Quinnipiac Meadows Railroad Name: Nhmaingis.DBO.Cityboundary Line Data Compiled from Various Sources

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Quinnipiac Meadows Railroad Name: Nhmaingis.DBO.Cityboundary Line Data Compiled from Various Sources West Rock Amity Newhallville Prospect Beaver Hill Quinnipiac Hills East Rock Meadows Westville Dixwell NORTH Edgewood HAVEN Dwight Fair Haven West River Downtown Wooster Fair Sq/ Mill Haven River Heights Hill Long Wharf Annex Rd n Rd ernhard ave B H n le G d N d R East orwoo r r St e k D Shore ndo inste a a D Westm v e G r t O g e St A s id s d o c R b n t a a y l i e S t r p HAMDEN W i Po n n Pro i e vidence v St u A Q n r w se D to Melro e l Pa d wtucket Neighborhood Location id St M H a w t h o r n St e Cranston R r d D o Scarb d oro n a St G t Foxo S n Hill Rd t e s Ave s Smith o New b port St y E e AT C W IV ro PR ss S t F t io S re t S l t e v e s o e o v R A i r ie m 17 E l ll a is P S t C B l li u ff e T A e ss r um t pt S ion t S e t s s o b y e He F W S mi li un ng Roos nt s wa evelt S e y P St Ex t t R l t dg 103 e v St rt B A Albe a Quinnipiac c r A a n i v e p e s i n n i W Meadows u e Q l r t D o e na n n v Do S A t n S w aint o A t nth ony e l S d t East d d i r R M ny D p Ken t m an S u Lym Rock D Middletown ve F A o x B o lv n Rd d Emily F 5 ox 91 91 on Dani B el Dr lvd Qu inn ipia c C Barn t es Ave E a t s r S t D e l l e r t n e a S D t e v t S n A ow c et a dl i id p M i Rock n e St 80 n v i A u C Q l F i n a t o G w F r n o a n xo c A n e S B v l S t v e F d t ro nt St F Ol ox d on t Rd M e oxon St S a Av F on y D x n t o w o St to iley S F dle Ba w F id n e M i r n ry g S S t t t John r S on D r liams e il t l W a P Wilcox w t t S A x se r s EAST HAVEN P l Rio D E e V a D B i r e e St k r a Dove w P c L h l l n linton P t C Peck S Fox St h St Englis k St e Pec v A St c bard a Lom i Aly p Peck i k St n ec n P i u Bella M t Q Vist rd S a a D ba C t r m l Lo t lley l b A S i n y t n o S At St r n t m tha e w a Ch t A a v s t R t S e e a ard D b o m r E Lo o w S w e t n S i n t t g S S t t n o r F St am St rafton Chath G ck St ay St Limeri Hemingw P t A i t n S n S P l rafto y e y G i a n t S w e Pine P g P n o i l p m l a e r P H t e S e L v S t r e A k l w l i n d i e s s o kso s c n o Ja L S S n s w t t e u s t R Pine S o Fair Haven Fair R C l i n A t Haven Heights o R t n w u T n a A e o B t r B n v o L e uchet r W e ood r h i ill Rd g St S Clay h t t e S e v t v A A t c s a 1 F i p e i r St n r nis n F ran i y G u i l l Q m S o t r P e Marie St o S p e t l v a C r lif A S Ave t rand on n t G o S t C t g lift n on i St x t E e t L S a S s l t r t G a n ra L e o in n c t r d oln A P F ve A S t v s e n a r E e y St t lse R s Woo obe H rt P a uls son arker e S Ave o E ge St S t ss xchan t u E t R er d T S n t a i t l r e t m S v e l S l h A m n o x u o W o S r St t r e S ont lc n rp s t a Pie om e Ki u n S e S L C gs o t Dr woo H d r Legend Data Location ATTENTION: DISCLAIMER City of New Haven, Connecticut Neighborhood Building CementPad Parcel Boundary Line Limited Access Server: GISDB-FS Database: NHMainGIS Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Airport_boundary Lake / River Foundation Deck Lake - Pond Highway Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Harbor_RiverText_14400 Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.CityBoundary_CTTowns This map is intended for illustrative and Community-Based Planning processes. Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Neighborhood_Analysis Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Shoreline Every reasonable effort has been made to assure the accuracy of the map and data John DeStefano Jr., Mayor Ocean House Trailer FuelTank Shoreline Major Road Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Building_Polygon_2007 Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Neighborhood_Analysis provided; nevertheless, some information may not be accurate. The City of Swamp Pool LoadingRamp River Local Road Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Geography_Polygon_2007 Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Parcel_2008_line New Haven assumes no responsibility arising from the use of this information. Airport Boundary Ruins RocksBoulders Stream Minor Road Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.HydrologyLine2007 City Boundary Silo WaterTank Wetland Other Road Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.CNH_StreetCenterlines No warranty is made by the City of New Haven as to the accuracy, reliability or Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.Airport_runway Shoreline Smokestack Airport Runway Ramp completeness of these data for individual or aggregate use with other data. Original Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.UtilityLine_2007 Quinnipiac Meadows Railroad Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.CityBoundary_Line data compiled from various sources. Spatial information may not meet national map Name: NHMainGIS.DBO.HydrologyArea2007 accuracy standards. This information may be updated without notification. Neighborhood city_boundary Data Source Map Document Information Streets - City of New Haven, 2012 Railroads - GNHWPCA, Aerial Photography, 2007 Produced by the 0120 240 480 720 960 1,200 1,440 1,680 Neighborhoods - City Plan, 2002 Mxd: neighborhood_series.mxd Creation Date: March 1, 2013 Mxd Loacation: W: (Engineer-fs)\Private Last Modified: March 1, 2013 Office of Information Technology Feet \IT\Alec\working\Mxd\ Map Prepared by: Alec Vincitorio, GIS Analyst, (203) 946-6538, [email protected] Geographic Information System 1 inch = 342 feet.
Recommended publications
  • GREATER NEW HAVEN Community Index 2016
    GREATER NEW HAVEN Community Index 2016 Understanding Well-Being, Economic Opportunity, and Change in Greater New Haven Neighborhoods A CORE PROGRAM OF In collaboration with The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven and other community partners and a Community Health Needs Assessment for the towns served by Yale-New Haven Hospital and Milford Hospital. Greater New Haven Community Index 2016 Understanding well-being, economic opportunity, and change in Greater New Haven neighborhoods MAJOR FUNDERS Other Funders The Greater New Haven Community Index makes extensive use of the 2015 DataHaven Community Wellbeing Survey, which completed in-depth interviews with 16,219 randomly-selected adults in Connecticut last year. In addition to the major funders listed above, supporters of the survey’s interviews with 1,810 adults in Greater New Haven as well as related data dissemination activities included the City of New Haven Health Department, United Way of Greater New Haven, Workforce Alliance, NewAlliance Foundation, Yale Medical Group, Connecticut Health Foundation, Connecticut Housing Finance Authority, and the Community Alliance for Research and Engagement at the Yale School of Public Health among others. Please see ctdatahaven.org for a complete list of statewide partners and funders. Lead Authors Mark Abraham, Executive Director, DataHaven Mary Buchanan, Project Manager, DataHaven Co-authors and contributors Ari Anisfeld, Aparna Nathan, Camille Seaberry, and Emma Zehner, DataHaven Amanda Durante and Fawatih Mohamed, University of Connecticut
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter V: Transportation
    Transportation CHAPTER V: TRANSPORTATION A. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS Located at the junction of Interstate 91 and Interstate 95, as well as a key access point to the Northeast Corridor rail line, New Haven is the highway and rail gateway to New England. It is the largest seaport in the state and the region and also the first city in Connecticut to have joined the national complete streets movement in 2008 by adopting the City’s Complete Streets Design Manual, balancing the needs of all roadway users including pedestrians, bicyclists, and motorists. Journey to Work Data For a U.S. city of its size, New Haven has substantial share (45 Aerial view of New Haven seaport: largest in the state and the region. percent) of commuters who use a form of transportation other than driving alone. Approximately 15 percent of all commuters travel via carpool, close to 14 percent walk to work, while over 11 percent use a form of public transportation. Of the 10 largest cities in New England, only Boston has a higher percentage of residents who travel to work via non-motorized transportation. Also, out of this same group of cities, New Haven ranked highest in the percentage of people who walked to work. New Haven Vision 2025 V-1 Transportation Vehicular Circulation There are 255 miles of roadway in the city, ranging from Interstate highways to purely local residential streets. Of these roadways, 88 percent are locally-maintained public roads and 12 percent are state-maintained roads and highways. There are 43 locally- maintained bridges in the city.
    [Show full text]
  • Report Appendices.Pdf
    APPENDIX A Appendix A Sampling Methodology for DataHaven 2015 Survey Respondents are contacted via landline or cell phone. The design of the landline sample is conducted so as to ensure the selection of both listed and unlisted telephone numbers, using random digit dialing (RDD). The cell phone sample is drawn from a sample of dedicated wireless telephone exchanges from within Connecticut and the specified zip codes within New York State. Respondents are screened for residence in the state of Connecticut or one of the seven zip codes in New York. The primary supplier of the RDD landline and cell phone samples is Survey Sampling International (SSI) of Shelton, Connecticut, “the premier global provider of sampling solutions for survey research1”. From the SSI Fact Sheet on Radom Digit Samples (for landline telephone samples): Most SSI samples are generated using a database of “working blocks.” A block (also known as a 100-bank or a bank) is a set of 100 contiguous numbers identified by the first two digits of the last four digits of a telephone number. For example, in the telephone number 255-4200, “42” is the block. A block is termed to be working if one or more listed telephone numbers are found in that block. The sample composition is comprised of random numbers distributed across all eligible blocks in proportion to their density of listed telephone households. All blocks within a county are organized in ascending order by area code, exchange, and block number. Once the quota has been allocated to all counties in the frame, a sampling interval is calculated by summing the number of listed residential numbers in each eligible block within the county and dividing that sum by the number of sampling points assigned to the county.
    [Show full text]
  • West River Westville Edgewood Beaver Hills Amity West Rock
    ve L A A ly i Li t v d c n o W e P West h i f l i m Rock e or l o l V ay d T t a e l v R Amity l A e d S y t Newhallville Prospect G e ve HAMDEN Hill Quinnipiac n r A e pe W Beaver s r B a Meadows e H in Hills East Rock a e d te n R S n rg Westville k ai t nt r Dixwell S ou e e e t M n Edgewood H v A A il l v t Dwight o e e d Fair Haven p i s R West River Wooster g Downtown d Fair n i Sq/ Mill r Haven 69 River p Heights S e v A Hill Long A y Wharf e m l r l i Annex D t a t y e h s R V n a V W u d l l ic S e t y o r S y t D r East Shore Amity St Rock WOODBRIDGE er l G ee West w Cr k R o S W F e d i n o A nt e u v e s t e rg e h re e en t N F S l h o r g Rock e ri t r e P v t d W h e A r y ic Vall e k S S p t r R i n o a S u g m t l s t h Neighborhood Location s i S P d d l P l l e V e eneca Rd e l a y S d l A s l le m v a e R st a F E a d d i R R rf y t ie rl s S ld e e t v d t r r e R S c e g n T B h P n w ll ig a ro a i t rk Dr t le S side S L H r l t r e l d n e t e S e T s R e e d y r w s e W m n s G i o V l a alle il V R h y n t St H e n t l s G A e W Ear 15 l St V alley St F air 63 t fiel S e t d S W d v t h r A t F S a a A ou L l S n l H u nt a ey m a o s a h in w t A t S v in h c t R n n e n t c e S r i d r a Fi B S t F e eld F s S to t t n e S r t g Pl Fairfield St 10 e ant n T St o t ll L i P S t t H a S t r S c s d t i e e e C t F v n S t D p v t y o o e S o u a e s e o r p A C n n k e S a S r t l t P o t Pl y a D o B n in r n i b l y s l S i P t o r t w d a o r o t s S C R r a s L D e d d e H t Eng o S n le m o w o W o ip B
    [Show full text]
  • History of the Colony of New Haven
    KJ5W H AVEN and its VICINITY Con. HISTORY COLONYF O NEW HAVEN, BEFOREND A AFTF.R THE U NION WITH CONNECTICUT. CONTAINING A P ARTICULAR DESCRIPTION OFHE T TOWNS WHICH COMPOSED THAT GOVERNMENT, VIZ., WEW H AVEN, / B RADFORD, ts iTIILFOKD, , STA n roiti», A CUILFORD, SOUTHOLD, I ,. I. WITH A N OTICE OF TIIE TOWNS WHICH HAVE BEEN SET OFF FROM "HE T ORIGINAL SIX." fillustrateb 6 n .fffttn NEW H AVEN: PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY HITCHCOCK & STAFFORD. 1838. ENTERED, A ccording to Act of Congress, in the year 1838, BY E DWARD R. LAMBERT, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Connecticut. PREFACE. AUTHENTIC h istory is of high importance. It exhibits the juris prudence, science, morals, and religion of nations, and while it •warns to shun their errors, holds forth their virtues for imitation in bold relief. But where is the history more interesting and important than that of our own, "our much loved native land," that abounds in incidents more romantic, or narrative more thrilling? Buta little more than two centuries have elapsed since the first band of the " Puritan Fathers" left their native home, crossed the wild Atlantic, landed on the snow-clad rock of Plymouth, and laid the first foundation stone of New England. Within this period a change has here taken place, and in our common counfry unparalleled in the history of mankind. A great and powerful nation has arisen. The desert has been made " to bud and blossom as the rose." And •what but the sword of civil discord can arrest the giant march of improvement, (yet advancing with accelerating rapidity,) till " the noblest empire iu the reign of time" shall extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific wave.
    [Show full text]
  • 412!1202 1 2 J ?Hn De~Tefano
    ; (412!1202_1_2 J_?hn De~tefano , Jr. - RE: Cemetery tree planting 4/27-8 Page 1 1 From: "Richard Epstein" <[email protected]> To: "' John DeStefano, Jr."' <[email protected]> Date: 4/21/2011 11 :03 AM Subject: RE: Cemetery tree planting 4/27-8 Have not heard back from the RWA on the options available and the costs. told Andy to contact RWA and get the buckets. We are trying to implement the adopt the tree program at least for the short term. -----Original Message----- From: John DeStefano, Jr. [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Wednesday, April 20 , 2011 5:00 PM To: repstein@ lhbrennerins.com Subject: Fw: Cemetery tree planting 4/27-8 Water? No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG - www.avg .com Version : 9.0.894 I Virus Database: 271 .1.1/3587- Release Date: 04/21 /11 02 :34 :00 [_[~~?.~~-~~-~ -!2John DeStefano, Jr. - Re: Water Availability Page 1_] From: John DeStefano, Jr. To: [email protected] CC: [email protected] Date: 4/27/2011 10:39 AM Subject: Re : Water Availability Great. This is a terrific community project. Everyone appreciates RWA's time, effort and contribution to the project. And I thank you for your leadership. John -----Original Message----- From: "Larry Bingaman" <[email protected]> To: John DeStefano, Jr. <[email protected]> Sent: 4/27/2011 9:12:21 AM Subject: RE: Water Availability Dear Mayor DeStefano, This morning I received an update from our Manager of Contracts & New Services, David Johnson, on the status of providing irrigation water for the proposed street trees on Jewell St.
    [Show full text]
  • GREATER NEW HAVEN Community Index 2016
    GREATER NEW HAVEN Community Index 2016 Understanding Well-Being, Economic Opportunity, and Change in Greater New Haven Neighborhoods A CORE PROGRAM OF In collaboration with The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven and other community partners and a Community Health Needs Assessment for the towns served by Yale-New Haven Hospital and Milford Hospital. Greater New Haven Community Index 2016 Understanding well-being, economic opportunity, and change in Greater New Haven neighborhoods MAJOR FUNDERS Other Funders The Greater New Haven Community Index makes extensive use of the 2015 DataHaven Community Wellbeing Survey, which completed in-depth interviews with 16,219 randomly-selected adults in Connecticut last year. In addition to the major funders listed above, supporters of the survey’s interviews with 1,810 adults in Greater New Haven as well as related data dissemination activities included the City of New Haven Health Department, United Way of Greater New Haven, Workforce Alliance, NewAlliance Foundation, Yale Medical Group, Connecticut Health Foundation, Connecticut Housing Finance Authority, and the Community Alliance for Research and Engagement at the Yale School of Public Health among others. Please see ctdatahaven.org for a complete list of statewide partners and funders. Lead Authors Mark Abraham, Executive Director, DataHaven Mary Buchanan, Project Manager, DataHaven Co-authors and contributors Ari Anisfeld, Aparna Nathan, Camille Seaberry, and Emma Zehner, DataHaven Amanda Durante and Fawatih Mohamed, University of Connecticut
    [Show full text]
  • MOVE New Haven Study Overview
    Transit Mobility Study 0 | Introduction Transit Mobility Study Chapter 1 Introduction ....................................................................................1 1.1 MOVE New Haven Study Overview ............................................................................. 1 1.2 Report Structure .................................................................................................................. 2 Chapter 2 Purpose and Need Statement ....................................................4 2.1 Purpose and Need of Study ........................................................................................... 4 2.2 Goals and Objectives ......................................................................................................... 5 Chapter 3 System Description .......................................................................7 3.1 System Overview ................................................................................................................. 7 3.2 CTtransit New Haven Routes .......................................................................................... 8 3.3 Route Profiles .................................................................................................................... 11 3.4 Ridership ............................................................................................................................. 16 3.5 Bus Stops............................................................................................................................. 25 3.6
    [Show full text]
  • Free COVID-19 Testing Sites Located Throughout Our City
    Iline Tracey, Ed.D. P: (475) 220-1000 Superintendent F: (203) 946-7300 September 2020 Dear New Haven Learning Community, As we near the reopening of school, New Haven Public Schools is recommending COVID-19 testing for all staff and students. We encourage you to utilize the free COVID-19 Testing Sites that are located throughout our City: Established Testing Sites Pre-existing Testing Sites within the City: ADDRESS Day/Time Neighborhood New Haven Green 8 am-4 pm Wednesday Downtown 1319 Chapel Street 12 pm-5 pm Monday & Thursday Dwight 226 Dixwell Avenue 8:30 am-4:30 pm Monday-Friday Dixwell 428 Columbus Avenue 10 am-1 pm Monday-Friday Hill 185 Barnes Avenue 9 am-3:30 pm Various Days Quinnipiac Meadows 1471 Whalley Avenue 8 am-6 pm Various Days Amity 374 Grand Avenue 9 am-4:30 pm Fair Haven Schools with School-Based Health Clinic (SBHC) ADDRESS SBHC Neighborhood 35 Davis Street CSHHC AMITY 191 Fountain Street Yale AMITY 150 Fournier Street CSHHC BEAVER HILLS 480 Sherman Parkway Yale DIXWELL 259 Edgewood Avenue Yale DWIGHT 181 Mitchell Drive FHCHC EAST-ROCK 293 Clinton Avenue FHCHC FAIR-HAVEN 164 Grand Avenue FHCHC FAIR-HAVEN 100 James Street FHCHC FAIR-HAVEN 360 Columbus Avenue CSHHC HILL 140 Dewitt Street CSHHC HILL 140 Legion Avenue Yale HILL 560 Ella Grasso Blvd. BOE HILL 114 Truman Street CSHHC HILL 130 Bassett Street CSHHC NEWHALLVILLE 170 Derby Avenue Yale WESTRIVER 199-200 Wilmot Street NHHD West Rock Gateway Center | 54 Meadow Street, New Haven, CT 06519 Iline Tracey, Ed.D.
    [Show full text]
  • GNHWPCA EJPPP Wet Weather Nitrogen Project Submission
    Environmental Justice Public Participation Plan OP R ! "O! P"%%%& &' ' O P Part I: Proposed Applicant Information 1. APPLICANT INFORMATION Greater New Haven Water Pollution Control Authority 260 East Street New Haven CT 06511 203-466-5280 321 Tom Sgroi [email protected] R ✔ 2. WILL YOUR PERMIT APPLICATION INVOLVE: ✔ 3. FACILITY NAME AND LOCATION East Shore Water Pollution Abatement Facility & Pre-Treatment Sta. 345 East Shore Parkway (See Attached) New Haven CT 06512 052 950 400, 600, 800 Part II: Informal Public Meeting Requirements R A. Identify Time and Place of Informal Public Meeting date, time and placeR June 21, 2012 New Haven Sound School Regional Vocational Aquaculture Center, 60 South Water St., New Haven, CT 06519 6:30pm ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * ( ))) & B. Identify Communication Methods By Which to Publicize the Public Meeting New Haven Register and La Voz June 11, 2012 (NHR), June 8, 2012 (La Voz) +, - % ) . / & 0 ( 123+$!$+"3$$ # 3 "3 Part II: Informal Public Meeting Requirements (continued) ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ R Part III: Measures to Facilitate Meaningful Public Participation
    [Show full text]
  • Bishop Estate East and Darling House Trails
    This Woodbridge Town Property known as the Directions and Parking: Bishop Estate/Darling House trail is located on the Litchfield Turnpike. The house is now home The main entrance to the trails and parking is Recreational Trails to the Amity & Woodbridge Historical Society. located adjacent to the Darling House located South Central Connecticut Thomas Darling (1720-1789) played a at 1907 Litchfield Turnpike (Route 69). significant role in colonial Connecticut and counted among prominent citizens as Benjamin Permitted/Prohibited Activities: Franklin, Ezra Stiles, Roger Sherman, and Benedict Arnold among his friends and This land is for passive recreational use only. No Bishop Estate associates. He studied theology at Yale motorized vehicles are permitted. Only hiking University in New Haven, CT, graduated in and bicycles. Dogs are permitted on leash. 1740, and was licensed to preach in 1743. Please bag and pick up all dog waste. Hunting East and During his years in New Haven he was a or trapping is prohibited. Fishing is allowed in manufacturer, merchant, Justice of the Peace, the West River. Darling House and “entrepreneur.” He ran a Rope Walk, helped set up the first printing press in New Haven, tried to establish a glass business, and Trails was a deputy to the General Assembly. The Bishop Estate/Darling House is located just south of Lake Dawson (a Regional Water Authority Property) and just west of the West Rock Ridge State Park on the eastern border of Woodbridge. The trail also connects to a Hiking Pets on Bicycling Fishing hike along the West Rock Ridge and then to Leash the Regicides Trail (a CT Blue Blazed Trail).
    [Show full text]
  • Dixwell East Rock Prospect Hill Newhallville Downtown
    West Rock Amity Newhallville Prospect Beaver Hill Quinnipiac Hills East Rock Meadows Westville HAMDEN Dixwell e Edgewood v A Dwight n Fair Haven o t l t Wooster e West River S Downtown Fair h r Sq/ Mill S e Haven l t t River L S Heights and u er St B d r a Hill p t e Long S h l l Wharf S a Bee h ch Annex wood w Ln e e v N A r e R t ead s St e h t c n S i East r i W o Shore v Ca r ve S e t s e R d R l l C i lif f e Og h St d e v en S t g A d Hu Re E y ntin ad S e gto t n n S t t i h Neighborhood Location W Ogde n St H untin Bu B gton rns asse St St tt St t S t r S e Ea l st t t Ro i ck r u R d e B v E E Ba P a ssett a st St rk Ro D ck t r S Hun l tin l gton a St h w Eas e t Rock Rd N Lil e ac v St e A v r A e t d l s e e i f h f c e n h i Newhallville S W t S H unti t ngton c St e p s Ivy S o t r P t S Hig n hl o and t St s g n i v i L d R H l az l el S i t h Highland St e g d E Highland St St arr S r t e T n o d l e h S Prospect e v A T hom y pso Hill e n St n t i l h t P S W t s i i r m t e v o S o E n L t n a i n a o t S t R S S l l ld St a e arr S h fi t s w n e a N d M D l t i e vi i S s f io e n f n S v t e o h A t s S g n i v i t L S n m u t u A Canner St C D old ivis Sp ion ring St St East Rock e v A t r S e t n s a e n h o c Can n R W n i il er t low St W n i St a S t S t n S o t s t g c in e v i p L s t o e S r v d P l A L e in i d f y en s S e t n a n t i M h W S aint t Ronan S Ter e g n a r O t S n o s r e d n A Munson St St Henry C otta A H ge S s illsid t h e Pl m u L n in de S n t St C a n L a aw l ren S ce S t t t t S n
    [Show full text]