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'''NY Heritage:''' A free digital, accessible, searchable online resource of New York history. Rich in facts, photos, letters, diaries, manuscripts, memorabilia, maps, ephemera, audio and video clips, postcards and more from the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection and other historical societies, libraries, museums across New York State. Visit us at [https://nyheritage.org/contributors/elting-memorial-library-haviland-heidgerd-historical-collection NY Heritage]. | '''NY Heritage:''' A free digital, accessible, searchable online resource of New York history. Rich in facts, photos, letters, diaries, manuscripts, memorabilia, maps, ephemera, audio and video clips, postcards and more from the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection and other historical societies, libraries, museums across New York State. Visit us at [https://nyheritage.org/contributors/elting-memorial-library-haviland-heidgerd-historical-collection NY Heritage]. | ||
'''Krupp Map:''' | '''Krupp Map:''' Working with Carol Johnson and Margaret Stanne from the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection, Gregory Krupp, a student intern for SUNY New Paltz’s Geography Department, mapped the land of the original patent and its early divisions. These divisions were made by the members of the Duzine, the twelve men, who governed our early township. Krupp was able to identify old boundary and plot lines combining today’s technology with old deeds, maps, town records, and stone walls, some of which were built with slave labor. All this land was not surveyed until 2017, 340 years after the patent. Online access to the Krupp Map is available [http://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/viewer.html?webmap=91e06011d76f4c698f9cce67e9c55cb6&extent=-74.2214,41.6695,-73.7998,41.8447 here]. | ||
Working with Carol Johnson and Margaret Stanne from the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection, Gregory Krupp, a student intern for SUNY New Paltz’s Geography Department, mapped the land of the original patent and its early divisions. These divisions were made by the members of the Duzine, the twelve men, who governed our early township. Krupp was able to identify old boundary and plot lines combining today’s technology with old deeds, maps, town records, and stone walls, some of which were built with slave labor. All this land was not surveyed until 2017, 340 years after the patent. Online access to the Krupp Map is available [http://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/viewer.html?webmap=91e06011d76f4c698f9cce67e9c55cb6&extent=-74.2214,41.6695,-73.7998,41.8447 here]. | |||
==History== | ==History== |
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