Starting on a personal note, it is somewhat appropriate that we arrive at New York on this date. Today would have been my mother's 82nd birthday. She's been gone for six years now and I miss her each and every day. Although she was born in New Jersey, raised in Rhode Island, she spent her adult life in New York, raising me and my siblings. It is truly the state where she made her mark. Rest well Mom.
I am a New Yorker. I was born there, spent all of my childhood there and moved from the Empire State when I was 35. It is the state with which I most identify. Having lived in three different areas of the state (Long Island, the Capital District, and the Hudson Valley), people used to tell me I didn't have a New York accent, the New York accent one hears from those who live in Gotham and its environs.
I have traveled extensively throughout the state - crossing into Canada at both the Northern border (shout out to Plattsburgh!) and the Western border (hey Buffalo!). I have been through Fulton (city with a future) on my way to Oswego. I've been through the center of the State, visiting Cooperstown.
I debated about what other information to provide here (the histories are all covered well below) and no one needs an extensive travelogue of my time in the Empire State. So by all means, let's do trivia!
- The First American chess tournament was held in New York in 1857.
- The 641 mile transportation network known as the Governor Thomas E. Dewey Thruway is the longest toll road in the United States.
- A brewer named Matthew Vassar founded Vassar College in Poughkeepsie in 1861.
- In 1807 The Clermont made its maiden voyage from New York City to Albany making the vessel the first successful steamboat.
- New York City has 722 miles of subway track.
- The New York Post, established in 1803 by Alexander Hamilton, is the oldest running newspaper in the United States.
- The Genesee River is one of the few rivers in the world that flows south to north.
- Adirondack Park is larger than Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Glacier, and Olympic Parks combined.
- The oldest working cattle ranch in America is in Montauk, Long Island. Deep Hollow Ranch has been around since the 1800s.
- Martin Van Buren
- Millard Fillmore
- Chester A. Arthur
- Grover Cleveland
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt
The Governor of the Empire State is a Democrat and the son of a former Governor. Andrew Cuomo was elected in 2010, while his father, Mario, served as Governor of the state from 1983 to 1994. Both of the Senators for the state are Democrats, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand. The House delegation is currently 21-8, in favor of Democrats.
- 1st District - Tim Bishop (D)
- 2nd District - Steve Israel (D)
- 3rd District - Pete King (R)
- 4th District - Carolyn McCarthy (D) (McCarthy was elected after taking on an incumbent who came out against gun control. She had gained notoriety after her husband was killed and her son wounded when a gunman opened fire on a Long Island Rail Road car)
- 5th District - Gary Ackerman (D) (Ackerman just recently announced he will not run for reelection - he had been redistricted and decided it was time to go home)
- 6th District - Gregory Meeks (D)
- 7th District - Joseph Crowley (D)
- 8th District - Jerry Nadler (D)
- 9th District - Robert Turner (R)
- 10th District - Edolphus Towns (D)
- 11th District - Yvette Clark (D)
- 12th District - Nydia Velazquez (D)
- 13th District - Michael Grimm (R)
- 14th District - Carolyn Maloney (D)
- 15th District - Charlie Rangel (D) - just call him "The Chief"
- 16th District - Jose Serrano (D)
- 17th District - Eliot Engel (D)
- 18th District - Nita Lowey (D)
- 19th District - Nan Hayworth (R)
- 20th District - Chris Gibson (R)
- 21st District - Paul Tonko (D)
- 22nd District - Maurice Hinchey (D) (the veteran Congressman from the Southern Tier is also retiring at the end of this Congress)
- 23rd District - Bill Owens (D)
- 24th District - Richard Hanna (R)
- 25th District - Ann Marie Buerkle (R)
- 26th District - Kathy Hochul (D)
- 27th District - Brian Higgins (D)
- 28th District - Louise Slaughter (D) (really, could she ever lose? Slaughter Slaughters Opponent Again - Would you run against her?)
- 29th District - Tom Reed (R)
- State Capital - Albany
- Largest City - duh, New York City
- Date of Admission - July 26, 1788
- Area - 54,556 sq mi (27th)
- State Motto - "Excelsior" (Ever Upward)
- State Nickname - the Empire State
- State Slogan - "I Love NY" (see the 2001 commercial below)
- State Song - also "I Love NY" (but see a video of Billy Joel singing the unofficial state song below)
- State bird - the Eastern Bluebird
- State flower - the Rose
- State University - The State University of New York
- State Archives - The New York State Archives (part of the New York State Cultural Education Center, which also contains the State Library and Museum)
- State Historical Society - the New York State Historical Society
- Population (2011 est.) - 19,465,197 (3rd)
- Signers of the Declaration of Independence - William Floyd, Francis Lewis, Philip Livingston, Lewis "Mr. President, New York abstains, courteously" Morris (Mr. Floyd has a parkway named for him, while Mr. Lewis just has a boulevard)
- ny.gov - the Official Website of the State of New York
- The New York Tourism site - of course it's I Love NY
- The Encyclopedia Britannic entry for New York
- Wikipedia
- 50states.com entry for New York
- InfoPlease entry for New York
- New York Fact Sheet - from the USDA
- New York Guide from the Library of Congress
- New York State Bibliography
- The Astors - John Jacob Astor - the fur trader, John Jacob Astor IV - Titanic Victim, creators of the Waldorf-Astoria
- Woody Allen
- Maria Callas
- Shirley Chisholm - the Congresswoman and 1972 Presidential Candidate
- DeWitt Clinton - who pushed through the building of the Erie Canal
- Robert DeNiro - founder of Tribeca Film
- George Eastman
- Thomas E. Dewey (was not born in NY and died in Florida, but was Governor of the State, when he lost the presidency to Harry Truman in 1948)
- Lou Gehrig
- Jackie Gleason
- Washington Irving
- Billy Joel (you knew he'd be on my list)
- The Marx Brothers
- Arthur Miller
- Christopher Reeve
- Margaret Sanger
- Martin Scorsese
- Jerry Seinfeld
- The Supremes are well represented: First Chief Justice John Jay, current Chief Justice John Roberts, former Justices Benjamin Cardozo and Charles Evans Hughes, and current Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan, Antonin Scalia (born in NJ but moved to NY when he was five), Sonia Sotomayor
- Walt Whitman
3 comments:
How about Lucille Ball, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B Anthony?
There's also Tim Russert, Wolf Blitzer, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ani de Franco, Natalie Merchant, Herman Hollerith, and Rick James (all from the western end of the state).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_from_Buffalo,_New_York
She is going to get you to include women yet!
The dude actually told me who won that first chess tournament. I think he's ready for Jeopardy!
C - look at you with the Western NYers. Perhaps my "downstate" bias was too evident?
Anna - I've been trying with the women. And we all know the Dude is smart.
Post a Comment