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![]() | A fact from Clinton Avenue Historic District (Albany, New York) appeared on Wikipedia's
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The house at 3 Clinton Square was owned and lived in by Gansevoort Melville. Herman stayed there often but from everything I can find, never actually lived there as resident, and which during the time period stated he was living in Troy. The best source I have for this is Dan Rittner's Albany (page 77), which I, myself, have bashed as an author when "reviewing" Albany Revisted on the NYCD wikiproject talk page, but he is correct about who lived and owned the house. I know the NRHP documents say Herman lived there, but as I have been correcting in other parts of this article and other NRHP article, those documents are not well-researched in my personal opinion and should backed up by other sources and info from them scrapped when conflicted by other sources, opinions on conflict between sources and the NRHP docs? Camelbinky ( talk) 05:39, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
There's a map near the back pages of the application, although you'll have to blow it up as it's difficult to read. Eventually we ought to get the map shop to do one similar to the new Central Troy Historic District map. The federal building area is not in the district, but the square is. Those pics, if they're of rowhouses, might actually be more useful in Buildings at 744–750 Broadway.
There's a "period of significance" for any NRHP listing, usually the dates when historically significant or important construction took place. The Palace isn't the most recent construction in the district, of course, but it's the last contributing property built. I suppose the family court building can be mentioned as newer construction within the district although it's certainly non-contributing. Daniel Case ( talk) 01:19, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
I'm working on Streets of Albany, New York and wondering if anyone has more information to expand on the blurb from the history section in this article that states that after the Revolution Stephen van Rensselaer II had the area north of Clinton Avenue laid out in a grid street section. It would be beneficial to know exactly which streets were laid out by him and a source to that effect so I can add that to the streets article. Plus if someone would like to take the time to summarize this article to the streets article that would be great. Camelbinky ( talk) 00:29, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
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![]() | This article is rated B-class on Wikipedia's
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![]() | A fact from Clinton Avenue Historic District (Albany, New York) appeared on Wikipedia's
Main Page in the
Did you know column on 12 July 2009 (
check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
| ![]() |
The house at 3 Clinton Square was owned and lived in by Gansevoort Melville. Herman stayed there often but from everything I can find, never actually lived there as resident, and which during the time period stated he was living in Troy. The best source I have for this is Dan Rittner's Albany (page 77), which I, myself, have bashed as an author when "reviewing" Albany Revisted on the NYCD wikiproject talk page, but he is correct about who lived and owned the house. I know the NRHP documents say Herman lived there, but as I have been correcting in other parts of this article and other NRHP article, those documents are not well-researched in my personal opinion and should backed up by other sources and info from them scrapped when conflicted by other sources, opinions on conflict between sources and the NRHP docs? Camelbinky ( talk) 05:39, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
There's a map near the back pages of the application, although you'll have to blow it up as it's difficult to read. Eventually we ought to get the map shop to do one similar to the new Central Troy Historic District map. The federal building area is not in the district, but the square is. Those pics, if they're of rowhouses, might actually be more useful in Buildings at 744–750 Broadway.
There's a "period of significance" for any NRHP listing, usually the dates when historically significant or important construction took place. The Palace isn't the most recent construction in the district, of course, but it's the last contributing property built. I suppose the family court building can be mentioned as newer construction within the district although it's certainly non-contributing. Daniel Case ( talk) 01:19, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
I'm working on Streets of Albany, New York and wondering if anyone has more information to expand on the blurb from the history section in this article that states that after the Revolution Stephen van Rensselaer II had the area north of Clinton Avenue laid out in a grid street section. It would be beneficial to know exactly which streets were laid out by him and a source to that effect so I can add that to the streets article. Plus if someone would like to take the time to summarize this article to the streets article that would be great. Camelbinky ( talk) 00:29, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
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Cheers.— InternetArchiveBot ( Report bug) 15:38, 26 November 2016 (UTC)
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Cheers.— InternetArchiveBot ( Report bug) 14:25, 9 August 2017 (UTC)