Tourism card featuring view of the historic "Home Sweet Home" house (now a museum). Printed text on verso provides brief information about the home. Message and addressee information, both handwritten, on verso.
Snow-covered view of the Setauket Presbyterian Church and its adjoining cemetery. The Setauket World War I monument, which is on the Village Green, is seen in the foreground. Printed text on verso provides information about the structure. Note:…
View of the Stony Brook Grist Mill, with the mill pond in the foreground. Printed text on verso provides brief details about the history of the mill. Note: The building is listed on the National and New York State Register of Historic Places. (Color)
Exterior view of the Hawkins-Mount House, home of painter William Sidney Mount. Printed text on verso provides brief details about the house. Note: In 1966, the house was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. (Color)
View of the Stony Brook Village Center covered in snow. Printed text on verso reads: “Stony Brook Shopping Center. Built in 1941 to create a village of the early Republican era.” (Color)
Exterior view of the old Woodhull mansion. Printed text on verso states the mansion was the home of Nathaniel Woodhull, a Revolutionary War general. Message and addressee information, both handwritten, on verso. (B&W)
Exterior view of the Roslyn Mill Tea House on Old Northern Boulevard. Built in 1701, the building operated as a grist mill until the early twentieth century. The top of the Roslyn Clocktower can be seen at far left. (Sepia)
View of the Old Water Mill, as seen from across Mill Creek. Additional captioning on the front of the card reads, “Now Used as a Summer Shop for the Blind by the New York State Commission for the Blind.” Annotation on verso. (Sepia)