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Harriman
Harriman or Hariman (variant Herriman) is a surname derived from the given name Herman, and in turn occurs as a placename derived from the surname in the United States. Buildings * Dr. O.B. Harriman House, a historic home in Hampton, Iowa, U.S. * Harriman Historic District, a residential area in Bristol, Pennsylvania * Hariman Sanatorium, Grand Forks, North Dakota * Harriman School, a one-room schoolhouse in Sebec, Maine, U.S. Inhabited places * Harriman, New York, U.S. * Harriman, Tennessee, U.S. Transportation * Harriman station, a metro station in Harriman, New York * Harriman station (Erie Railroad), a former metro station in Harriman, New York * Harriman Station, original name of Greystone station in Yonkers, New York City Surname * Harriman (surname) Parks * Harriman State Park (Idaho), located on the Harriman Wildlife Refuge in Fremont County, Idaho * Harriman State Park (New York), in Rockland and Orange counties, donated by the Harriman family * Harriman State Park ...
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Harriman Station (Erie Railroad)
Harriman Station, formerly known as Turner Station until 1910, was the first station on the Erie Railroad Main Line west of Newburgh Junction in Harriman, New York. Built adjacent to Grove Street in Harriman, one of the earlier structures built here in 1838 was a three-story hotel-train station combination. This station caught fire in 1873 and was replaced by a one-story wooden structure. That structure remained in use for decades before it began decaying and was replaced in 1911 with a new station on land donated by the widow of Edward Henry Harriman. A new one-story structure was built on the land. The station was maintained as a one-story depot with an adjacent monument dedicated to the work of Charles Minot. Minot was a director of the Erie Railroad who, in 1851, while his train was stopped at Turner, made the first railroad call by telegraph. The station depot remained in use by the Erie through October 1960, when that was folded into the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad, which it ...
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Harriman Historic District
The Harriman Historic District is located in the northern section of Bristol, Pennsylvania, United States. It is a residential area with 109 buildings, mostly houses, and the local secondary school. By 1921, production at the shipyard had declined due to a postwar shipbuilding slump. The government consequently closed the shipyard and put many of the residential houses up for auction. Most remain standing today, and in 1987 the district was added to the National Register of Historic Places as a well-preserved example of a government planned and financed residential neighborhood from the World War I era. Geography The district is slightly oval in shape, bounded by East and West Circle on the north and south, Farragut Avenue on the east and Trenton Avenue to the west. This neighborhood contains 109 buildings, all but five of which are contributing properties to its historic character. In designing the project, the original architects strove to provide not mere accommodation, ...
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Harriman, New York
Harriman is a Village (New York), village in Orange County, New York, Orange County, New York (state), New York, United States. It is in the southeastern section of the town of Monroe (town), New York, Monroe, with a small portion in the town of Woodbury, Orange County, New York, Woodbury. The population was 2,714 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census. It is part of the Kiryas Joel, New York, Kiryas Joel–Poughkeepsie, New York, Poughkeepsie–Newburgh, New York, Newburgh, NY Kiryas Joel–Poughkeepsie–Newburgh metropolitan area, Metropolitan Statistical Area as well as the larger New York City, New York–Newark, New Jersey, Newark–Bridgeport, Connecticut, Bridgeport, NY-New Jersey, NJ-Connecticut, CT-Pennsylvania, PA New York metropolitan area, Combined Statistical Area. Geography Harriman is located at (41.308442, -74.147317). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of , of which is land and 1.00% is water. Ne ...
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Harriman State Park (New York)
Harriman State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of New York. Located in Rockland and Orange counties north of New York City, it the state's second largest, and features 31 lakes, multiple streams, public camping area, and great vistas. Its over of trails are a haven for hikers, currently maintained by volunteers from the New York - New Jersey Trail Conference. On its northeastern edge, Harriman State Park borders the Bear Mountain State Park and the United States Military Academy's forest reserve. To the southwest, it partly borders the state-owned Sterling Forest reserve. Together with the state's Storm King, these contiguous protected forests are almost as large as Harriman alone. History Edward Harriman and Mary Averell Harriman owned in Arden, New York as part of their estate. They opposed the state's decision to build a prison at Bear Mountain and wanted to donate some of their land to the state in order to build a park. A year after the death of ...
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Herriman (other)
Herriman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Damon Herriman, Australian actor *Delme Herriman (born 1973), British basketball player *Don Herriman (born 1946), Canadian ice hockey player *George Herriman (1880–1944), American cartoonist *William H. Herriman (1829–1918), American art collector *William S. Herriman (1791–1867), American businessman See also

*Herriman, Utah, a city in southwestern Salt Lake County *Herriman High School, a public high school in Herriman, Utah *Harriman (other) {{Surname ...
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Herman (name)
Herman is a masculine given name, from an ancient Germanic name consisting of the elements '':wikt:Appendix:Proto-Germanic/harjaz, harja-'' "army" and '':wikt:Appendix:Proto-Germanic/mann-, mann-'' "man". Hermine (other), Hermine is the feminine form of ''Herman''. It is first recorded in the 8th century, in the forms ''Hariman'', ''Heriman'', ''Hairman'', ''Herman''. It regained popularity in the English-speaking world in the 19th century, particularly in the United States amongst German Americans.Katie Martin-Doyle, ''The Treasury of Baby Names'', Worth Press, Cambridge 2005. ''Herman'' remains widely used in Dutch language, Dutch and Scandinavian languages. Variant forms include German language, German ''Hermann (name), Hermann''; French language, French ''Armand (name), Armand''; Italian language, Italian, Spanish language, Spanish and Portuguese language, Portuguese ''Armando (given name), Armando''; Italian ''Ermanno (given name), Ermanno''. Herman has also been ...
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Hariman Sanatorium
Hariman Sanatorium was the first chiropractic hospital with both in-patient and out-patient care in the United States when it opened on July 6, 1928. It was built by George E. Hariman, DC in Grand Forks, North Dakota Grand Forks is a city in and the county seat of Grand Forks County, North Dakota, United States. The city's population was 59,166 as of the 2020 United States census, 2020 census, making it the List of cities in North Dakota, third-most populous .... He managed the hospital until his death in 1977. His son continued the practice for four more years until he sold the building to the University of North Dakota which used it to house the offices of Department of Anthropology. They sold it to a developer in 1999 who converted it into apartments. References External linksGeorge Hariman, DC - Profession Builder Commercial buildings completed in 1928 Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in North Dakota 1928 establishments in Nor ...
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Harriman School
The Harriman School is a historic one-room schoolhouse on North Road in rural Sebec, Maine. Built in 1860, it is the oldest of two surviving 19th-century district schoolhouses in the community. The vernacular Greek Revival building served as a public school until 1933, and was converted into a museum by the Sebec Historical Society after it acquired the property in 1966. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the Federal government of the United States, United States federal government's official United States National Register of Historic Places listings, list of sites, buildings, structures, Hist ... in 1996. Description and history The Harriman School is set facing south on the north side of North Road, about northeast of its junction with Parsons Landing Road. It is a rectangular wood-frame structure with a front-facing gable roof, weatherboard exterior, and a granite foundation. The fr ...
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Harriman, Tennessee
Harriman is a city located primarily in Roane County, Tennessee, with a small extension into Morgan County. The population of Harriman was 5,892 at the time of the 2020 census. Geography Harriman is situated along the physiographic boundary between the Tennessee Valley region and the Cumberland Plateau region, with the Plateau—namely its Walden Ridge escarpment—rising several hundred feet above the city to the west. The Emory River enters the Tennessee Valley just west of Harriman at a pass known as Emory Gap, and forms an oxbow bend that surrounds the original section of Harriman. U.S. Route 27, known as Roane Street in Harriman, runs north-to-south through the city along the base of Walden Ridge. Interstate 40 runs east-to-west through the city's southern section. Harriman's southwestern boundary, which it shares with Rockwood, is located along US-27 about a half-mile south of the road's intersection with I-40. The city's southeastern boundary runs along Pi ...
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Harriman Station
Harriman station is a commuter rail stop owned by Metro-North Railroad serving trains on the Port Jervis Line, serving the village of Harriman, New York, the Monroe (town), New York, town and Monroe (village), New York, village of Monroe, and the town of Woodbury, Orange County, New York, Woodbury in Orange County, New York. Before its use as a station, the area was better known as "Newburgh Junction" and was where the Erie Railroad's mainline separated from the Newburgh Shortcut (and, later on and more importantly, the Graham Line). This junction was controlled by "NJ" interlocking tower and, while the mainline has been abandoned since 1983, the wye (rail), wye remains intact. Station layout The station has two tracks and a low-level side platform with a pathway connecting the platform to the siding, however the siding does not connect to the bypassing track where there is a switch near the Newburgh Junction, which is located a few feet north of the station. The station has ...
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Greystone Station
Greystone station is a commuter rail station on the Metro-North Railroad Hudson Line, located in the Greystone neighborhood of Yonkers, New York. The station has two high-level side platforms, each eight cars long, serving the outer tracks of the four-track line. History Greystone station was originally built in 1899 by developer Charles Harriman as "Harriman station" for the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, who insisted that he rename the station "Greystone" in 1910. A pedestrian bridge was built in 1915. As with many NYCRR stations in Westchester County, the station became a Penn Central station upon the merger between NYC and Pennsylvania Railroad in 1968, until it was taken over by Conrail Conrail , formally the Consolidated Rail Corporation, was the primary Class I railroad in the Northeastern United States between 1976 and 1999. The trade name Conrail is a portmanteau based on the company's legal name. It continues to do busine ... in 1976, and then by Met ...
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Harriman (surname)
Harriman is a surname of English origin. Notable people with the surname include: *W. Averell Harriman, Governor of New York, son of Edward * Edward Henry Harriman (1848–1909), American railroad financier * E. Roland Harriman, American railroad executive, son of Edward *Florence Jaffray Harriman, American socialite, suffragist, social reformer, organizer, and diplomat * Gladys Fries Harriman (1896–1983), American philanthropist, equestrian and big game hunter * Henry Harriman (Mormon), President of the Seventy of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints * Herbert M. Harriman (1873-1933), American heir, businessman and sportsman * John Emery Harriman (1869—1916), American civil engineer and inventor * John Harriman (botanist), English botanist * J. Borden Harriman (1864-1914), American financier * Oliver Harriman (1829-1904), American businessman * Oliver Harriman, Jr. (1862-1940), American stockbroker *Pamela Harriman, American socialite and diplomat * Robert Harima ...
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