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Overview

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 Hartsdale
Hartsdale is a hamlet and census designated place (CDP),
located in the City of Greenburgh, Westchester County, New York. The
population was 9,830 in 2000 census.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the community has a total area of
3.2 square miles (8.3 km), all land.
Demographics
What is censusGR2 2000 was 9,830 people, 4,314 households, and 2,756
families residing in the Community. The population density was 3,068.0
per square mile (1,186.1 / km). 4,478 housing units was the average
density of 1,397.6 / sq mi (540.3/km). The racial make-up, the
connection was 76.14% White, 8.71% African American, 0.19% Native
American, 10.17% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 2.64% other races, and
2.10% in two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 9.55% of
the population.
Was 4,314 households, of which 24.3% were under the age of 18 who live
with them, 53.1% were married couples living together, 8.6% were women
householder with no husband present, and 36.1% were non-families. 31.8%
of all households were made up of individuals and 12.7% had someone
living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household
size was 2.27 and the average family size was 2.86.
If the CDP the population spread out in 18.2% less than 18-4.8% 18-24,
30.3% 25-44, 28.8% from 45 to 64 and 17.9% who were 65 years of age or
older. The median age was 43 years. For every 100 females were 86.2
males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, was 81.2 for men.
The average income for a household in the community was $ 81,824 and the
median income for a family was $ 100,330. Males had an average income $
62,362 versus $ 47,380 for females. Per capita income, the association
was $ 45,691. Approximately 1.6% of families and 2.6% of the population
were below the poverty line, including 1.5% under the age of 18 and 4.6%
of those 65 or more.
History
Hartsdale, a CDP / hamlet / post-town is located in Greenburgh, NY, lies
on the Bronx River just 20 miles north of New York. Has served on Metro
North Harlem River commuter rail a series of Grand Central Station.
Hartsdale is the home and the first American dog pet cemetery (started
veterinarian Samuel Johnson in 1896) and the world's first Carvel ice
cream store (1934).
Hartsdale during the first settlers were Weekquaeskeeks (sometimes
written Weekquasgeeks), a sub-tribe of the Algonquin Indians.
Weekquaeskeek the Algonquin term believed to mean "place of cream kettle
and water heater is located in Greenburgh town seal today.
After that, the sooner the British colonialists arrived, the estate was
developed in the system, when Frederick Philips, a Dutch merchant and
British Loyalist, was "given" the land the British Government. Lord
Philips of his estate, he leased land to tenant farmers, who are, at
least for some time, were believed to have lived with their Native
American neighbors.
There is evidence to show that Hartsdale played a key role in the
Revolutionary War, some of which are still today. Is 28 October 1776, a
Revolutionary War battle was fought alongside the Bronx River, near the
current around the Hartsdale train station. The Odell House (on Ridge
Road, built in 1732) served as the headquarters of the French General
Comte de Rochambeau and the Comte and George Washington should have
formed the Battle of Yorktown Association. The house later became the
name of John Odell, Washington's guide who bought the house in 1785. In
1965, his descendants deeded the house to the sons of the American
Revolution and today houses the museum.
After the Continental Army and American colonialists won the
Revolutionary War, Frederick Philips, III (third Lord of the manor, and
a great-grandson, Frederick the Philips I) fled, his land is confiscated
and sold the remaining farming tenants, many of whom were descendants of
the Hart family. The intersection of Central Park Avenue and Hartsdale
Avenue was named "Hart's Corners" after Robert Hart, one of the farmers
who successfully bid the land and the mid-1800 the entire area became
known as "Hartsdale".
An area remained largely agrarian until 1865, when Eleazar Hart deeded
land development in New York and Harlem Railroad series of Manhattan,
which is the phase of Hartsdale's become a more cosmopolitan commuter
village. In the period 1880-1940, large tracts of farmland and estates
were subdivided and converted into private houses and apartments are
furious pace. By 1960, almost no remaining farmland was left for sale.
In 1904, a successful German-Jewish banker Felix Warburg (1871-1937)
purchased a large land-the land to build its own 500-acre "Woodlands"
estate in Hartsdale, the summer home next to the country club, where he
and his wife Frieda Schiff Warburg (1876-1958 ) spent a lot of time.
Later, the estate has become a key site where the history of modern
American ballet on the 10th June 1934 their son Edward MM Warburg
(1908-1992) helped produce the first American performance of George
Balanchine's masterpiece "Serenade. In accordance with the family's
philanthropic efforts, Frieda Schiff Warburg, his death in 1958, deeded
150 remaining acres to the city to build a public school in Greenburgh.
These 150 acres is now the home of District Greenburgh Central 7 School
and Woodlands High School. The main Warburg Mansion now serves as a
school district headquarters, but other remnants from the original
estate grounds can still see the image of the surrounding woods and
neighboring streets. The Warburg family home in New York would later be
donated to the Jewish Museum of New York.
February 9th, 1928, Hartsdale became a birthplace of the American "Couch
Potato" as a Scottish inventor John Logie Baird (1888-1946) transmitted
the world's first inter-continental short-wave from a television
transmitter (call 2KZ) in Coulsdon, Surrey (a suburb of London,
England), OG to his colleague Robert M. Hutchinson is a basement Hart is
the Amateur Radio Operator (call 2CVJ) in Hartsdale, New York.
1932, Henry Jacques Gaismas, inventor and founder of the Gillette safety
razor blade, bought 136 acres of land along Ridge Road, most of which he
purchased from George Christiancy, the former U.S. minister to Peru. In
1952, at the age of 82, he married his nurse Catherine "Kitty" Vance
Gaismas between the ages of 33, a former Catholic nun. In 1957, he and
his wife, Catherine (Mrs. Henry J. Gaismas) drove in the title of his
land in New York Archdiocese for $ 600,000 with the agreement that they
can live there for as long as they wish. Mr. Gaismas died in 1974 aged
104, and Mrs. Gaismas remained of the estate until she moved to
Connecticut in 1995. In 1999, the estate has been recorded in the sales
and development, the city of Greenburgh acquired the property and
reopened it as the Hart's Brook Nature Reserve. The contract included
maintenance of a certain part of the estate is the home of retired
Catholic nuns. Today, by Catherine and Henry J. Gaismas The Fund will
continue to donate large sums of money to support medical research.
Hartsdale is one of the few communities immediately surrounding New York
City, that there are still two working farms, both SECOR Road. It also
has several parks, including the 25-acre park SECOR Woods is a 170-acre
Ridge Road park, and the 86-acre park Rumbrook.
City may be broadly divided into a number of different areas, including
the "Village" or downtown part (East Hartsdale Avenue), Manor Park,
Windsor Park, Poet's Corners, Ridge Road, Orchard Hill, College Corner,
namely one of the condominium developments built since 1970. Over the
years, the city has attracted many different ethnic groups, and the
downtown village has a significant Japanese population in Japan, shops,
restaurants, real-estate brokers, and even supermarkets, all within
walking distance of East Hartsdale Avenue.
SECOR Ferncliff Cemetery Road is located in Hartsdale, famous as the
burial grounds, many celebrities, including Aaliyah, Malcolm X, Judy
Garland, Jerome Kern, Joan Crawford, Ed Sullivan, Jam Master Jay, Gerry
Mulligan, James Baldwin, Michel Fokine, Jim Henson, Tom Carvel, Yul
Brenner, Oscar Hammerstein, Thelonious Monk, Paul Robeson and others.
British-American rocker John Lennon was cremated there. Composer Béla
Bartók was initially buried in Hartsdale until reinterred his native
Hungary in 1988. Radio DJ Alan Freed was also initially buried in
Hartsdale until his ashes were moved to Rock n 'Roll Hall of Fame in
2002.
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