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St. Ann, The Personal School

1926 establishments in New York (state)Educational institutions established in 1926Manhattan building and structure stubsNew York City school stubsRoman Catholic elementary schools in Manhattan
Roman Catholic secondary schools in Manhattan
St. Ann School Crest
St. Ann School Crest

St. Ann, The Personal School is a Catholic pre-kindergarten and K–8 school in Upper Manhattan, located in East Harlem at 314 East 110th Street, New York City. It was founded in 1926. The principal is Mrs. Teresa Letizia.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Ann, The Personal School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Ann, The Personal School
East 110th Street, New York Manhattan

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.792627 ° E -73.939831 °
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Address

East 110th Street 314
10029 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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St. Ann School Crest
St. Ann School Crest
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Metropolitan Park (New York City)

Metropolitan Park is a former baseball ground located in East Harlem, Manhattan, New York. The ground was the part-time home to the New York Metropolitans of the American Association in 1884. The wooden ballpark was built a few blocks east and south from their first home, the original Polo Grounds, on a piece of land bounded by 109th Street (north), the Harlem River (east), 107th Street (south), and First Avenue (west). It was built a block east and north of the site of the Red House hotel and grounds, which had hosted trotting, cricket and baseball from 1833 until its demise in about 1867. The park had been built on a former dumping ground, a fact which contributed to its quick demise. It also suffered from the various swamp-related unpleasantries, such as mosquitoes, which had led to the shutdown of the Red House grounds. The Mets played their first game at Metropolitan Park on May 13, 1884, amid a degree of publicity. However, the park proved unsatisfactory, and was soon labeled "The Dump" by players and other observers (especially sports reporters working for the Brooklyn Eagle). The Mets returned to the Polo Grounds for games starting on July 17, 1884, except when the New York Giants were playing at home. The final Mets game played at Metropolitan Park was on August 23, 1884. The Mets then returned to their original Polo Grounds venue, in time to win the American Association pennant. The park continued to be used for occasional amateur baseball and football for a year or two after the Mets abandoned it. The block is now occupied by a complex of residential, commercial and school buildings.