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Holy Cross Church (Bronx)

1921 establishments in New York CityCatholic elementary schools in the BronxChristian organizations established in 1921Private middle schools in the BronxRoman Catholic churches in the Bronx
Soundview, Bronx
Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, Bronx IMG 2572 HLG
Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, Bronx IMG 2572 HLG

The Church of Holy Cross is a Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 600 Soundview Avenue, Bronx, New York City, NY 10473. The rectory address is the same.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Holy Cross Church (Bronx) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Holy Cross Church (Bronx)
Soundview Avenue, New York The Bronx

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.817777777778 ° E -73.861777777778 °
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Address

Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church

Soundview Avenue 610
10473 New York, The Bronx
New York, United States
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Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, Bronx IMG 2572 HLG
Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, Bronx IMG 2572 HLG
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Nearby Places

Bronx River
Bronx River

The Bronx River (), approximately 24 miles (39 km) long, flows through southeast New York in the United States and drains an area of 38.4 square miles (99 km2). It is named after colonial settler Jonas Bronck. Besides the Hutchinson River, the Bronx River is the only fresh water river in New York City.It originally rose in what is now the Kensico Reservoir, in Westchester County north of New York City. With the construction of the Kensico Dam in 1885, however, the river was cut off from its natural headwaters and today a small tributary stream serves as its source. The Bronx River flows south past White Plains, then south-southwest through the northern suburbs in New York, passing through Edgemont, Tuckahoe, Eastchester, and Bronxville. It forms the border between the large cities of Yonkers and Mount Vernon, and flows into the northern end of The Bronx, where it divides East Bronx from West Bronx, southward through Bronx Park, New York Botanical Garden, and the Bronx Zoo and continues through neighborhoods of the South Bronx. It empties into the East River, a tidal strait connected to Long Island Sound, between the Soundview and Hunts Point neighborhoods. In the 17th century, the river—called by the natives "Aquehung"—served as a boundary between loosely associated bands under sachems of the informal confederacy of the Wecquaesgeek, Europeanized as the Wappinger; the east bank of the river was the boundary for the Siwanoy, clammers and fishermen. The same line would be retained when manors were granted to the Dutch and the English. The Algonkian significance of the name is variously reported; the acca- element, as represented in the Long Island place-name Accabonac, was deformed into the more familiar, suitably watery European morpheme aque-. The tract purchased by Jonas Bronck in 1639 lay between the Harlem River and the river that came to be called "Bronck's river".