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Re: Upstate NY
#205720
04/12/06 04:10 PM
04/12/06 04:10 PM
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902 New York
SC
Consigliere
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Consigliere

Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902
New York
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Originally posted by Ballsy McDuff: I have heard rumors that White Lake was used as a dumping ground for bodies from the city. It was, supposedly, used by Murder, Inc. in the 20's and 30's as a burial ground. I don't know any details.
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Re: Upstate NY
#205725
08/14/06 03:43 AM
08/14/06 03:43 AM
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Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 8 Warwick, NY
jason_els
Associate
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Associate
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 8
Warwick, NY
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There are a lot of dumping grounds throughout the Hudson Valley. Greenwood Lake, Seven Lakes Drive, and Yankee Lake are a few reputed places. There are alleged wiseguys living in the area and once in a great while our regional paper, The Times Herald Record, tries to interview someone under indictment, but on the whole they're pretty quiet confining themselves to small communities throughout the area. We have had issues with toxic waste dumping in landfills (legal and otherwise), supposedly done by the mob. This doesn't surprise me.
I have a friend who went into business with another guy here in Orange county and they apprently stepped on a few toes. One day my friend runs into this guy, an aquaintence of his business partner, who insists on taking my friend for a ride. So they go up to the woods, down a dirt road and my friend is shitting bricks, but as they drive it's clear that this guy knows about their business. They pull up to my friend's partner's car and the guy opens the trunk. There was my friend's business partner.
Not quite alive.
So at this point my friend soils himself and the guy turns to him and says, "You don't want to be in this business no more," then gets in his car and drives away. Needless to say, my friend dissolved the business and that was the end of that.
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Re: Upstate NY
#205726
08/14/06 03:01 PM
08/14/06 03:01 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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That's a delightful little story, Jason..... Just to clear a small, somewhat unrelated, point: The Sullivan County hotels of yore - Grossingers, The Concord, The Nevele, etc. - are actually not in the Catskill Mountains. In fact, they're not really in any mountains. You could, I guess, say that they're in the "foothills" of the Catskills, but that's about it. The mountains themselves don't really begin until the northern reaches of Sullivan County, at least 20 miles or so up Route 42. What happened, though, was that there was an original round of Catskill Mountain hotels - The Catskill Mountain House at North Lake in Greene County ( http://www.catskillarchive.com/mtnhouse/index.htm ) - good pictures there (It’s a very easy walk from North Lake to the exact spot where the hotel stood, and the hike north along the escarpment is wonderful) - The Overlook Mountain House near Woodstock, in Ulster County, The Laurel House, also near North Lake but closer to Kaaterskill Falls (another great day trip), The Grand, in Ulster County, and many others. These hotels had their heydays in the late 1800’s, when they were considered THE place to take a summer vacation in the northeast. The second round of "Catskill" hotels – the Sullivan County ones – just sought to capitalize on the "Catskill Mountains" name, even though they were not in the mountains themselves.
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: Upstate NY
#205727
08/14/06 06:55 PM
08/14/06 06:55 PM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721
AZ
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Originally posted by plawrence: In fact, they're not really in [b]any mountains. You could, I guess, say that they're in the "foothills" of the Catskills, but that's about it.[/b] ...but if you grew up in flat-as-a-board Brooklyn, they looked like "mountains." The second round of "Catskill" hotels – the Sullivan County ones – just sought to capitalize on the "Catskill Mountains" name, even though they were not in the mountains themselves. Those resorts started out as diary farms. At the turn of the 19th century, tuberculosis was the #1 killer of urban dwellers. The antidotes were thought to be fresh air, milk and sunshine--all of which were abundantly available at those Sullivan County dairy farms. So, the owners got the idea to advertise their farms as "sanitariums" and take in guests. This proved popular. In the 1920's, when some of the national prosperity trickled down to the woikin' stiffs and more people got vacations, they converted to full-time hotels.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Upstate NY
#205728
08/24/06 09:39 AM
08/24/06 09:39 AM
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Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 44 Riva, Maryland
Janice
Wiseguy
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Wiseguy
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 44
Riva, Maryland
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About sanitariums in New York and in New England. Check out http://www.opacity.us. It's a website devoted to urban exploration. The creator of the Opacity site has posted several places in the New England and New York areas about abandoned insane asylums, TB hospitals, etc. The site is very informative and the Forum is very very interesting!
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