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J. Eshelman and Company Store

Buildings and structures in Erie County, New YorkCommercial buildings completed in 1872Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)Erie County, New York Registered Historic Place stubsItalianate architecture in New York (state)
National Register of Historic Places in Erie County, New York
J. Eshelman and Company Store Aug 10
J. Eshelman and Company Store Aug 10

J. Eshelman and Company Store, also known as The Square Deal Store, is a historic general store located at Clarence Center in Erie County, New York. It is a three-story, brick and cast iron commercial building constructed in the Italianate style in 1872. It exemplifies the type of brick and cast iron commercial building common to the region from the 1850s to the 1880s.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article J. Eshelman and Company Store (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

J. Eshelman and Company Store
Goodrich Road,

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Latitude Longitude
N 43.010555555556 ° E -78.6375 °
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Address

Goodrich Road 6000
14032
New York, United States
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J. Eshelman and Company Store Aug 10
J. Eshelman and Company Store Aug 10
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Colgan Air Flight 3407
Colgan Air Flight 3407

Colgan Air Flight 3407 (marketed as Continental Connection Flight 3407) was a scheduled passenger flight from Newark, New Jersey, USA to Buffalo, New York, USA on February 12, 2009. Colgan Air staffed and maintained the aircraft used on the flight that was scheduled, marketed and sold by Continental Airlines under its Continental Connection brand. The aircraft, a Bombardier Q400, entered an aerodynamic stall from which it did not recover and crashed into a house at 6038 Long Street in Clarence Center, New York at 10:17 pm EST (03:17 UTC), killing all 49 passengers and crew on board, as well as one person inside the house.The National Transportation Safety Board conducted the accident investigation and published a final report on February 2, 2010 that identified the probable cause as the pilots' inappropriate response to stall warnings.The pilots were Captain Marvin Renslow, 47, of Lutz, Florida was the pilot in command, and Rebecca Lynne Shaw, 24, of Maple Valley, Washington served as the first officer Families of the accident victims lobbied the U.S. Congress to enact more stringent regulations for regional carriers and to improve the scrutiny of safe operating procedures and the working conditions of pilots. The Airline Safety and Federal Aviation Administrative Extension Act of 2010 (Public Law 111–216) required some of these regulation changes.At that time of the crash, it was the deadliest aviation disaster involving the Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 until the crash of US-Bangla Airlines Flight 211 in 2018.