Our firm started serving the needs of the people in the Middletown area in a store front under the name of the Rockafellow Burial Company in 1899. In 1929, it purchased the former Galloway residence at eleven Orchard Street in downtown...
Funeral Homes in Arden, NY
Places
Below you fill find all funeral homes and cemeteries in or near Arden.
Zip codes in the city: 10910.
Orange County funeral flowers can be purchased from one of the local funeral shops we partner with.
Our funeral home is a independently owned and operated business. We are large enough to give our families the same service as the largest funeral homes around, yet we are small enough that each family receives the level of attention and care they...
Since 1916, Hellman Memorial Chapels has been a respected name in Jewish funeral service, endeavoring to make a time of loss for each family as bearable as possible. Not dealing with death on a daily basis, people do not realize that there is a...
Nearby Funeral Homes for Arden
Middletown, NY 10940
Pearl River, NY 10965
Haverstraw, NY 10927
Mahopac, NY 10541
New Windsor, NY 12553
Middletown, NY 10940
Washingtonville, NY 10992
Pine Bush, NY 12566
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Haverstraw, NY 10927
Walden, NY 12586
Hopewell Jct, NY 12533
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Walden, NY 12586
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Poughkeepsie, NY 12603
Poughkeepsie, NY 12603
Monroe, NY 10950
Warwick, NY 10990
Greenwood Lake, NY 10925
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Pine Bush, NY 12566
Facts about the city
Arden, is a hamlet around the town line of Tuxedo and Monroe, New York, in the United States. It is roughly coterminous with the 10910 ZIP Code.The area was originally known as Greenwood, and was noted for the iron works belonging to Robert and Peter P. Parrott, of Parrott gun fame. The Greenwood Furnace was established in 1810; during the American Civil War, the furnace produced the iron for the famous Parrott Gun, which was built in Cold Spring, New York by the Parrott brothers. The Parrotts built St. John's Episcopal Church in Arden in 1863. By the 1890s, the iron industry in New York was in decline due to the discovery of surface beds of iron in Minnesota.The hamlet takes its current name from the estate built in the area by railroad magnate Edward H. Harriman in the late 19th century. It is today a National Historic Landmark, but not open to the public. The Open Space Institute acquired the building and 540 surrounding acres from Columbia University for $4.5 million in 2007. Reportedly, the land is to be preserved and the building sold. [1]
Arden Obituaries
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History
*Arden (estate). . . . .
News
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