Minnewaska mountain houses . Uiibcvdift By West Shore Railroad to Kingston, and byspecial trains to New Paltz. By New York, Ontario & Western Railwayfrom New York to New Paltz, via Cornwall and Campbell Hall, By New York Central & Hudson River Railroad or by NewYork and Albany day boats to Kingston Point, and by rail to New New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad to Goshen, andby Wallkill Valley Railroad to New Paltz. The Highland & New Paltz Electric Railroad will make goodconnections with New York Central andWest Shore trains at Poughkeepsie andHighland. After the summer time-tables
Minnewaska mountain houses . Uiibcvdift By West Shore Railroad to Kingston, and byspecial trains to New Paltz. By New York, Ontario & Western Railwayfrom New York to New Paltz, via Cornwall and Campbell Hall, By New York Central & Hudson River Railroad or by NewYork and Albany day boats to Kingston Point, and by rail to New New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad to Goshen, andby Wallkill Valley Railroad to New Paltz. The Highland & New Paltz Electric Railroad will make goodconnections with New York Central andWest Shore trains at Poughkeepsie andHighland. After the summer time-tables arearranged, schedules of trains, etc., willbe sent on application. Tickets from New York, Brooklyn,and Philadelphia will be sold to andfrom New Paltz, and baggage checkedthrough. Parties wishing to inspect the roomsin May will be met at the train uponproper notice being given, and whenwishing to stay over night, can be com-fortably accommodated at one of lliilinncvc lEIiff Opened in 1879 and enlarged in 1881. willaccommodate about two hundred andtwenty-five guests. This house is located on the eastern sideof the lake,on a commanding height,eighteenhundred feet above tide-water, or nearly ashigh as the Catskill Mountain House : andfrom nearly every room in the hotel there aremagnificent valley and mountain views, tak-ing in the mountains of New Jersey on thesouth; the highlands of the Hudson andNewburg Bay to the southeast; the Housa-tonic Mountains of Connecticut to the east;the whole line of the Berkshire Mountainsof Massachusetts and the Green Mountainsof Vermont to the northeast; the HelderbergMountains to the north ; the bold outline ofthe Catskills and the Shandaken Mountainsto the northwest; and the Neversink and Shawangunk Hills to the west. The viewsembrace several river valleys, including thevalley of the Hudson from Cornwall to themountains about Lake George. From thecupola of this house six States can be seenat o
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidminnewaskamo, bookyear1898