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Canandaigua City School District

1791 establishments in New York (state)Canandaigua, New YorkEducation in Ontario County, New YorkSchool districts in New York (state)Use mdy dates from July 2023

The Canandaigua City School District is a public school district in New York State, United States, that serves approximately 3,650 students in the city of Canandaigua and the town of Canandaigua and portions of the towns of Bristol, Farmington, East Bloomfield, Gorham, Hopewell and South Bristol in Ontario County, with an approximate operating budget of $76 million. The student-teacher ratio is 13:1(elementary), 12-13:1(middle-high school).The District motto is "One Community, Transforming Lives". Jamie Farr is the Superintendent of Schools.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Canandaigua City School District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Canandaigua City School District
North Pearl Street,

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N 42.89 ° E -77.292777777778 °
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North Pearl Street 143
14424
New York, United States
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United States Post Office (Canandaigua, New York)
United States Post Office (Canandaigua, New York)

The former U.S. Post Office in Canandaigua, New York, is located on North Main Street (New York state routes 21 and 332). It is a Classical Revival granite structure built in 1910 and expanded in 1938. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places both as a contributing property to the Canandaigua Historic District in 1984 and individually in 1988, as part of a Multiple Property Submission of over 200 post offices all over the state.Its construction was authorized in the first decade of the 20th century under the Tarsney Act of 1893, which authorized the federal government to hire private architects to design buildings for its use. Local philanthropist Mary Clark Thompson, widow of banker Frederick Ferris Thompson, donated the land and paid for Boston-based Allen & Collens to design the new building. It is one of only three post offices in the state built under the act, and the only one outside of New York City. In 1938 it was expanded with an additional story under the auspices of Louis Simon, Supervising Architect of the Treasury Department. At the time of its construction it was also used as a federal courthouse. Three years after it was listed on the Register, the Postal Service moved out for larger quarters. The neighboring YMCA bought the post office building several years later. It has annexed it to its own building and built an extension to the west, but kept the post office building intact.