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The National Register of Historic Places listings in Syracuse, New York are described below. There are 120 listed properties and districts in the city of Syracuse, including 19 business or public buildings, 13 historic districts, 6 churches, four school or university buildings, three parks, six apartment buildings, and 43 houses.
Limestone Creek at the Old Erie Canal, Town of Manlius, NY. The 1,191-acre (4.82 km 2) park lies within Madison, Oneida, and Onondaga counties. [1] The park passes near or through several communities, including Fayetteville, Manlius Center, Kirkville, Chittenango, Canastota, Durhamville and New London.
Fayetteville Green Lake (FGL) was among the first lakes in North America identified as meromictic, [4] and is the best-studied meromictic lake in the world, with records dating back to 1839. [2] Green Lake was referred to as Lake Sodon by Lardner Vanuxem , who was the first to study Green Lake in 1839, and the presence of sulfide in the deeper ...
The Fayetteville Historic Square (usually shortened to Fayetteville Square or just The Square), in Fayetteville, Arkansas, includes the original Fayetteville post office, the Old Bank of Fayetteville Building, the Lewis Brothers Building, the Mrs. Young Building, and the Guisinger Building.
New York State Route 290 crosses the northwestern corner of the town. New York State Route 5 (in part, Genesee Turnpike) and New York State Route 173 (Seneca Turnpike) are east-west highways. New York State Route 257 is a north-south state highway, while New York State Route 92 (Cazenovia Rd) is a northwest-southeast highway.
DeWitt was part of the Central New York Military Tract.The first settlers arrived around 1789. The original Erie Canal progressed through the town in 1825. DeWitt was formed in 1835 from the Town of Manlius and was named in honor of Moses DeWitt, [5] a major in the militia, a county judge, and one of the first settlers of the county.
Clark Reservation State Park is a state park in Onondaga County, New York.The park is in Jamesville, NY, in the Town of DeWitt, south of Syracuse.It was the site of a large waterfall formed by melting glacial ice at the end of the last Ice Age; the plunge basin at the base of the old falls is now a small lake.
NY 92 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to a northwest–southeast roadway connecting Fayetteville to Cazenovia. [2] [5] At Fayetteville, NY 92 ended at NY 5, which continued west into downtown Syracuse on Genesee Street. [6] NY 5 was realigned c. 1934 to follow Erie Boulevard through eastern Syracuse.