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NEW YORK MESOTHELIOMA & ASBESTOS EXPOSURE LAWYERS
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BELLUCK & FOX - New
York, NY |
The attorneys
of Belluck & Fox, LLP, Joseph W. Belluck and Jordan Fox, help injured people
recover damages resulting from asbestos, unsafe products, mesothelioma,
toxic chemicals, medical malpractice, construction accidents, and serious
injuries.
1-877-200-6LAW |
Visit Website |
At the center of great events and
controversies from the very beginning of our nation's history (see
Aaron Burr), the Colony of New York became a state on April 20, 1777. New
York adopted its first constitution 12 years before the Federal Constitution was
adopted. New York City was the first capital of the United States and was the
site of the inauguration of George Washington as President on April 30, 1789. A
third of the battles fought in the American Revolution were in New York.
With their major port and
city occupied, New Yorkers managed to serve valiantly in the Continental Army
and to supply quantities of food, clothing, lead and iron to
General Washington. The American flag was first flown in battle at the
defense of Fort Stanwix in Rome, NY.
In 1784, George Washington
referred to New York as the "Seat of Empire". The Empire State cannot be
described without superlatives: the best, the fastest, the tallest, the first,
the biggest, the most. Excelsior (Ever Upward) is New York State's motto and
New York, in its mastery of technology is fast becoming the e-mpire state. Note
the "welcome" in so many of the websites listed on this page. The Government
sites are truly "user friendly" models with cross-reference links to related
services. With over 2,200,000 web sites for New York state attractions and
government, the easiest reference to use in web research is
northernlight.com, a searchengine that will organize the results into
category folders for you.
The total area of New York
State is 54,471.144 square miles (47,223.839 land and 7,247.305 inland water).
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mountain ranges:
Adirondack, Catskill, Shawangunk and Taconic
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water: 6,713
natural ponds, lakes and reservoirs of one acre or more (76 with an area of
one square mile or more); 1,745 square miles of inland water; 4,000 lakes,
ponds and reservoirs; 70,000 miles of rivers and streams; 127 miles of
Atlantic Ocean coastline; 9,767 miles of shoreline; 231 miles of shorefront,
83 miles of island shorefront, 548 miles of bayfront in & near Long Island
area.. Oneida Lake is the largest lake completely within the State. Lake
Champlain is 107 miles long. Lake Tear of the Clouds in Essex County is the
highest lake in the State - 4,320'. Other noted lakes: Finger Lakes, Otsego
Lake, Lake George, Lake Placid. New York's harbors and waterways must include
The Hudson River (306 miles long), the
Erie Canal (363 miles long - now a National Recreational Trail -
The New York State Canal System - Erie, Champlain, Oswego and Cayuga Seneca)
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and the fertile
interior is dotted with sugar maples (state trees) yielding a sweet sap
for syrup and sugar, apples (introduced by seed in the 1600s by European
settlers - dried apples and apple cider were staples), cherry orchards and two
hundred year old grape arbors (See the
Cayuga Wine Trail for wine history in New York), horse farms and dairy
farms, alfalfa and field corn and truck farms.
U.S. Presidents associated
with New York State are Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore, Chester Arthur,
Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, William J. Clinton.
As the publishing capitol
of the United States, most of America's writers are associated with New York -
a very few who may epitomize New York are:
James Fennimore Cooper,
Walt Whitman,
Dorothy Parker - and perhaps the essence of New York was captured by
Washington Irving who was the first American literary humorist and the first
to write history & biography as entertainment (as a consequence, nonfiction
prose was recognized as a genre of literature).
New York was the first
state to (1) preserve an historic site (Washington's Headquarters at Newburgh);
(2) establish a railroad (see Albany); (3) establish a state park (Niagara
Reservation); and (4) declare land "forever wild" (the Adirondack and Catskill
forest preserves) in the State Constitution.
"Uncle
Sam" was a meatpacker from
Troy, New York. During the War of 1812, Sam Wilson stamped "U.S. Beef" on
his products. The Uncle Sam caricature of Sam Wilson came to personify the
United States government.
New York is a world
capital with the
United Nations Headquarters in New York City.
A wonderful trip planner
is located at
http://www.iloveny.com/ "Useful Information".
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Albany / Saratoga:
Albany - the capitol city's 19th century architecture,
Saratoga
Racetrack, ballet, museums & other attractions are located in the upper
Hudson Valley. The first railroad in America ran between Albany and
Schenectady, a distance of 11 miles.
The Adirondacks: 46 high
peaks, 3,000 clear lakes, 1,500 miles of rivers, wilderness, Lake George and
Lake Placid. The highest point in New York State is Mount Marcy, Essex
County in the Adirondacks - 5,344 feet above sea level. North Elba, New
York, is the home and grave of abolitionist
John Brown whose actions at Harper's Ferry are generally thought to have
been the final trigger for the Civil War.
Lake George Monster - Warren County - 1904 surfacings wreaked havoc with
the tourist trade, frightened honeymooners, and reportedly caused one man to
swear off liquor permanently. |
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The Catskills: boast the
world's largest kaleidoscope: 60' tall. Home of the
Borscht Belt, the legend of Rip Van Winkle and other
LEGENDS AND FOLKLORE, brown trout and flycasting and of course legendary
Woodstock where the Bed & Breakfasts list Spirituality Links on their
websites. |
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Central Leatherstocking:
Howe Caverns,
Glimmerglass Opera,
Fenimore House and Manson Williams Proctor Institute in Utica.
Cooperstown's National Baseball Hall of Fame. The United States flag
was first flown in battle at the defense of Fort Stanwix in Rome. In 1815,
Rome was the starting place for the Erie Canal. .
Rome is within a 300-mile radius of 25% of US-Canadian population. The
National Association of Homebuilders ranked the area 9th in the top 10 most
affordable metro areas in the nation.
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Chautauqua-Allegheny:
Allegheny State Park, Salamanca, the only city in the world entirely
within native lands, the Allegheny Reservation of the
Seneca Nation of Indians. It is the only city in the U.S. to lie
entirely within native lands. And
Chautauqua Institution over 125 years old, is a renowned arts festival
set in a charming Victorian village in upstate NY, dedicated to intellectual
and spiritual growth.
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The Finger Lake Region:
Carved by glaciers and noted for its artistic retreats, waterfalls and
Wineries,
Corning Museum of Glass and Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science &
Technology in Syracuse and the International Museum of Photography in
Rochester.
Taughannock Falls in the Finger Lake region is the highest falls at 215
feet (yes, higher than Niagara). Mark Twain spent many summers here.
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Greater Niagra:
Niagara Falls - Thunder Alley and
Letchworth State Park (the Grand Canyon of the East). Buffalo, the
regions largest city offers fine dining and museums. The Niagara River
spills 40 million gallons of water 180 feet downward each minute across a
ragged ledge nearly 2/3 of a mile wide ( which honeymooners may not have
noticed).
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The Hudson Valley: Along
the meandering Hudson River are great estates, Franklin Roosevelt's Hyde
Park, the
Rockefeller's Kykuit and the
U.S. Military Academy at West Point. The Hudson Valley is homeland to
the Iroquois Confederacy and the Oneida Nation. The size of the valley
estuary led Henry Hudson to believe he had found passage to the Orient.
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Long Island: Miles of
shore dotted with seaside villages offer whale watching, surfing, sunning
and other water recreation.
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New York City: The first capital of the United States and the site
of the inauguration of George Washington as President on April 30, 1789.
With
Broadway and
New York City Opera for entertainment and
Madison Square Garden for sports, the city that never sleeps offers
entertainment 24/7 all year long. Named "The Big Apple" by touring jazz
musicians of the 1930s . ("Apple" was slang for any town or city. New York
City was and is the entertainment, business and publishing capital of the
country , which equals big time or "The Big Apple"). Must see's
in the city include: the
American Museum of Natural History,
Bryant Park,
Central Park, Chelsea Piers, the
Empire State Building (1,454 feet tall, built in 1931, in Art Deco
style),
Metropolitan Museum of Art (One of the greatest museums in the world),
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), NBC Studio Tours, New York Public
Library,
New York Skyride,
Rockefeller Center, St Patrick's Cathedral, and United Nations
Headquarters - all in Midtown Manhattan. In the Bronx, there is the Bronx
Zoo/Wildlife Conservation Park,
New York Botanical Garden (One of the world's largest botanical gardens,
250 acres, founded 1891, tram rides, etc.), and
Yankee Stadium. Upper Manhattan holds the
Cloisters, and the
Jewish Museum (4,000 years of Jewish art, history, etc. - largest
collection outside of Israel). Chinatown,
Ellis Island (built in 1842 on the site of the first U.S. Capitol),
Federal Hall National Memorial, Greenwich Village, Little Italy,
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) (visitors tours), SoHo, Statue Of Liberty
National Monument (tallest statue of modern times, presented by France in
1884.) Gateway National Recreation Area, Richmondtown (village/museum
complex with centuries' old schoolhouses, shops, prison, etc.) can be found
in Staten Island/Richmond and
Shea Stadium (New York Mets) is in Queens. |
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The Thousand Islands Seaway: St. Lawrence Seaway harbors hundreds of
islands (maybe a thousand). The fishing offered includes salmon, walleyes,
pike, muskellunge and the finest small mouth bass in the world.
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List of Counties
in New York State
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Allegany
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Montgomery
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Columbia
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The Statute of Liberty
New York City Photos |

Empire State Building
New York City Photos |

Golden Prometheus Statue
Rockefeller Center, NY |
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Broadway
New York Pictures |

The New York Stock Exchange
New York City Photographs |

New York City Photos |
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