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Brooklyn -  6 bedrooms, 5 baths Keeping Room Finished Basement Extra large bonus room upstairs Level Backyard, Premium lot Brick front, HardiplankMore Info -->


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Overview

 

Home Foreclosure

How to Find Foreclosure Listings


 

Foreclosure is a legal process to eliminate the mortgagor's right of redeeming the mortgaged property. This is the act to terminate all the rights covered by the homeowner and the mortgage. This is the process by which an asset is transferred to the lending institution because the homeowner does not make the possession of the money to pay the mortgage payments at the agreed time. This may be medical problems, in connection with the loan, the loss of a job, or even death.

 

                After some time, the closure of bug is striking in New York. Foreclosed homes in New York have been an invitation to bargain. A company which recently hosted a foreclosure auction, says they are looking for these to sell 232 houses in New York metro area alone. Since the banks are able to inventory, which made a major contribution to this great event, if the company suspects that the second and third in this year's auction will be held in city.

 


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About Harlem

Harlem is a neighborhood of Manhattan New York, long known as a great African-American cultural and business center. After a lot of the twentieth century, joined with black culture, but also crime and poverty, it is now experienced by the social and economic renaissance.

Harlem reaches the Hudson River East River 155th Street - where it meets Washington Heights - has been ragged border along the south. Central Harlem begins 110th Street, Central Park at the northern border, the Spanish Harlem extends east Harlem south to the borders of the 96th Street, while the north west it begins Morningside Heights, which gives ragged border along the 125th Street west of Morningside Avenue.

The neighborhood contains a number of smaller, more cohesion between. Here are some examples:

East Harlem
Spanish Harlem below 116th Street
East Harlem "pretty", which is more than the 116th Street
Central Harlem
Sugar Hill
Mount Morris extending west of Marcus Garvey Park
Strivers' Row, centered on 139th Street
Astor Row, centered on 130th Street
The West Harlem (west of St. Nicholas Avenue)
Hamilton Heights, around the Hamilton Grange
Manhattanville, north of Morningside Heights

The first solution, which is now Harlem was the Dutch settlers in 1658 and formalized as Nieuw Haarlem (or New Haarlem), after the Dutch city Haarlem. Indian trail to Harlem's lush bottomland meadows was rebuilt by the Dutch West India Company's black slaves and eventually developed the Boston Post Road. In 1664, when the English took control of New Netherland colony and anglicized the name of the city of Harlem. On the 16th September 1776, the Battle of Harlem Heights (also called the Battle of Harlem or Battle of Harlem Plain) was fought west of Harlem around the Hollow Way (now West 125th St.) and the conflict Morningside Heights, Harlem and the South-North Heights.

Of 19 century, Harlem was a place of farms, such as James Roosevelt's, east of Fifth Avenue between 110th and 125 Streets, now the heart of Spanish (actually Latin-American) Harlem. Country estates were largely on the heights overlooking the Hudson, west of Harlem. Service connecting the suburb of Harlem in New York on the East River was a steamer, an hour and a half's passage, sometimes interrupted when the river froze in winter, or in wagons along the Boston Post Road, which descended McGown passport (now Central Park) and skirted the salt marshes around 110th Street, passing through Harlem. The New York and Harlem Railroad (now Metro North) was incorporated in 1831, to better link the suburb of the city, starting at the depot is East 23rd the street. It was extended 127 miles north to the railroad junction with Columbia County at Chatham, New York, by 1851. Harlem was a bit run-down suburb of developing large-scale.

Elevated railways extended to Harlem in 1880. Along with the construction, els, urbanized development occurred very rapidly, with townhouses, apartments and tenements to springide virtually overnight. Developers assume that the Lexington Avenue subway would be designed for easy transport of lower Manhattan, and feared that the new housing rules must be established for 1901, they raced to complete the new buildings as much as possible before they take effect. Harlem that was mostly white and Christian. Early entrepreneurs had grandiose plans for Harlem: Polo was actually played the original Polo Grounds (later home to the New York giants baseball team) and Oscar Hammerstein I opened the Harlem Opera House in East 125. Street in 1889. GLUT, and construction delays led to the construction of the subway decline of real estate prices, which attracted the Eastern European Jews to Harlem in large numbers, reaching a peak of 150,000 in 1917. As with many other Jewish neighborhoods, Jewish Harlem was ephemeral entity, by 1930, only 5,000 Jews remained. East Harlem area of the River, now known as Spanish Harlem became occupied Italy. Italian Harlem is gone as well, although it lasted longer than Jewish Harlem (traces of Italian Harlem lasted from around 1970 of the Pleasant Avenue). Blacks did not start arriving in large numbers until 1904, real estate speculation and construction began again in 1903, and the resulting accident resulted in the GLUT of housing values, eclipsed at the end of-19. the slowdown in the century, opening the door to blacks. The number of black residents increased rapidly in the 20th the beginning of the century, and in Central Harlem was essentially entirely is the African American Community in 1920.

Today, Harlem is an area where you can find affordable housing (New York standards) prices.

 
 


 



 

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