′8″N 73°44′58″W / 42.63556°N 73.74944°W / 42.63556; -73.74944 (Aiken House)
Rensselaer
2 Albany Avenue Historic District November 21, 1978 Albany Ave.
42°31′1″N 73°36′55″W / 42.51694°N 73.61528°W / 42.51694; -73.61528 (Albany Avenue Historic District)
Nassau
3 Bennington Battlefield[4] October 15, 1966 NY 67, on VT state line
42°56′2″N 73°18′25″W / 42.93389°N 73.30694°W / 42.93389; -73.30694 (Bennington Battlefield)
Walloomsac Site of key American victory over British during Revolution
4 Beverwyck Manor Beverwyck August 3, 1979 St. Anthonys Lane.
42°39′48″N 73°43′22″W / 42.66333°N 73.72278°W / 42.66333; -73.72278 (Beverwyck Manor)
Rensselaer
5 Blink Bonnie August 10, 2000 1368 Sunset Rd.
42°34′6″N 73°42′9″W / 42.56833°N 73.70250°W / 42.56833; -73.70250 (Blink Bonnie)
Schodack
6 Breese-Reynolds House March 1, 2007 601 South St.
42°51′28.911″N 73°19′27.3684″W / 42.85803083°N 73.324269000°W / 42.85803083; -73.324269000 (Blink Bonnie)
Hoosick Built by Perry Eldridge in 1880.
7 Burden Iron Works Site Burden Waterwheel November 10, 1977 Address Restricted Troy
8 Burden Ironworks Office Building March 16, 1972 Polk St.
42°42′35″N 73°41′58″W / 42.70972°N 73.69944°W / 42.70972; -73.69944 (Burden Ironworks Office Building)
Troy
9 Buskirk Covered Bridge March 8, 1978 Spans Hoosic River N of NY 67
42°57′30″N 73°26′0″W / 42.95833°N 73.43333°W / 42.95833; -73.43333 (Buskirk Covered Bridge)
Buskirk
10 Esek Bussey Firehouse July 16, 1973 302 10th St.
42°44′21″N 73°40′26″W / 42.73917°N 73.67389°W / 42.73917; -73.67389 (Bussey, Esek, Firehouse)
Troy
11 Cannon Building[5] March 5, 1970 1 Broadway
42°43′53″N 73°41′32″W / 42.73139°N 73.69222°W / 42.73139; -73.69222 (Cannon Building)
Troy 1835 Alexander Jackson Davis-Ithiel Town commercial building further enhanced with mansard roof after 1870s fire.
12 John Carner Jr. House January 16, 2004 1310 Best Rd.
42°37′50″N 73°39′58″W / 42.63056°N 73.66611°W / 42.63056; -73.66611 (Carner, John Jr., House)
East Greenbush
13 Central Troy Historic District[6] Downtown Troy from RPI August 13, 1986 Roughly bounded by Grand St., Fifth Ave. and Third, Adams, and First and River Sts.
42°43′41″N 73°41′31″W / 42.72806°N 73.69194°W / 42.72806; -73.69194 (Central Troy Historic District)
Troy 96-acre (39 ha) commercial section of downtown Troy with many buildings, including two National Historic Landmarks, from 1787-1940.
43.5 Chapel and Cultural Center February 22, 2011 2125 Burdett Ave Troy New listing; refnum 11000041
14 Chatham Street Row December 1, 1978 Chatham St.
42°30′53″N 73°36′40″W / 42.51472°N 73.61111°W / 42.51472; -73.61111 (Chatham Street Row)
Nassau
15 Church of the Holy Cross Church of the Holy Cross and the Mary Warren Free Institute June 4, 1973 136 8th St.
42°43′57″N 73°41′1″W / 42.73250°N 73.68361°W / 42.73250; -73.68361 (Church of the Holy Cross)
Troy Gothic Revival church built in 1844.
16 Church Street Historic District November 21, 1978 Church St.
42°30′54″N 73°36′26″W / 42.51500°N 73.60722°W / 42.51500; -73.60722 (Church Street Historic District)
Nassau
17 Clark-Dearstyne-Miller Inn January 9, 2008 11-13 Forbes Ave.
42°39′32″N 73°44′6″W / 42.65889°N 73.73500°W / 42.65889; -73.73500 (Clark--Dearstyne--Miller Inn)
Rensselaer
18 Craver Farmstead December 16, 1996 115 Craver Rd.
42°37′23″N 73°38′37″W / 42.62306°N 73.64361°W / 42.62306; -73.64361 (Craver Farmstead)
East Greenbush
19 Defreest Homestead August 2, 1977 S of Troy at U.S. 4 and Jordan Rd.
42°40′32″N 73°41′39″W / 42.67556°N 73.69417°W / 42.67556; -73.69417 (Defreest Homestead)
Troy Early Dutch house built around 1750 and early Dutch barn
20 Delaney Hotel[7] June 21, 1996 Jct. of NY 22 and NY 67
42°55′37″N 73°20′38″W / 42.92694°N 73.34389°W / 42.92694; -73.34389 (Delaney Hotel)
North Hoosick Intact Greek Revival hotel with vernacular Victorian features built ca. 1850
21 District School No. 3 August 28, 1998 1125 S. Schodack Rd.
42°30′9″N 73°42′26″W / 42.50250°N 73.70722°W / 42.50250; -73.70722 (District School No. 3)
Castleton-on-Hudson
22 District #6 Schoolhouse[8] July 3, 2008[8] Brick Church Rd. and Buck Rd.
42°45′4.29″N 73°34′28.8″W / 42.7511917°N 73.574667°W / 42.7511917; -73.574667 (District #6 Schoolhouse)
Brunswick One-room schoolhouse built c. 1830 and closed in 1952. Believed to be one of the oldest remaining schoolhouses in Rensselaer County.
23 East Nassau Central School May 23, 1997 37 Garfield Rd.
42°30′33″N 73°30′19″W / 42.50917°N 73.50528°W / 42.50917; -73.50528 (East Nassau Central School)
East Nassau
24 Elmbrook Farm May 21, 2001 2567 Brookview Rd.
42°34′22″N 73°42′39″W / 42.57278°N 73.71083°W / 42.57278; -73.71083 (Elmbrook Farm)
Schodack
25 Estabrook Octagon House[9] February 8, 1980 8 River St.
42°53′47″N 73°21′11″W / 42.89639°N 73.35306°W / 42.89639; -73.35306 (Estabrook Octagon House)
Hoosick Falls 1854 octagon house built closely following specifications of Orson Squire Fowler
26 Fifth Avenue-Fulton Street Historic District March 5, 1970 Bounded by Grand, William, and Union Sts., and Broadway
42°44′0″N 73°40′59″W / 42.73333°N 73.68306°W / 42.73333; -73.68306 (Fifth Avenue--Fulton Street Historic District)
Troy 1860s-era homes of city's business elite. One of five districts consolidated into Central Troy Historic District
27 Fire Alarm, Telegraph and Police Signaling Building[10] January 15, 2003 67 State St.
42°43′47″N 73°41′12″W / 42.72972°N 73.68667°W / 42.72972; -73.68667 (Fire Alarm, Telegraph and Police Signaling Building)
Troy 1922 building consolidated city's public safety communications systems, in wake of history of devastating fires. After a period of vacancy in late 20th century, back in service as police headquarters
28 Fort Crailo[11] October 15, 1966 S of Columbia St. on Riverside Ave.
42°38′8″N 73°44′59″W / 42.63556°N 73.74972°W / 42.63556; -73.74972 (Fort Crailo)
Rensselaer Only well-preserved Dutch patroon house in upper Hudson Valley
29 Albert R. Fox House April 25, 2001 2801 NY 66
42°38′4″N 73°32′18″W / 42.63444°N 73.53833°W / 42.63444; -73.53833 (Fox, Albert R., House)
Sand Lake
30 Garfield School[12] June 9, 1988 NY 2 and Moonlawn Rd.
42°43′52″N 73°35′56″W / 42.73111°N 73.59889°W / 42.73111; -73.59889 (Garfield School)
Brunswick First building in Brunswick to be added to the NRHP.[13]
31 Glenwood May 25, 1973 Eddy's Lane
42°45′4″N 73°40′33″W / 42.75111°N 73.67583°W / 42.75111; -73.67583 (Glenwood)
Troy
32 Grand Street Historic District February 27, 1973 Grand St. between 5th and 6th Aves.
42°43′59″N 73°41′13″W / 42.73306°N 73.68694°W / 42.73306; -73.68694 (Grand Street Historic District)
Troy Civil War-era rowhouses built in wake of devastating 1862 fire. Now part of Central Troy Historic District.
33 Hart-Cluett Mansion[14] April 11, 1973 59 2nd St.
42°43′46″N 73°41′38″W / 42.72944°N 73.69389°W / 42.72944; -73.69389 (Hart-Cluett Mansion)
Troy 1827 Federal style mansion is one of the best in that style in city. Home to Rensselaer County Historical Society since 1950s
34 Haskell School September 19, 2003 150 Sixth Ave.
42°45′28″N 73°40′42″W / 42.75778°N 73.67833°W / 42.75778; -73.67833 (Haskell School)
Troy
35 Hoosick Falls Armory[15] March 2, 1995 Jct. of Church and Elm Sts.
42°53′57″N 73°21′15″W / 42.89917°N 73.35417°W / 42.89917; -73.35417 (Hoosick Falls Armory)
Hoosick Falls Intact 1889 Isaac Perry-designed armory. Home to units that have fought in the Mexican Border Campaign and Battle of Saipan
36 Hoosick Falls Historic District[16] December 3, 1980 Central Ave. and Main St.
42°54′4″N 73°21′6″W / 42.90111°N 73.35167°W / 42.90111; -73.35167 (Hoosick Falls Historic District)
Hoosick Falls Eight-acre commercial core of village with intact buildings from turn-of-the-century industrial peak
37 Ilium Building[17] December 18, 1970 NE corner of Fulton and 4th Sts.
42°43′57″N 73°41′20″W / 42.73250°N 73.68889°W / 42.73250; -73.68889 (Ilium Building)
Troy Intact 1904 Marcus F. Cummings commercial building
38 W. P. Irwin Bank Building October 3, 2007 156 Broadway
42°38′25″N 73°44′49″W / 42.64028°N 73.74694°W / 42.64028; -73.74694 (Irwin, W.P., Bank Building)
Rensselaer
39 Knickerbocker Mansion December 11, 1972 Knickerbocker Rd.
42°54′18″N 73°39′8″W / 42.90500°N 73.65222°W / 42.90500; -73.65222 (Knickerbocker Mansion)
Schaghticoke
40 Henry Koon House February 21, 1997 171 Pawling Ave.
42°43′0″N 73°40′13″W / 42.71667°N 73.67028°W / 42.71667; -73.67028 (Koon, Henry, House)
Troy
41 Lansingburgh Academy October 14, 1976 4th and 114th Sts.
42°46′22″N 73°40′34″W / 42.77278°N 73.67611°W / 42.77278; -73.67611 (Lansingburgh Academy)
Troy
42 Lansingburgh Village Burial Ground November 21, 2002 Third Ave. and 107th St.
42°45′52″N 73°40′48″W / 42.76444°N 73.68000°W / 42.76444; -73.68000 (Lansingburgh Village Burial Ground)
Troy
43 David Mathews House September 10, 1979 VT 67
42°56′27″N 73°16′28″W / 42.94083°N 73.27444°W / 42.94083; -73.27444 (Mathews, David, House)
Hoosick
44 McCarthy Building[18] March 5, 1970 255-257 River St.
42°43′56″N 73°41′30″W / 42.73222°N 73.69167°W / 42.73222; -73.69167 (McCarthy Building)
Troy Downtown Troy landmark built in 1904 and largely intact
45 Mechanicville Hydroelectric Plant November 13, 1989 At NY 32 on Hudson River
42°52′41″N 73°40′47″W / 42.87806°N 73.67972°W / 42.87806; -73.67972 (Mechanicville Hydroelectric Plant)
Mechanicville
46 Herman Melville House August 21, 1992 2 114th St.
42°46′23″N 73°40′45″W / 42.77306°N 73.67917°W / 42.77306; -73.67917 (Melville, Herman, House)
Troy
47 Muitzes Kill Historic District July 24, 1974 An irregular pattern on both sides of Schodack Landing Rd.
42°28′35″N 73°43′22″W / 42.47639°N 73.72278°W / 42.47639; -73.72278 (Muitzes Kill Historic District)
Schodack
48 Kate Mullany House[19] April 1, 1998 350 8th St.
42°44′24″N 73°40′54″W / 42.74000°N 73.68167°W / 42.74000; -73.68167 (Mullany, Kate, House)
Troy Apartment building of teenaged Irish immigrant who organized her fellow garment workers and went on to become first major female U.S. labor leader
49 National State Bank Building[20] December 29, 1970 297 River St.
42°43′57″N 73°41′27″W / 42.73250°N 73.69083°W / 42.73250; -73.69083 (National State Bank Building)
Troy 1904 Marcus F. Cummings building shows influence of early skyscrapers; has been Monument Square landmark since its construction.
50 Northern River Street Historic District[21] May 19, 1988 403-429 and 420-430 River St.
42°44′8″N 73°41′17″W / 42.73556°N 73.68806°W / 42.73556; -73.68806 (Northern River Street Historic District)
Troy Transitional neighborhood between downtown and industrial areas in late 19th century; largely unchanged since then
51 Oakwood Cemetery[22] October 4, 1984 50 101st St.
42°45′44″N 73°40′12″W / 42.76222°N 73.67000°W / 42.76222; -73.67000 (Oakwood Cemetery)
Troy Burial site of "Uncle Sam" Wilson and Civil War Gen. George H. Thomas
52 Old Troy Hospital (also known as West Hall) October 25, 1973 8th St.
42°43′54″N 73°41′0″W / 42.73167°N 73.68333°W / 42.73167; -73.68333 (Old Troy Hospital)
Troy French Second Empire structure home to Arts Department at RPI
53 J. C. Osgood Firehouse November 2, 2000 316-324 Third St.
42°43′10″N 73°41′35″W / 42.71944°N 73.69306°W / 42.71944; -73.69306 (Osgood, J.C., Firehouse)
Troy
54 Patroon Agent's House and Office August 3, 1979 15 Forbes Ave.
42°39′26″N 73°44′7″W / 42.65722°N 73.73528°W / 42.65722; -73.73528 (Patroon Agent's House and Office)
Rensselaer
55 Petersburgh United Methodist Church January 2, 2004 12 Head of Lane Rd.
42°45′8″N 73°20′44″W / 42.75222°N 73.34556°W / 42.75222; -73.34556 (Petersburgh United Methodist Church)
Petersburgh
56 Poesten Kill Gorge Historic District March 8, 1978 Address Restricted Troy Try also Poestenkill Gorge Historic District
57 Powers Home April 16, 1974 819 3rd Ave.
42°47′2″N 73°40′22″W / 42.78389°N 73.67278°W / 42.78389; -73.67278 (Powers Home)
Troy
58 Proctor's Theater[23] October 4, 1979 82 4th St.
42°43′55″N 73°41′25″W / 42.73194°N 73.69028°W / 42.73194; -73.69028 (Proctor's Theater)
Troy 1914 theater shows transition between eras of live entertainment and motion picture.
59 Public School No. 10 November 4, 1994 77 Adams St.
42°43′22″N 73°41′34″W / 42.72278°N 73.69278°W / 42.72278; -73.69278 (Public School No. 10)
Troy
60 Pumpkin House June 8, 1998 180 Fourth St.
42°43′35″N 73°41′26″W / 42.72639°N 73.69056°W / 42.72639; -73.69056 (Pumpkin House)
Troy
61 River Street Historic District June 3, 1976 Both sides of River St. from Congress St. to jct. with 1st St.
42°43′49″N 73°41′42″W / 42.73028°N 73.69500°W / 42.73028; -73.69500 (River Street Historic District)
Troy Oldest downtown neighborhood in city, largely rebuilt after 1820 fire. Now part of Central Troy Historic District.
62 Sand Lake Baptist Church January 2, 2004 2960 NY 43
42°38′7″N 73°32′59″W / 42.63528°N 73.54972°W / 42.63528; -73.54972 (Sand Lake Baptist Church)
Averill Park
63 Schodack Landing Historic District September 15, 1977 NY 9J
42°28′58″N 73°46′7″W / 42.48278°N 73.76861°W / 42.48278; -73.76861 (Schodack Landing Historic District)
Schodack Landing
64 Second Street Historic District August 7, 1974 Both sides of 2nd St.
42°43′53″N 73°41′40″W / 42.73139°N 73.69444°W / 42.73139; -73.69444 (Second Street Historic District)
Troy Troy's first desirable residential neighborhood. Many houses from 1820s-1840s. Merged into Central Troy Historic District in 1986.
65 Sharpe Homestead and Cemetery May 19, 2005 44 Laura Ln.
42°39′40″N 73°41′57″W / 42.66111°N 73.69917°W / 42.66111; -73.69917 (Sharpe Homestead and Cemetery)
Defreestville
66 Sherman Farm July 5, 2003 35 Sherman Rd.
42°51′23″N 73°30′37″W / 42.85639°N 73.51028°W / 42.85639; -73.51028 (Sherman Farm)
Pittstown
67 Henry Tunis Smith Farm September 18, 1975 S of Nassau on NY 203
42°29′37″N 73°37′10″W / 42.49361°N 73.61944°W / 42.49361; -73.61944 (Smith, Henry Tunis, Farm)
Nassau
68 St. Barnabas Episcopal Church January 28, 2004 2900 Fifth Ave.
42°44′46″N 73°40′58″W / 42.74611°N 73.68278°W / 42.74611; -73.68278 (St. Barnabas Epicopal Church)
Troy
69 St. Mark's Episcopal Church[24] July 27, 2000 Main St.
42°53′59″N 73°21′2″W / 42.89972°N 73.35056°W / 42.89972; -73.35056 (St. Mark's Episcopal Church)
Hoosick Falls 1858 Henry Dudley church done in brick rather than his usual stone
70 St. Paul's Episcopal Church Complex[25] September 7, 1979 58 3rd St.
42°43′49″N 73°41′24″W / 42.73028°N 73.69000°W / 42.73028; -73.69000 (St. Paul's Episcopal Church Complex)
Troy 1828 church is early Gothic Revival imitation of Ithiel Town's Trinity Church in New Haven, Connecticut
71 Joachim Staats House and Gerrit Staats Ruin December 15, 1978 N of Castleton-on-Hudson
42°34′15″N 73°44′58″W / 42.57083°N 73.74944°W / 42.57083; -73.74944 (Staats, Joachim, House and Gerrit Staats Ruin)
Castleton-on-Hudson
72 Tibbits House May 22, 1978 S of Hoosick at jct. of NY 22 and NY 7
42°51′28″N 73°20′37″W / 42.85778°N 73.34361°W / 42.85778; -73.34361 (Tibbits House)
Hoosick
73 Trinity Church Lansingburgh May 1, 1995 585 Fourth Ave.
42°46′28″N 73°40′32″W / 42.77444°N 73.67556°W / 42.77444; -73.67556 (Trinity Church Lansingburgh)
Troy
74 Troy Gas Light Company Gasholder House February 18, 1971 NW corner of Jefferson St. and 5th Ave.
42°43′17″N 73°41′26″W / 42.72139°N 73.69056°W / 42.72139; -73.69056 (Troy Gas Light Company)
Troy Unusual structure used to hold coal gas in the 1800s.
75 Troy Public Library January 17, 1973 100 2nd St.
42°44′46″N 73°40′59″W / 42.74611°N 73.68306°W / 42.74611; -73.68306 (Troy Public Library)
Troy
76 Troy Savings Bank and Music Hall April 11, 1989 32 Second St.
42°43′49″N 73°41′31″W / 42.73028°N 73.69194°W / 42.73028; -73.69194 (Troy Savings Bank and Music Hall)
Troy Late 19th-century bank building with full theater, including pipe organ, upstairs
77 US Post Office-Hoosick Falls[26] November 17, 1988 35 Main St.
42°54′2″N 73°21′5″W / 42.90056°N 73.35139°W / 42.90056; -73.35139 (US Post Office--Hoosick Falls)
Hoosick Falls 1925 brick Colonial Revival building mostly intact
78 US Post Office-Troy[27]
May 11, 1989 400 Broadway
42°43′53″N 73°41′21″W / 42.73139°N 73.68917°W / 42.73139; -73.68917 (US Post Office--Troy)
Troy Stripped Classical Revival-style building from 1936, excellent example of that sort of architecture in larger city post offices during Depression. One of only three in the U.S. with interior mural by Waldo Peirce.
79 John Evert Van Alen House August 20, 2004 1744 Washington Ave. Ext.
42°39′11″N 73°41′56″W / 42.65306°N 73.69889°W / 42.65306; -73.69889 (Van Alen, John Evert, House)
Defreestville
80 W. & L. E. Gurley Building[28] March 5, 1970 514 Fulton St.
42°43′57″N 73°41′18″W / 42.73250°N 73.68833°W / 42.73250; -73.68833 (W. & L. E. Gurley Building)
Troy Exemplary Neoclassical commercial building preserved nearly intact; built in only eight months on site of 1845 original after 1862 fire. Home of Gurley Precision Instruments for over 150 years.
81 Washington Park Historic District Washington Park May 25, 1973 Washington Park and adjacent properties on 2nd, 3rd, and Washington Sts. and Washington Pl.
42°43′26″N 73°41′35″W / 42.72389°N 73.69306°W / 42.72389; -73.69306 (Washington Park Historic District)
Troy Rows of townhouses built by local businessmen in 1839 on the model of British residential squares in Bloomsbury. Residents are still assessed for the maintenance of the park. Now part of Central Troy Historic District.
82 Emma Willard School Emma Willard School August 30, 1979 Pawling and Elmgrove Aves.
42°42′48″N 73°39′44″W / 42.71333°N 73.66222°W / 42.71333; -73.66222 (Willard, Emma, School)
Troy
83 Winslow Chemical Laboratory Winslow Laboratory November 4, 1994 105 Eighth St.
42°43′52″N 73°41′5″W / 42.73111°N 73.68472°W / 42.73111; -73.68472 (Winslow Chemical Laboratory)
Troy 1866 structure on RPI campus.

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ The Kingdom of England existed until the Acts of Union 1707, when Scotland and England came together to form the Kingdom of Great Britain.
  3. ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved May 3, 2024.
  4. ^ Richard Greenwood (November 24, 1975), Template:PDFlink, National Park Service and Template:PDFlink
  5. ^ Peckham, Mark (July 1986). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Central Troy Historic District (requires JavaScript)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-10-26.. Also see excerpts at "Central Troy Historic District". Livingplaces.com., which does not require JavaScript to view.
  6. ^ Peckham, Mark (July 1986). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Central Troy Historic District". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (NYSOPRHP). Retrieved 2008-10-26.. Also see excerpts at "Central Troy Historic District". Livingplaces.com., which does not require JavaScript to view. Page numbers used for the former version are those assigned by the JavaScript reader at the NYSOPRHP site, not those used in the document itself.
  7. ^ DiSanto, Victor. "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Delaney Hotel". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  8. ^ a b Zankel, Sharon (2008-04-22). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, District 6 Schoolhouse (Javascript)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  9. ^ Harwood, John (November 15, 1979). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Estabrook Octagon House". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved OCtober 27, 2009. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  10. ^ Shaver, Peter (2002-06-17). "National Register of Historic Places nomination; Fire Alarm, Telegraph and Police Signaling Building". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  11. ^ James Dillon (1983), Template:PDFlink, National Park Service and Template:PDFlink
  12. ^ Waite, Diana S. (1988-04-29). "National Register of Historic Places Registration nomination, Garfield School (Javascript)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  13. ^ Ingraham, Frances (1993-04-25). "Eagle Mills' Rural Charm Keeps Longtime Residents". Times Union (Albany). pp. G1. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  14. ^ Brooke, Cornelia (September 1971). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Hart-Cluett Mansion". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  15. ^ Todd, Nancy (December 1994). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Hoosick Falls Armory". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved October 25, 2009.
  16. ^ Powers, Robert (August 1979). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Hoosick Falls Historic District". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  17. ^ Liebs, Chester (May 1970). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Ilium Building". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-11-11.
  18. ^ Waite, Diana (December 1969). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, McCarthy Building". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
  19. ^ Page Putnam Miller, Jill S. Mesirow, Andrew Laas, John W. Bond, and Rachel Bliven (September 4, 1997), Template:PDFlink, National Park Service{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) and Template:PDFlink
  20. ^ Liebs, Chester (May 1970). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, National State Bank Building". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  21. ^ Smith, Raymond (February 1988). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Northern River Street Historic District". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  22. ^ Harrison, A. Rebecca (1984-08-03). "National Register of Historic Places Registration nomination, Oakwood Cemetery (Javascript)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
  23. ^ Powers, Robert (May 1979). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Proctor's Theater". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-10-28.
  24. ^ Shaver, Peter (November 24, 1999). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, St. Mark's Episcopal Church". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  25. ^ Dunn, Shirley (June 19, 1979). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, St. Paul's Episcopal Church (JavaScript)". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-11-08.
  26. ^ Gobrecht, Larry (December 1986). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, US Post Office–Hoosick Falls". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved October 21, 2009.
  27. ^ Gobrecht, Larry (December 1986). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, U.S. Post Office-Troy". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  28. ^ George R. Adams (November, 1977), Template:PDFlink, National Park Service {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) and Template:PDFlink