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Scribner House (Cornwall, New York)

Cornwall, New YorkHouses completed in 1910Houses in Orange County, New YorkHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)National Register of Historic Places in Orange County, New York
Shingle Style architecture in New York (state)Shingle Style houses
Scribner House, Cornwall, NY
Scribner House, Cornwall, NY

The Scribner House is located on Roe Avenue in Cornwall, New York, United States. It was built in 1910 as the main house for the summer estate of New York City publishing executive Charles Scribner II, one of Charles Scribner's Sons. It combines Colonial Revival interiors with a Shingle style exterior, including some hints of the Arts and Crafts Movement. After the Scribners sold the estate, most of the land was sold and this is all that remains. In 1996 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Scribner House (Cornwall, New York) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Scribner House (Cornwall, New York)
Roe Avenue, Town of Cornwall

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.4375 ° E -74.024166666667 °
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Address

Roe Avenue 19
12520 Town of Cornwall
New York, United States
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Scribner House, Cornwall, NY
Scribner House, Cornwall, NY
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Stanton Preparatory Academy

Stanton Preparatory Academy was founded in 1925 to prepare young men for entrance to the United States Military Academy at West Point and the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis. The school was located in Cornwall, New York, five miles from West Point. The school was founded and led by Lieutenant Colonel Hubert G. Stanton (born September 14, 1897 – died September 15, 1955). It followed in the tradition established by the National Preparatory Academy. That institution was owned and led by LT Charles Braden from 1890 until his death in 1919. In the late 1920s, some sources refer to it as the "Stanton Loomis Academy." Stanton was a 1911 graduate of West Point. He was the president of the class of 1911. Commissioned as an officer in the coastal artillery, he was an instructor in the Department of Mathematics at the academy between 1911 and 1914 and returned in 1917 as an assistant professor remaining as a member of the faculty until 1925. The 1938 edition of the Handbook of Private Schools for American Boys and Girls lists the tuition for boarders as $1,100 (roughly $16,695 in 2009 dollars) and $675 for the day school ($10,245 in 2009 dollars). Harvard University's tuition, by comparison, was only $400 a year. The school closed by 1952; that August, the town purchased its former property. The school building was renovated as the town hall; the grounds were converted to a park. Both U.S. services now operate their own preparatory schools, the United States Military Academy Preparatory School and the Naval Academy Preparatory School.