NEW YORK 



4204 



NEW YORK 



June, 1917, local option was applied to cities and 

 in November of that year suffrage was extended 

 to women. T.E.F. 



Consult Kale's AVtr York. In "Tarry at Home" 

 Travels; Irving' s Knickerbocker'* Hi^tori/ of New 

 York; Roberts' AYic York: the i'luntin<> ami the 

 linm-th of the Empire State; Randall's llisttirii 

 of the State of New York; Prentice's History of 

 New York State, for use in high schools and 

 academies. 



KrlattMl SulijrctN. The following articles, of 

 interest in t-omu-i-tion with a study of New York, 

 will be found in these volumes : 



EDUCATION 



Albany 



Amsterdam 



Auburn 



Batavia 



Beacon 



Binghamton 



Brooklyn 



Buffalo 



Cohoes 



Corning 



Cortland 



Dunkirk 



Elmira 



Fulton 



Geneva 



Glens Falls 



Gloversville 



Hornell 



Hudson 



Ithaca 



Jamestown 



Johnstown 



Kingston 



Lackawanna 



Little Falls 



Lockport 



Mattt-awan 



Middletown 



Mount Vernon 



Newburgh 



New Rochelle 



New York 



Niagara Falls 



North Tonawanda 



Ogdensburg 



Olean 



Oneonta 



Ossining 



Oswego 



Peekskill 



Plattsburg 



Port Chester 



Port Jervis 



Poughkeepsie 



Rensselaer 



Rochester 



Rome 



Saratoga Springs 



Schenectady 



Syracuse 



Troy 



Utica 



Watertown 



Watervliet 



White Plains 



Yonkers 



1 laniard College 

 Columbia University 

 Cornell University 

 Military Academy, 



I'nitrd States 

 Xi-\v York, College of 

 the City of 



Clinton, De Witt 

 Crown Point 

 Hudson, Henry 



New York, University 



of the State of 

 New York University 

 Syracuse University 

 Vassar College 



HISTORY 



Revolutionary War in 



America 



Saratoga, Battles of 

 Stony Point 



LAKES 

 Oneida 

 Ontario 

 Seneca 



Cayuga 

 Champlain 

 Erie 

 George 



LEADING PRODUCTS AND INDUSTRIES 



Aluminum Gypsum 



Apple Hay 



Buckwheat Iron 



Cabbage Lumber 



Cheese Marble 



Dairying Oats 



Glove Oyster 



Granite Potato 



Grape Printing 



Graphite Salt 



Adirondack 



Allegheny 

 Delaware 

 East River 

 Genesee 



Algonquin Park 

 Ausable Chasm 

 Brooklyn Bridge 

 Ellis Island 

 Hell Gate 



MOUNTAINS 



Catskill 



RIVERS 



Hudson 

 Mohawk 



Niagara Falls and 

 River 



UNCLASSIFIED 



Liberty, Statue of 

 Long Island Sound 

 Palisades 

 West Point 



THE STORY OF NEW YORK 



lEW YORK, the greatest city in the 

 Western hemisphere, and, referring strictly to 

 corporate lines, the largest city in the world. 

 The population of London, England, including 

 the metropolitan and city police districts, is 

 over 7,250,000, but Registration London, the 

 city proper, contained 4,522,964 people at the 

 census of 1911. Greater New York in 1910 

 had a population of 4,766,883; the state census 

 of 1915 credited it with 5,006,484, and accord- 



ing to a Census Bureau estimate the number 

 had increased to 5,602,841 by January, 1917. 



This vast city in its everyday life presents 

 statistics which emphasize its greatness, and 

 from these there have arisen popular fancies 

 which reveal New York in certain unfavorable 

 lights, most of which are incorrect and mis- 

 leading. We are told that every second four 

 visitors arrive in the city; that every forty-two 

 seconds in normal years an immigrant from 



