Gleeson-Ryan Funeral Home is family owned and operated by Christopher “Chris” E. Ryan, Sr., who has been serving families in their time of need for over twenty-five years. We are available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week to assist...
Funeral Homes in Taconic, CT
Although our name, Burnett & White Funeral Homes, is new, we have owned and operated the Burnett, Rockefeller & Hand Funeral Home in Red Hook and the White Funeral Home in Rhinebeck as independently owned family businesses for more than 25 years....
Our firm has been providing professional, caring funeral service to Chatham and the surrounding areas since 1893. We proudly represent a trusted name in our community. We continually strive to bring information needed to make good decisions to...
The first Millspaugh Funeral Home was founded at 40 Summit Avenue in 1926 by the late Harry and Lucy Tesch Millspaugh. In 1929, they moved to 175 Grandview Avenue and in 1942 to 257 Main Street. Their son, Henry, and grandson, Harry, began...
Many changes have happened since 1937. Ed moved his business in Pittsfield to Bradford Street and added a branch in Cheshire in 1964, the same year his sons Dave and Ed Jr. joined the business. Ed Senior's untimely death in 1968 did not change...
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Facts about the city
Salisbury is a town in Litchfield County, Connecticut, United States of the New York metropolitan area. The town is the northwest-most in the State of Connecticut. The MA-NY-CT (Massachusetts-New York-Connecticut) Tri-State Marker is located just on the border of Salisbury. The population was 3,977 at the 2000 census.
Taconic Obituaries
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History
The solution, according to Muir, was to pour labor into the iron, working it into a quality of wroght iron so high that it could be used even for gun barrels. This fetched a high price and made Salisbury iron the celebrated choice of Connecticut's early nineteenth century arms industry.(See: Diana Muir, Reflections in Bullough's Pond, Economy and Ecosystem in New England, University of New England Press, 2002, p. The town possessed small iron mines, described by historian Diana Muir as "scarcely big enough to notice," with the further disadvantage of not being near a river large enough to ship iron to market at a reasonable cost. The MA-NY-CT (Massachusetts-New York-Connecticut) Tri-State Marker is located just on the border of Salisbury. 126.).
News
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