fbpx
Wikipedia

Rye, New York

Rye is a coastal city in Westchester County, New York, United States, located near New York City and within the New York City metropolitan area. It is separate from the Town of Rye, which has more land area than the city.[3] The City of Rye, formerly the Village of Rye, was part of the Town until it received its charter as a city in 1942, making it the youngest city in the State of New York. Its population density for its 5.85 square miles of land is roughly 2,729.76/sq mi.[4]

Rye, New York
City of Rye
Jay Estate is the childhood home of American Founding Father John Jay.
Location in Westchester County and the state of New York
Interactive map of Rye
Coordinates: 40°58′52″N 73°41′02″W / 40.98111°N 73.68389°W / 40.98111; -73.68389
Country United States
State New York
CountyWestchester
Incorporated (as a village)1904[1]
Reincorporated (as a city)1942[1]
Government
 • TypeCouncil-Manager
 • MayorJosh Cohn (D)
 • City managerGreg Usry
 • City council
Members' List
Area
 • Total20.02 sq mi (51.86 km2)
 • Land5.85 sq mi (15.16 km2)
 • Water14.17 sq mi (36.70 km2)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total16,592
 • Density2,834.79/sq mi (1,094.60/km2)
Time zoneUTC−05:00 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (EDT)
ZIP Code
10580
Area code914
FIPS code36-64309
Websitehttp://www.ryeny.gov/

Rye is notable for its waterfront which covers 60 percent of the city's six square miles and is governed by a waterfront act instituted in 1991.[5][6][7][8] Located in the city are two National Historic Landmarks: the Boston Post Road Historic District was designated a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service in 1993; its centerpiece is the Jay Estate, the childhood home of John Jay, a Founding Father and the first Chief Justice of the United States.

Playland, a historic amusement park designated a National Historic Landmark in 1987 is also located in Rye. Playland features one of the oldest wooden roller coasters in the Northeast, the Dragon Coaster.

History edit

 
Rye Beach, early 20th century

Rye was once a part of Fairfield County, Connecticut, belonging to the Sachem Ponus, of the Ponus Wekuwuhm, Canaan Parish, and was probably named for that chieftain, "Peningoe Neck".[9]

It was founded in 1660 by three men: Thomas Studwell, Peter Disbrow and John Coe. Later landowners included John Budd and family.[10][11]

During the 19th and early 20th centuries it was a haven for wealthy Manhattanites who traveled by coach or boat to escape the city heat. Its location on Long Island Sound and numerous beaches also appealed to visitors with more moderate means who gravitated for short stays at cottages and waterfront hotels.

It has an extraordinary inventory of buildings with architectural distinction that help visually articulate specific neighborhoods and districts.[11]

Planning and zoning edit

Planning and zoning oversight is vested in several branches of the Rye government including several volunteer staffed committees like the Planning Commission, the Architectural Review Board, the Sustainability Committee, the Conservation Committee and the Landmarks Committee to name a few.[12]

Master plan (1985) edit

The City's current Master Plan guides the planning process. Also known as a Comprehensive plan, it was authored 37 years ago with an expectation that it would be updated again in 2000. Attempts to revise the 1985 document with community input as recommended in NY State's Statute on Comprehensive Planning[13] were made in 2016 and 2017.[14] The review, which was aimed to reflect current conditions of growth and forecast future changes, was not completed. As of 2018,[15] Rye lagged behind almost all of the 43 municipalities in Westchester County in updating this "serious document".[16]

Failure to modernize the 1985 Master Plan on that schedule has produced concerns from residents about the lack of community consensus, lack of informed and coordinated regulation of development and the subsequent impacts including increased flooding and a higher than expected volume of teardowns. Other concerns include threats to historical resources, cultural resources, natural resources, sensitive coastal and environmental areas and numerous other negative repercussions on neighborhood character.[17][18] Previous Master Plans for Rye were created in 1929, 1945, and in 1963.

Local Waterfront Revitalization Plan (1991) edit

Rye is a coastal community with numerous sensitive wetlands and watercourses.[19] In 1991, the City of Rye adopted a comprehensive plan to further regulate land and water usage to protect and preserve these fragile resources.[8]

Sustainability plan (2013) edit

In 2010, spurred by disastrous flooding events in 2007 and other environmental concerns, the Rye Sustainability Committee (RSC) was formed and tasked with creating a plan to inform best environmental and land stewardship practices for the city. A sustainability plan was formally adopted in December 2013 [20]

Neighborhoods edit

Many of Rye's unique neighborhoods are defined in the 1985 Master Plan.[11] Many have historic significance and their preservation was signaled as important for enhancing Rye's character. They include:

Proposed National Register District

  • Soundview Park
  • Church Row

Local or National Register Significance

  • Dogwood/Upper Dogwood Lane
  • Grace Church Street Area
  • Milton Harbor
  • Kirby Mill
  • Post Road Old Cottage District
  • Central Business District
  • Dublin (West Rye)[21]
  • Greenhaven
  • Indian Village
  • Loudon Woods[22]
  • Rye Town Park
  • Hix Park

Geography edit

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 20.0 square miles (52 km2), of which 5.9 sq mi (15 km2) is land and 14.2 sq mi (37 km2) is water.[3]

Rye is "situated in the eastern part of central Westchester County on Long Island Sound. The western border of the City generally parallels Beaver Swamp Brook, while the eastern border is formed by Milton Harbor and the Sound. Blind Brook traverses the City from the northwest corner of Rye to Milton Harbor at the southern end."[11]

Rock and wetlands edit

 
Rye High football field flooded in 2011

The geology and hydrology of Rye is characterized by a significant quantity of rock, marshes and wetlands [5] which makes the city both desirably scenic but also challenging for developers.

Rye's bedrock is predominantly constituted of Fordham gneiss and Harrison diorite also known as Byram Black granite.[23]

According to Rye's 1985 Master Plan, "Rye contains a variety of environmentally significant areas. Numerous tidal and freshwater wetlands are found near the waterfront and brooks. The Milton Harbor area (including the Marshlands Conservancy and Rye Golf Club), Disbrow Park and the Manursing area contain the most extensive wetlands in the City. In addition, substantial areas near the Sound, Milton Harbor, Blind Brook and Beaver Swamp Brook are within the 100 year flood hazard area, and thus subject to potential flooding."[5] According to the City of Rye, "Considerable acreage of these important natural resources has been lost or impaired by draining, dredging, filling, excavating, building, polluting and other acts inconsistent with the natural uses of such areas. Remaining wetlands are in jeopardy of being lost, despoiled or impaired by such acts contrary to the public safety and welfare." As a result, the City has charged itself with the responsibility of "preventing the despoilation and destruction of wetlands and watercourses while taking into account varying ecological, economic, recreational and aesthetic values. Activities that may damage wetlands or watercourses should be located on upland sites in such a manner as not to degrade these systems."[24]

In 2017, Rye resident and then New York State Senator George Latimer noted that wetlands maps for the area have not been updated in over 20 years [25]

Flooding edit

Flooding has long been an issue in Rye as in other coastal towns with water coming in from Long Island Sound. The Blind Brook watershed is also a source of that flooding with significant deluges recorded in the neighborhood of Indian Village after four days of rain in October 1975.[26]

Three major weather events in just five years produced catastrophic damage in the town.

  • Following major flooding in March 2007, the April 2007 nor'easter six weeks later left some homes in Rye with over five feet of floodwater.[27][28]
  • In 2011, the after effects of Hurricane Irene in August and Hurricane Maria in September included swelling of Blind Brook and submersion of private and commercial properties including the Rye Nature Center, Indian Village, the Rye High football field, businesses on Purchase Street and homes on Milton and Highland Roads.[29]
  • Storm surges from Hurricane Sandy in 2012 resulted in evacuations of many coastal residences and facilities including the Milton firehouse.[30]

The City's response to these recurring hazards was to apply for funding through the NY Rising Community Reconstruction Program. Rye received $3,000,000 to safeguard the city against future flooding threats, upgrade its infrastructure for resiliency, identify stormwater mitigation solutions, and protect historic buildings and natural wetlands.[31][32]

Starting on September 1, 2021, Rye experienced another substantial flooding event. The storm lasted two days and caused significant damage to municipal facilities, businesses and residences.[33] Areas around Indian Village and other sections of the city that had previously flooded during Hurricane Irene were under 8–9 feet of water. Other areas around the town normally not affected by flooding were also affected. Prior to the flooding event, Rye had undergone approximately five inches of rainfall[34] from Hurricane Henri.[35] Two weeks later, the remnants Hurricane Ida dropped another 8–9 inches of rain in the area within a 12-hour period.[36][37] Hurricane Ida remnants caused flooding in Rye nearly 10 years to the day from Hurricane Irene.

Archaeological significance and notable indigenous sites edit

As of 2010, seventy-five percent of the acreage in Rye or the equivalent of 3,954 acres had been determined to be archaeologically sensitive with many Indigenous and First Nations contact sites.[38][39][40] At least two villages have been determined to have existed, one on Manursing Island and the other on today's Milton Point.[41]

The presence of Indigenous people's activities has been noted in numerous locations where implements and bones were unearthed, including an "ancient Indian burial ground, site of the present Playland Casino"[42] together with discoveries of artifacts along the shoreline,[43] pottery, skeletons and relics along Milton Road,[44][45] Disbrow Park[46] and throughout today's Boston Post Road Historic District including Marshlands Conservancy.

The presence of Indigenous people in Rye was more recently documented in a 2012 Phase IA archaeological investigation commissioned by Westchester County in connection with the construction of a bike path along the Playland Parkway in Rye. Within just one mile of the project site, the report noted a dozen archeologically sensitive areas. The publication included supporting data from files in the repositories of NYOPRHP and the NY State Museum; it further highlighted the existence of shell middens, evidence of camp sites and at least two burial grounds. One of these documented sites included the Blind Brook.[47] Additional findings have been made at the Jay Estate in archaeological digs conducted by Dr. Eugene Boesch[48] and submitted to the NY State Cultural Resource Information System (CRIS).

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
19103,964
19205,30833.9%
19308,71264.1%
19409,86513.2%
195011,72118.8%
196014,22521.4%
197015,86911.6%
198015,083−5.0%
199014,936−1.0%
200014,9550.1%
201015,7205.1%
202016,5925.5%
U.S. Decennial Census[49]

As of the 2020 United States Census, there were 16,592 people living in the city. This is representative of approximately 5491 households. 74.8% have a college degree. 15.5% were over the age of 65 and 51.7% were women. 88.2% identified themselves as White alone. 1.3% identified as Black or African American alone. 6.7% identified as Hispanic or Latino. 5.6% identified as Asian alone. [50]

Economy edit

Rye is home to:

Arts and culture edit

Lectures, concerts, exhibits and classes edit

  • Jay Heritage Center
  • Rye Arts Center
  • Rye Free Reading Room
  • Rye Historical Society
  • Wainwright House (1928)(5 acres) – Historic estate with gardens and central building commissioned by US Congressman J. Mayhew Wainwright. In 1951, the property was re-imagined as a religious center "for research and training in the laws of God for Human Conduct."[51] It was donated by Mrs. Philip King Condict to the Layman's Movement for a Christian World, an ecumenical organization serving New York men in business, banking and the law.[52][53] Complaints about departure from its core mission of “inspiring greater understanding through body, mind, spirit and community” have mired the "nonsectarian spiritual and educational center" in controversy repeatedly since 1996 when the organization's $2.2 million endowment was completely depleted.[54][55]
 
Memorial Day Parade, Rye, NY Boys Scouts

Largest annual community events edit

  • Rye Little League Parade (April)
  • American Legion Memorial Day Parade (May)
  • Rye Sidewalk Sale (July)
  • Jay Day (September)
  • Rye Harrison Football Game (October)
  • Rye Window Painting (October)
  • Rye Turkey Trot (November)
  • Mistletoe Magic (December)

Service and Volunteer Organizations edit

  • American Legion Post 128 [56]
  • Rye City Lions [57]

Historic sites edit

Of the more than 2600 National Historic Landmark (NHL) sites in the country, Rye has two: the Boston Post Road Historic District [58] and Playland Amusement Park [11] Both are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Rye also has one of the few National Historic Landmark Districts in the country.

Boston Post Road Historic District (Rye, New York) (NPS designation 1994) edit

 
Historic Jay Gardens - Sensory Room and Reflecting Pool

Includes 5 historically significant parcels; much of the land was originally the ancestral home of American Founding Father John Jay. It is where he grew up and where he is buried.

  • Jay Estate – 23 acre park with gardens operated by the Jay Heritage Center.[59][60] Restoration of the Jay Mansion (1838) overlooking Long Island Sound was an official project of the Save America's Treasures Program. The Jay Mansion is the oldest National Historic Landmark (NHL) structure in New York State with a geothermal heating and cooling pump system and the first in Westchester County to have such an energy efficient system. Member site of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area.[61] It is also listed on Westchester County's African American Heritage Trail.[62] Other historic buildings at the estate include a 1760s farmhouse, 1907 Zebra House and Carriage House, late 1800s Ice House and a 1917 Tennis House.
  • Lounsbury (1836–38)
  • Marshlands Conservancy (dates back to Indigenous peoples era; part of original Jay Estate – partitioned in 1966)
  • Whitby Castle (Rye Golf Club)(1852–54)
  • The Jay Cemetery (established 1805)

Rye Playland (NPS designation 1987) edit

 
The wooden Dragon Coaster is a signature component of Playland Amusement Park, a National Historic Landmark that dates back to 1927.

This 279-acre theme park is owned and operated by Westchester County and includes rides, games, an indoor skating rink or Ice Casino, beach, a boardwalk, and concession stands. It is one of only two amusement parks in the country with National Historic Landmark status, the other one being Kennywood in Pennsylvania. It has been a popular destination since it first opened in 1928. Its wooden roller coaster, the Dragon Coaster, built in 1929, is one of the last roller coaster rides built by engineer Frederick Church that is still operating.[63] The Derby Racer, also built by Church, is one of only three rides of its kind remaining in the world. Glenn Close's and Ellen Latzen's characters ride the roller coaster in the 1980s thriller film, Fatal Attraction. Airplane Coaster, Church's most acclaimed coaster, was removed in 1957.[64] Playland is also the setting for several key scenes in the 1988 comedy film Big, starring Tom Hanks

Sites on the National Register of Historic Places edit

 
Rye Post Office dedicated to Caroline O'Day

Of the more than 88,000 sites in the country that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), Rye has 10 including the aforementioned Playland and Boston Post Road Historic District.[11]

Local landmarks edit

Rye has a local landmark law that protects the following properties:

  • Haines-Robinson House (1867), 556 Milton Road
  • Jay Estate (formerly known as the Alansten District), 210 Boston Post Road
  • Stillman Residence (1915), 235 Boston Post Road
  • Village Green, Purchase Street

Additional historic resources edit

Of note are two 200 plus year old milestones labeled 24 and 25 on the Boston Post Road, oldest thoroughfare in the United States.[citation needed] The concept of mile markers to measure the distance from New York City was originated in 1763 by Benjamin Franklin during his term as Postmaster General. These sandstone markers likely date from 1802 when the Westchester Turnpike was configured.

Rye is also home to a rare 1938 WPA mural by realist Guy Pene du Bois which is located within the city's Post Office lobby and titled John Jay at His Home.[68]

Rye is home to two of the 16 sites on the African American Heritage Trail of Westchester County- The Rye African-American Cemetery and the Jay Estate.[69]

Cemeteries and burial grounds edit

  • Greenwood Union Cemetery – originally known as Union Cemetery; founded in 1837
  • Guion Cemetery
  • Milton Cemetery – oldest recorded burial is 1708
  • Rye African-American Cemetery – established in 1860[70]
  • St. Mary's Cemetery – earliest burial 1854
  • Playland Ice Casino – site of Native American burying ground [71][72][73]
  • Unnamed African American Cemetery between Apawamis and Grace Church Street with burials prior to 1860[70]
  • Unnamed African American Cemetery near Old Boston Post Road and Playland Parkway with burials prior to 1860[70]

Churches and synagogues edit

 
Christ's Church clock tower Rye

Parks and recreation edit

 
Jay Meadow, Rye, NY

Parks and nature reserves edit

Rye has over 454 acres of green open space with multiple types of usage from active to passive recreation including walking, hiking, bird-watching and dog walking.[11] It is also a significant coastal community. In 1991, the City of Rye authored a Local Waterfront Revitalization Program (LWRP) to provide clear guidance for addressing future water conservation and preservation issues [5]

  • Edith G. Read Wildlife Sanctuary (179 acres) established in 1985.
  • Jay Estate (23 acres) – opened as a park in 1992; site of 1917 Palmer Indoor Tennis Court currently undergoing restoration for public use. Dogs on leash allowed.
  • Marshlands Conservancy (137 acres/147 with tidal lands), originally called the Devereux Reservation, opened as nature preserve in 1966. No dogs allowed.
  • Rye Nature Center (47 acres) acquired by city in 1956 and opened in 1957.
  • Rye Nursery Park (6.74 acres) – acquired "for wetland restoration and park uses" [74] and deemed as "crucial land in the Long Island Sound Estuary" in 2001 following a recommendation by the Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan for the Long Island Sound with the help of $3.1 million from the NY State and the Clean Water State Revolving Fund CWSRF administered by New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and NY State Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC);[75] also supported by the Westchester Land Trust and approved for $1.6 million in funding from The Clean Water/Clean Air Bond Act.[76][77][78]
  • Rye Town Park (62 acres) – opened as a park in 1909 and jointly owned with the Town of Rye. Walking, dog friendly during appropriate seasonal hours. Recipient of multiple grants to fund ADA compliance including $300,000 grant from the State Office of Parks and Recreation [79]

Private and public clubs edit

Rye has numerous private country clubs, many of which were formed in the late 19th and early 20th century. The combined acreage of these clubs affords members and guests over 993 acres of recreation.[80]

  • American Yacht Club (New York) (founded in 1883) (12 acres+) – sailing, tennis, paddle
  • The Apawamis Club (1890) (120 acres) – golf, squash, tennis, paddle, swimming
  • The Coveleigh Club (1933) (13 acres) – tennis, swimming, beach, bocce
  • Manursing Island Club (1912) (65 acres) – tennis, swimming, beach
  • Rye Golf Club (1921) (126 acres) (formerly known as Rye Country Club [81] and Ryewood) – golf, swimming
  • Shenorock Shore Club (1945) (former site of defunct Milton Point Casino) (12+ acres)- tennis, swimming, beach
  • Westchester Country Club (1922) (Main Club: 583 acres; Beach Club:62 acres; 645 Total acres) – golf, tennis, squash, paddle, swimming, beach

Recreation facilities edit

Access to recreation in Rye is plentiful with numerous public, private and shared sports facilities from tennis, to ice hockey to boating.

Rye recreation facilities (79 acres total) (city owned and operated) edit

  • Damiano Recreation Center (1.5 acres)
  • Disbrow Park (51 acres) – 4 tennis courts, baseball – 12 acres dedicated as a park in 1930 with acreage added in 1931 by Mayor John Motley Morehead [82][83] Includes a former city landfill.
  • Gagliardo Park (2.5 acres)
  • Rye Nursery Park – (6.74 acres) natural grass soccer and lacrosse fields
  • Rye Recreation Park (17 acres) – tennis courts, soccer fields

Other recreation facilities owned by city edit

  • Rye Boat Basin/Marina – boating
  • Rye Golf Club (126 acres) – golf, swimming; course designed by Devereux Emmet in 1921 [84]
  • Rye High School – football, tennis, track; the Rye High School sports teams are named the Garnets.
  • Osborn School
  • Midland School
  • Milton School

Recreation facilities not owned by city edit

  • Playland Ice Casino – skating, hockey
  • Row America Rye – rowing
  • Rye Country Day School – skating, hockey; the Rye Country Day teams are named the Wildcats.
  • Rye YMCA – swimming, fitness
  • School of the Holy Child (18 acres)
  • Tide Mill Yacht Basin

Education edit

Nursery school programs edit

  • Rye Presbyterian
  • Christ's Church
  • Community Synagogue of Rye

Public schools edit

Most of the city is in the Rye City School District.[85] Rye is served by three public elementary schools: Osborn, Milton, and Midland.

Rye Middle School and Rye High School are part of the same campus, and the two buildings connect.

The Greenhaven and The Preserve at Rye neighborhoods of the City of Rye[citation needed] are served by the Rye Neck School District.[85] Rye Neck High School and Middle School are on one campus also located partially in the City of Rye.

Rye High School has been named a Gold Medal school and the 61st-best high school in the U.S., ninth-best in New York state, and best in New York state if test-in schools are disregarded, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2013 "Best High Schools". The annual Rye-Harrison football game has been played for more than 80 years and is a top high school football rivalry in Westchester County.

Rye schools were recently ranked #18 in New York State with "A" ratings in all aspects except diversity.[86]

Private schools edit

Media edit

News websites edit

  • MyRye.com since 2006 [89]

Newspapers edit

  • The Rye Record – The Rye Record has been Rye's community paper for 22 years. [90]
  • The Rye Chronicle (out of print)
  • Rye Rising (Yonkers)
  • The Rye City Review (White Plains)

Cable edit

  • Rye TV municipal programming

Forums edit

  • Rye Moms

Infrastructure edit

Transportation edit

The Rye train station provides commuter rail service to Grand Central Terminal in New York City or Stamford and New Haven-Union Station via the Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line. The Bee-Line Bus System provides bus service to Rye on routes 13 and 61 with additional seasonal service to Rye Playland on routes 75 and 91.

 
Rye Fire House on Locust (1907)

Police department edit

The City of Rye police department has 36 sworn-in officers police officers and about six auxiliary police officers. They operate a fleet of Ford Crown Victorias, Chevrolet Tahoes, and one military-surplus truck used for emergency services. There is also one Toyota Prius for parking enforcement. The Rye Auxiliary Police is an all-volunteer force that provides assistance when needed. The Westchester County Police also patrols several areas of Rye, such as Playland Park, and The Marshlands. New York State Police patrols Interstate 95 and 287 while the MTA Police patrols the Rye Train station and property within the Metro North right-of-way.

Fire department edit

The City of Rye Fire Department is a combination department consisting of 100 volunteer firefighters (only 20 active) and 21 career firefighters of which 4–5 are on duty at all times. The department has two fire stations and man three engines, two ladders, two utility units, and two command vehicles. The Rye Fire Department responds to approximately 1,000 emergency calls annually and does not respond to medical calls.

Emergency medical services edit

Emergency medical service is provided by Port Chester-Rye-Rye Brook EMS at the Advanced Life Support Level (ALS). They are a combination agency with 50 members (30 paid EMTs, 15 paramedics and five volunteers). They operate up to five ALS ambulances and three paramedic flycars from their station in Port Chester and responds to over 5,000 calls a year between Port Chester, Rye and Rye Brook.

Notable people edit

In popular culture edit

  • The 1995 music video for Mariah Carey's Fantasy featuring Ol' Dirty Bastard was shot at Rye Playland.[97]
  • In the television series Mad Men, Rye is the home of Henry and Betty Francis and Betty's three children from her previous marriage to Don Draper. The Francis family lives there from 1965 to 1970.[citation needed]
  • One of the early scenes from the 1988 movie "Big" was shot at Rye Playland.
  • Several episodes of Season 3 of Apple TV's show Dickinson about the poet Emily Dickinson were filmed at the Jay Heritage Center in 2021.[98]
  • The Vampire Weekend song "Finger Back" (2013) references the town.
  • Rye is mentioned in the song American Pie, by Don McLean: "good old boys were drinkin' whiskey in Rye".[99]
  • In the book series "The Destroyer" by Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir, the headquarters of CURE is inside Folcroft Sanitarium in Rye, New York.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Office of the Comptroller (2013). "Fiscal Profile" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-12-14.
  2. ^ "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2022-09-20.
  3. ^ a b "Population, Housing Units, Area, and Density: 2010 – State – Place and (in selected states) County Subdivision". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2016-12-23.
  4. ^ "Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (DP-1): Rye city, New York". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  5. ^ a b c d "City of Rye Local Waterfront Revitalization Program" (PDF). Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  6. ^ Brown, Betsy (1988-01-10). "IN THE REGION: Westchester and Connecticut; Rye Weighs Plan to Preserve Waterfront". The New York Times. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  7. ^ "Hazard Mitigation – City of Rye" (PDF). Westchester County. Retrieved 2019-12-14.
  8. ^ a b "City of Rye LWRP". NY Department of State, Office of Planning and Development. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  9. ^ Selleck, Rev. Charles M. (1896). Norwalk. The author. p. 371.
  10. ^ Robert Bolton (1848). A History of the County of Westchester, from its first settlement to the present time. Alexander Gould.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "City of Rye, NY, 1985 Development Plan" (PDF). City of Rye Planning Commission. 1985. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
  12. ^ "Boards and Commissions". City of Rye. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  13. ^ "NYS Statute on Comprehensive Planning" (PDF). New York State. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  14. ^ "Rye Master Plan – First Public Session Tuesday, 7pm". 2017-09-24. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  15. ^ "Status of Comprehensive Plans Municipalities in Westchester County, NY" (PDF). Westchester County. October 2018. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  16. ^ "What is a Comprehensive Plan". Westchester County. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  17. ^ "Looking to Update the 1985 Rye Master Plan, Tuesday 7pm". My Rye. 2016-03-29. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  18. ^ Bill Lawyer (2016-04-10). "Remastering the Master Plan". The Rye Record. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  19. ^ "Chapter 195, Wetlands and Watercourses". Retrieved 2019-12-14.
  20. ^ Bill Lawyer (2016-01-22). "Sustainability in Rye, Looking Back and Looking Forward". The Rye Record. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  21. ^ Howard Husock (2021-09-11). "The importance of Dublin and Limerick, and the future of affordable neighborhoods". American Enterprise Institute. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  22. ^ "RYE NEIGHBORHOODS FORM CITY-WIDE ASSOCIATION". Rye Chronicle. 1961-10-26. p. 10.
  23. ^ "Quarry History of NY". Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  24. ^ City of Rye. "Chapter 195, Wetlands and Watercourses". Retrieved 2019-12-14.
  25. ^ "NYS Senator Seeks Greater Protection for Wetlands". 2017-03-27. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
  26. ^ "Chronological Review of 1975 Seen in Chronicle Headlines". The Rye Chronicle. 1976-01-01. p. 11.
  27. ^ Robert D. McFadden (2007-04-17). "Storm Leaves a Toll of Flooding and Hardship". The New York Times.
  28. ^ Jay Sears (2007-04-15). "Rye Hit By Second Flood In Six Weeks". My Rye. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  29. ^ Renea Henry (2011-09-08). "Not Again, Rain Causes Flooding in Indian Village". Rye patch. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
  30. ^ "Hurricane Sandy Hits Rye Hard". Rye Fire Department. 2012-11-04. Retrieved 2019-11-23.
  31. ^ "RISING Community Reconstruction Plan, Rye, NY" (PDF). Governor's Office of Storm Recovery. December 2015. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  32. ^ Robin Jovanovich (2018-10-17). "Council Makes a Timely Decision on NY Rising Projects". The Rye Record. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  33. ^ "Ida Flood Review". City of Rye. 2021-09-22. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  34. ^ Miller, Ryan. "Henri dumps rain, causes flooding in New York. How much to expect in each region". The Journal News. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  35. ^ "Rain from Henri causes flooding concerns in Rye". News 12 – Westchester. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  36. ^ "PHOTOS: Massive Flooding Across Rye". MyRye.com. 2021-09-02. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  37. ^ "Rye residents stunned by the amount of rain that fell during the storm". News 12 – Westchester. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  38. ^ "CULTURAL RESOURCES INVENTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND – DREDGED MATERIAL MANAGEMENT PLAN, Long Island Sound, Connecticut, New York, and Rhode Island, VOLUME I, Contract #W921WJ-08-R-002, WHG #PAL0002" (PDF). PAL Publications. August 2010. pp. 103–105. Retrieved 2020-05-18.
  39. ^ Lucianne Lavin and Birgit Morse (1985). "Ceramic Asemblages from the Rye Marshland Area of Southern New York" (PDF). The Bulletin and Journal of Archaeology for New York State. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  40. ^ Stuart J. Fiedel (1988). "Orient Fishtail Points from the Rye Marshlands Conservancy" (PDF). Archaeology Society of Connecticut. pp. 111–124. Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  41. ^ "SIXTEEN GRADUATE FROM RYE HIGH SCHOOL". Rye Chronicle. 1926-10-16. p. 3.
  42. ^ "Historical". Rye Chronicle. 1965-11-18. p. 13.
  43. ^ Charles Washington Baird (1871). Chronicle of a Border Town: History of Rye, Westchester County, New York. New York: Anson D. F. Randolph & Company. p. 193.
  44. ^ Whitman Bailey (1941-08-15). "Historic Milton Road". Rye Chronicle. p. 1.
  45. ^ "Historic Land; Arrowheads Found at Indian Hill, Off Milton Road". Rye Chronicle. 1926-10-16. p. 16.
  46. ^ "MR. MOREHEAD SUGGESTS DISBROW PARK FOR PUBLIC RECREATION". Rye Chronicle. 1945-07-13. p. 5.
  47. ^ John Milner Associates, Inc. (July 2012). Phase IA Archaeological Investigation, Playland Parkway Pathway, City of Rye, Westchester County, New York, Prepared for Westchester County Department of Planning (Report).
  48. ^ Marguerite Ward (2013-08-16). "Archaeological dig uncovers Westchester's past". The Harrison Report.
  49. ^ "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov. Retrieved 2016-06-04.
  50. ^ "Quick facts, Rye city, New York". United States Census Bureau.
  51. ^ "Milton Point Mansion Given by Owner for Religious Work". Rye Chronicle. 1951-03-22.
  52. ^ "Home for Laymen's Movement for a Christian World". The New York Times. 1951-06-13.
  53. ^ Edwards, Mark Thomas (2019). Faith and Foreign Affairs in the American Century. Lexington Books. p. 109.
  54. ^ "Wainwright House on the Rebound". The Rye Record. 2013-07-18.
  55. ^ Diana Marszalek (2008-09-14). "Members Questioning Center's Priorities". New York Times. Retrieved 2022-02-02.
  56. ^ "Honoring Our Veterans". The Rye Record. 2020-11-11.
  57. ^ "Lions Club Gives Us Community Honorees to Roar About". The Rye Record. 2017-11-06.
  58. ^ Vivian J. Dennis (1983-02-20). "The Sound Shore also offers diverse historic landmarks". Gannett Westchester Newspapers.
  59. ^ Field Horne (2018). Westchester County: A History. Westchester Historical Society.
  60. ^ Cary, Bill (2015-02-27). "Jay gardens in Rye to get 'sustainable' makeover". lohud.
  61. ^ "Welcome to the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area". hudsonrivervalley.com.
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
  63. ^ Futrell, Jim, Amusement Parks of New York, Stackpole Books, Pennsylvania, 2006
  64. ^ Munch, Richard (1982). Harry G. Traver: Legends of Terror. Mentor, OH: Amusement Park Books, Inc. ISBN 0935408029.
  65. ^ "Historians Make Tour of Heritage Of Rye Landmarks". Rye Chronicle. 1960-11-24.
  66. ^ Goddard Light (1960-03-17). "The Timothy Knapp House - Oldest Structure in Rye". Rye Chronicle. p. 13.
  67. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Listings". Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 1/31/11 through 2/04/11. National Park Service. 2011-02-11.
  68. ^ "Visitors Admire Mural of John Jay in Rye Post Office". The Rye Chronicle. 1938-01-28. p. 4.
  69. ^ "African American Heritage Trail brochure". Westchester County, New York. Retrieved 2021-12-17.
  70. ^ a b c "Cemetery Offers Life Lessons". The Journal News. 1999-05-08. p. 2A.
  71. ^ "Historic Map of Rye Village". The Rye Chronicle. 1928-12-08.
  72. ^ "Peter Disbrow". The Rye Chronicle. 1960-04-21.
  73. ^ Karen T. Butler (2011-11-03). "Vintage Rye: Ode to the Odell Family". The Rye Record.
  74. ^ City of Rye, New York (November 2001). "Flood Mitigation Plan". Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  75. ^ "Open Space Planning Guide" (PDF). NY State DEC. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  76. ^ Elsa Brenner (2001-07-01). "In the Region/Westchester; Land Trust Helps Preserve Sites Throughout County". New York Times. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  77. ^ "Final List Water Quality Improvement Projects Under The Clean Water/Clean Air Bond Act of 1996". NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION. 2003. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  78. ^ NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION (2013-04-18). "Long Island Sound Enhanced Implementation Plan" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  79. ^ Debbie Reisner (2019-02-08). "Rye Town Park Secures Funds For ADA Compliant Upgrades". Retrieved 2019-12-07.
  80. ^ Clary, Suzanne,"Sailing and Tennis and Golf Clubs, Oh Rye!", Rye Magazine, Weston Publishing, (July 2015)
  81. ^ "Meeting Here Tonight of the New Rye Club". The Daily Argus. 1921-07-14.
  82. ^ "Disbrow Park". The Rye Chronicle. 1930-02-15.
  83. ^ "J. M. Morehead's Gift to Village, Former Mayor Presents Property for New Parkway Leading to Disbrow Park in Milton". The Rye Chronicle. 1931-12-05.
  84. ^ "New Rye Country Club Rushing Work of Construction of 18 Hole Course". New York Evening Post. 1921-08-13.
  85. ^ a b "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Westchester County, NY" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 2023-04-07.
  86. ^ "RANKING PUTS RYE SCHOOLS AT #18 IN STATE WITH A "C" GRADE FOR DIVERSITY". My Rye. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
  87. ^ "Zoning Map". Harrison Town. Retrieved 2023-04-07. - Compare to the address: "2225 Westchester Ave, Rye, NY 10580"
  88. ^ "Mission". School of the Holy Child. Retrieved 2019-02-13.
  89. ^ "My Rye.com". Jay Sears. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  90. ^ "The Rye Record". Retrieved 2019-11-05.
  91. ^ Feron, James (1977-10-23). "INTERVIEW". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  92. ^ O'Kane, Cahair (2022-05-23). "McCole finding his way". The Irish News. Retrieved 2022-05-23.
  93. ^ Rye, New York at Soccerway. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  94. ^ https://guhoyas.com/sports/mens-soccer/roster/will-sands/12794
  95. ^ . Sportageous. 2020-11-14. Archived from the original on 2022-06-26. Retrieved 2022-01-17.
  96. ^ "Edgar 'Ed' Wachenheim III". CNBC. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2019-05-24.
  97. ^ Genius (2018-11-16), Mariah Carey Breaks Down Her Iconic Hits & Songwriting Process | Genius Level, retrieved 2018-11-20
  98. ^ Mary Elizabeth Andriotis. "How Two Historic House Museums Were Transformed for Season Three of Dickinson". House Beautiful. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  99. ^ Burns, Joseph E. (2012). "Chapter 1: A Long, Long Time Ago: A Lyrical Interpretation". In Schuck, Raymond I.; Schuck, Ray (eds.). Do You Believe in Rock and Roll?: Essays on Don McLean's "American Pie". McFarland. pp. 21, 22. ISBN 9781476600369.

External links edit

  • Official website

york, adjacent, town, same, name, town, york, village, within, town, brook, york, area, within, both, town, village, mamaroneck, neck, coastal, city, westchester, county, york, united, states, located, near, york, city, within, york, city, metropolitan, area, . For the adjacent town of the same name see Rye town New York For the village within the town of Rye see Rye Brook New York For the area within both the town of Rye and the village of Mamaroneck see Rye Neck Rye is a coastal city in Westchester County New York United States located near New York City and within the New York City metropolitan area It is separate from the Town of Rye which has more land area than the city 3 The City of Rye formerly the Village of Rye was part of the Town until it received its charter as a city in 1942 making it the youngest city in the State of New York Its population density for its 5 85 square miles of land is roughly 2 729 76 sq mi 4 Rye New YorkCityCity of RyeJay Estate is the childhood home of American Founding Father John Jay SealLocation in Westchester County and the state of New YorkInteractive map of RyeCoordinates 40 58 52 N 73 41 02 W 40 98111 N 73 68389 W 40 98111 73 68389Country United StatesState New YorkCountyWestchesterIncorporated as a village 1904 1 Reincorporated as a city 1942 1 Government TypeCouncil Manager MayorJosh Cohn D City managerGreg Usry City councilMembers List Julie N Souza D Carolina Johnson D Josh Nathan D Ben Stacks D William Henderson R Lori Fontanes D Area 2 Total20 02 sq mi 51 86 km2 Land5 85 sq mi 15 16 km2 Water14 17 sq mi 36 70 km2 Population 2020 Total16 592 Density2 834 79 sq mi 1 094 60 km2 Time zoneUTC 05 00 EST Summer DST UTC 04 00 EDT ZIP Code10580Area code914FIPS code36 64309Websitehttp www ryeny gov Rye is notable for its waterfront which covers 60 percent of the city s six square miles and is governed by a waterfront act instituted in 1991 5 6 7 8 Located in the city are two National Historic Landmarks the Boston Post Road Historic District was designated a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service in 1993 its centerpiece is the Jay Estate the childhood home of John Jay a Founding Father and the first Chief Justice of the United States Playland a historic amusement park designated a National Historic Landmark in 1987 is also located in Rye Playland features one of the oldest wooden roller coasters in the Northeast the Dragon Coaster Contents 1 History 2 Planning and zoning 2 1 Master plan 1985 2 2 Local Waterfront Revitalization Plan 1991 2 3 Sustainability plan 2013 2 4 Neighborhoods 3 Geography 3 1 Rock and wetlands 3 2 Flooding 3 3 Archaeological significance and notable indigenous sites 4 Demographics 5 Economy 6 Arts and culture 6 1 Lectures concerts exhibits and classes 6 2 Largest annual community events 6 3 Service and Volunteer Organizations 7 Historic sites 7 1 Boston Post Road Historic District Rye New York NPS designation 1994 7 2 Rye Playland NPS designation 1987 7 3 Sites on the National Register of Historic Places 7 4 Local landmarks 7 5 Additional historic resources 7 6 Cemeteries and burial grounds 7 7 Churches and synagogues 8 Parks and recreation 8 1 Parks and nature reserves 8 2 Private and public clubs 8 3 Recreation facilities 8 3 1 Rye recreation facilities 79 acres total city owned and operated 8 3 2 Other recreation facilities owned by city 8 3 3 Recreation facilities not owned by city 9 Education 9 1 Nursery school programs 9 2 Public schools 9 3 Private schools 10 Media 10 1 News websites 10 2 Newspapers 10 3 Cable 10 4 Forums 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Transportation 11 2 Police department 11 3 Fire department 11 4 Emergency medical services 12 Notable people 13 In popular culture 14 References 15 External linksHistory edit nbsp Rye Beach early 20th centuryRye was once a part of Fairfield County Connecticut belonging to the Sachem Ponus of the Ponus Wekuwuhm Canaan Parish and was probably named for that chieftain Peningoe Neck 9 It was founded in 1660 by three men Thomas Studwell Peter Disbrow and John Coe Later landowners included John Budd and family 10 11 During the 19th and early 20th centuries it was a haven for wealthy Manhattanites who traveled by coach or boat to escape the city heat Its location on Long Island Sound and numerous beaches also appealed to visitors with more moderate means who gravitated for short stays at cottages and waterfront hotels It has an extraordinary inventory of buildings with architectural distinction that help visually articulate specific neighborhoods and districts 11 Planning and zoning editPlanning and zoning oversight is vested in several branches of the Rye government including several volunteer staffed committees like the Planning Commission the Architectural Review Board the Sustainability Committee the Conservation Committee and the Landmarks Committee to name a few 12 Master plan 1985 edit The City s current Master Plan guides the planning process Also known as a Comprehensive plan it was authored 37 years ago with an expectation that it would be updated again in 2000 Attempts to revise the 1985 document with community input as recommended in NY State s Statute on Comprehensive Planning 13 were made in 2016 and 2017 14 The review which was aimed to reflect current conditions of growth and forecast future changes was not completed As of 2018 15 Rye lagged behind almost all of the 43 municipalities in Westchester County in updating this serious document 16 Failure to modernize the 1985 Master Plan on that schedule has produced concerns from residents about the lack of community consensus lack of informed and coordinated regulation of development and the subsequent impacts including increased flooding and a higher than expected volume of teardowns Other concerns include threats to historical resources cultural resources natural resources sensitive coastal and environmental areas and numerous other negative repercussions on neighborhood character 17 18 Previous Master Plans for Rye were created in 1929 1945 and in 1963 Local Waterfront Revitalization Plan 1991 edit Rye is a coastal community with numerous sensitive wetlands and watercourses 19 In 1991 the City of Rye adopted a comprehensive plan to further regulate land and water usage to protect and preserve these fragile resources 8 Sustainability plan 2013 edit In 2010 spurred by disastrous flooding events in 2007 and other environmental concerns the Rye Sustainability Committee RSC was formed and tasked with creating a plan to inform best environmental and land stewardship practices for the city A sustainability plan was formally adopted in December 2013 20 Neighborhoods edit Many of Rye s unique neighborhoods are defined in the 1985 Master Plan 11 Many have historic significance and their preservation was signaled as important for enhancing Rye s character They include Proposed National Register District Soundview Park Church Row Local or National Register Significance Dogwood Upper Dogwood Lane Grace Church Street Area Milton Harbor Kirby Mill Post Road Old Cottage District Central Business District Dublin West Rye 21 Greenhaven Indian Village Loudon Woods 22 Rye Town Park Hix ParkGeography editAccording to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 20 0 square miles 52 km2 of which 5 9 sq mi 15 km2 is land and 14 2 sq mi 37 km2 is water 3 Rye is situated in the eastern part of central Westchester County on Long Island Sound The western border of the City generally parallels Beaver Swamp Brook while the eastern border is formed by Milton Harbor and the Sound Blind Brook traverses the City from the northwest corner of Rye to Milton Harbor at the southern end 11 Rock and wetlands edit nbsp Rye High football field flooded in 2011The geology and hydrology of Rye is characterized by a significant quantity of rock marshes and wetlands 5 which makes the city both desirably scenic but also challenging for developers Rye s bedrock is predominantly constituted of Fordham gneiss and Harrison diorite also known as Byram Black granite 23 According to Rye s 1985 Master Plan Rye contains a variety of environmentally significant areas Numerous tidal and freshwater wetlands are found near the waterfront and brooks The Milton Harbor area including the Marshlands Conservancy and Rye Golf Club Disbrow Park and the Manursing area contain the most extensive wetlands in the City In addition substantial areas near the Sound Milton Harbor Blind Brook and Beaver Swamp Brook are within the 100 year flood hazard area and thus subject to potential flooding 5 According to the City of Rye Considerable acreage of these important natural resources has been lost or impaired by draining dredging filling excavating building polluting and other acts inconsistent with the natural uses of such areas Remaining wetlands are in jeopardy of being lost despoiled or impaired by such acts contrary to the public safety and welfare As a result the City has charged itself with the responsibility of preventing the despoilation and destruction of wetlands and watercourses while taking into account varying ecological economic recreational and aesthetic values Activities that may damage wetlands or watercourses should be located on upland sites in such a manner as not to degrade these systems 24 In 2017 Rye resident and then New York State Senator George Latimer noted that wetlands maps for the area have not been updated in over 20 years 25 Flooding edit Flooding has long been an issue in Rye as in other coastal towns with water coming in from Long Island Sound The Blind Brook watershed is also a source of that flooding with significant deluges recorded in the neighborhood of Indian Village after four days of rain in October 1975 26 Three major weather events in just five years produced catastrophic damage in the town Following major flooding in March 2007 the April 2007 nor easter six weeks later left some homes in Rye with over five feet of floodwater 27 28 In 2011 the after effects of Hurricane Irene in August and Hurricane Maria in September included swelling of Blind Brook and submersion of private and commercial properties including the Rye Nature Center Indian Village the Rye High football field businesses on Purchase Street and homes on Milton and Highland Roads 29 Storm surges from Hurricane Sandy in 2012 resulted in evacuations of many coastal residences and facilities including the Milton firehouse 30 The City s response to these recurring hazards was to apply for funding through the NY Rising Community Reconstruction Program Rye received 3 000 000 to safeguard the city against future flooding threats upgrade its infrastructure for resiliency identify stormwater mitigation solutions and protect historic buildings and natural wetlands 31 32 Starting on September 1 2021 Rye experienced another substantial flooding event The storm lasted two days and caused significant damage to municipal facilities businesses and residences 33 Areas around Indian Village and other sections of the city that had previously flooded during Hurricane Irene were under 8 9 feet of water Other areas around the town normally not affected by flooding were also affected Prior to the flooding event Rye had undergone approximately five inches of rainfall 34 from Hurricane Henri 35 Two weeks later the remnants Hurricane Ida dropped another 8 9 inches of rain in the area within a 12 hour period 36 37 Hurricane Ida remnants caused flooding in Rye nearly 10 years to the day from Hurricane Irene Archaeological significance and notable indigenous sites edit As of 2010 seventy five percent of the acreage in Rye or the equivalent of 3 954 acres had been determined to be archaeologically sensitive with many Indigenous and First Nations contact sites 38 39 40 At least two villages have been determined to have existed one on Manursing Island and the other on today s Milton Point 41 The presence of Indigenous people s activities has been noted in numerous locations where implements and bones were unearthed including an ancient Indian burial ground site of the present Playland Casino 42 together with discoveries of artifacts along the shoreline 43 pottery skeletons and relics along Milton Road 44 45 Disbrow Park 46 and throughout today s Boston Post Road Historic District including Marshlands Conservancy The presence of Indigenous people in Rye was more recently documented in a 2012 Phase IA archaeological investigation commissioned by Westchester County in connection with the construction of a bike path along the Playland Parkway in Rye Within just one mile of the project site the report noted a dozen archeologically sensitive areas The publication included supporting data from files in the repositories of NYOPRHP and the NY State Museum it further highlighted the existence of shell middens evidence of camp sites and at least two burial grounds One of these documented sites included the Blind Brook 47 Additional findings have been made at the Jay Estate in archaeological digs conducted by Dr Eugene Boesch 48 and submitted to the NY State Cultural Resource Information System CRIS Demographics editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2015 Historical population CensusPop Note 19103 964 19205 30833 9 19308 71264 1 19409 86513 2 195011 72118 8 196014 22521 4 197015 86911 6 198015 083 5 0 199014 936 1 0 200014 9550 1 201015 7205 1 202016 5925 5 U S Decennial Census 49 As of the 2020 United States Census there were 16 592 people living in the city This is representative of approximately 5491 households 74 8 have a college degree 15 5 were over the age of 65 and 51 7 were women 88 2 identified themselves as White alone 1 3 identified as Black or African American alone 6 7 identified as Hispanic or Latino 5 6 identified as Asian alone 50 Economy editRye is home to Con Edison Jarden a Fortune 500 company GAMCO Investors Inc formerly known as Gabelli Asset Management Company Sims Metal ManagementArts and culture editLectures concerts exhibits and classes edit Jay Heritage Center Rye Arts Center Rye Free Reading Room Rye Historical Society Wainwright House 1928 5 acres Historic estate with gardens and central building commissioned by US Congressman J Mayhew Wainwright In 1951 the property was re imagined as a religious center for research and training in the laws of God for Human Conduct 51 It was donated by Mrs Philip King Condict to the Layman s Movement for a Christian World an ecumenical organization serving New York men in business banking and the law 52 53 Complaints about departure from its core mission of inspiring greater understanding through body mind spirit and community have mired the nonsectarian spiritual and educational center in controversy repeatedly since 1996 when the organization s 2 2 million endowment was completely depleted 54 55 nbsp Memorial Day Parade Rye NY Boys ScoutsLargest annual community events edit Rye Little League Parade April American Legion Memorial Day Parade May Rye Sidewalk Sale July Jay Day September Rye Harrison Football Game October Rye Window Painting October Rye Turkey Trot November Mistletoe Magic December Service and Volunteer Organizations edit American Legion Post 128 56 Rye City Lions 57 Historic sites editOf the more than 2600 National Historic Landmark NHL sites in the country Rye has two the Boston Post Road Historic District 58 and Playland Amusement Park 11 Both are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places Rye also has one of the few National Historic Landmark Districts in the country Boston Post Road Historic District Rye New York NPS designation 1994 edit nbsp Historic Jay Gardens Sensory Room and Reflecting PoolIncludes 5 historically significant parcels much of the land was originally the ancestral home of American Founding Father John Jay It is where he grew up and where he is buried Jay Estate 23 acre park with gardens operated by the Jay Heritage Center 59 60 Restoration of the Jay Mansion 1838 overlooking Long Island Sound was an official project of the Save America s Treasures Program The Jay Mansion is the oldest National Historic Landmark NHL structure in New York State with a geothermal heating and cooling pump system and the first in Westchester County to have such an energy efficient system Member site of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area 61 It is also listed on Westchester County s African American Heritage Trail 62 Other historic buildings at the estate include a 1760s farmhouse 1907 Zebra House and Carriage House late 1800s Ice House and a 1917 Tennis House Lounsbury 1836 38 Marshlands Conservancy dates back to Indigenous peoples era part of original Jay Estate partitioned in 1966 Whitby Castle Rye Golf Club 1852 54 The Jay Cemetery established 1805 Rye Playland NPS designation 1987 edit nbsp The wooden Dragon Coaster is a signature component of Playland Amusement Park a National Historic Landmark that dates back to 1927 This 279 acre theme park is owned and operated by Westchester County and includes rides games an indoor skating rink or Ice Casino beach a boardwalk and concession stands It is one of only two amusement parks in the country with National Historic Landmark status the other one being Kennywood in Pennsylvania It has been a popular destination since it first opened in 1928 Its wooden roller coaster the Dragon Coaster built in 1929 is one of the last roller coaster rides built by engineer Frederick Church that is still operating 63 The Derby Racer also built by Church is one of only three rides of its kind remaining in the world Glenn Close s and Ellen Latzen s characters ride the roller coaster in the 1980s thriller film Fatal Attraction Airplane Coaster Church s most acclaimed coaster was removed in 1957 64 Playland is also the setting for several key scenes in the 1988 comedy film Big starring Tom Hanks Sites on the National Register of Historic Places edit nbsp Rye Post Office dedicated to Caroline O DayOf the more than 88 000 sites in the country that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places NRHP Rye has 10 including the aforementioned Playland and Boston Post Road Historic District 11 Bird Homestead NRHP listing 2010 Boston Post Road Historic District NRHP listing 1982 Timothy Knapp House NRHP listing 1982 The oldest house in the city is owned by the Rye Historical Society and dates to around 1667 Notable for its location at the juncture of the Peningo Trail a Native American path 65 Further evidence of Indigenous presence includes mounds of shells or middens recorded by scientist Henry Bird 66 Milton Cemetery NRHP listing 1982 Playland NRHP listing 1980 The Square House originally known as Widow Haviland s Tavern NRHP listing 1974 Owned by the Rye Historical Society this inn tavern was built in 1730 George Washington stayed at the inn on two separate occasions remarking favorably on his experience in his diaries Rye African American Cemetery NRHP listing 2003 Rye Meeting House NRHP listing 2011 67 Rye Town Park Bathing Complex and Oakland Beach NRHP listing 2003 United States Post Office Rye NRHP listing 1989 Local landmarks edit Rye has a local landmark law that protects the following properties Haines Robinson House 1867 556 Milton Road Jay Estate formerly known as the Alansten District 210 Boston Post Road Stillman Residence 1915 235 Boston Post Road Village Green Purchase StreetAdditional historic resources edit Of note are two 200 plus year old milestones labeled 24 and 25 on the Boston Post Road oldest thoroughfare in the United States citation needed The concept of mile markers to measure the distance from New York City was originated in 1763 by Benjamin Franklin during his term as Postmaster General These sandstone markers likely date from 1802 when the Westchester Turnpike was configured Rye is also home to a rare 1938 WPA mural by realist Guy Pene du Bois which is located within the city s Post Office lobby and titled John Jay at His Home 68 Rye is home to two of the 16 sites on the African American Heritage Trail of Westchester County The Rye African American Cemetery and the Jay Estate 69 Cemeteries and burial grounds edit Greenwood Union Cemetery originally known as Union Cemetery founded in 1837 Guion Cemetery Milton Cemetery oldest recorded burial is 1708 Rye African American Cemetery established in 1860 70 St Mary s Cemetery earliest burial 1854 Playland Ice Casino site of Native American burying ground 71 72 73 Unnamed African American Cemetery between Apawamis and Grace Church Street with burials prior to 1860 70 Unnamed African American Cemetery near Old Boston Post Road and Playland Parkway with burials prior to 1860 70 Churches and synagogues edit nbsp Christ s Church clock tower RyeChrist s Church Episcopal established in 1695 as Grace Church current building erected in 1866 Church of the Resurrection Community Synagogue of Rye Congregation Emanu El of Westchester Rye Presbyterian Church 1870 designed by Richard UpjohnParks and recreation edit nbsp Jay Meadow Rye NYParks and nature reserves edit Rye has over 454 acres of green open space with multiple types of usage from active to passive recreation including walking hiking bird watching and dog walking 11 It is also a significant coastal community In 1991 the City of Rye authored a Local Waterfront Revitalization Program LWRP to provide clear guidance for addressing future water conservation and preservation issues 5 Edith G Read Wildlife Sanctuary 179 acres established in 1985 Jay Estate 23 acres opened as a park in 1992 site of 1917 Palmer Indoor Tennis Court currently undergoing restoration for public use Dogs on leash allowed Marshlands Conservancy 137 acres 147 with tidal lands originally called the Devereux Reservation opened as nature preserve in 1966 No dogs allowed Rye Nature Center 47 acres acquired by city in 1956 and opened in 1957 Rye Nursery Park 6 74 acres acquired for wetland restoration and park uses 74 and deemed as crucial land in the Long Island Sound Estuary in 2001 following a recommendation by the Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan for the Long Island Sound with the help of 3 1 million from the NY State and the Clean Water State Revolving Fund CWSRF administered by New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and NY State Environmental Facilities Corporation EFC 75 also supported by the Westchester Land Trust and approved for 1 6 million in funding from The Clean Water Clean Air Bond Act 76 77 78 Rye Town Park 62 acres opened as a park in 1909 and jointly owned with the Town of Rye Walking dog friendly during appropriate seasonal hours Recipient of multiple grants to fund ADA compliance including 300 000 grant from the State Office of Parks and Recreation 79 Private and public clubs edit Rye has numerous private country clubs many of which were formed in the late 19th and early 20th century The combined acreage of these clubs affords members and guests over 993 acres of recreation 80 American Yacht Club New York founded in 1883 12 acres sailing tennis paddle The Apawamis Club 1890 120 acres golf squash tennis paddle swimming The Coveleigh Club 1933 13 acres tennis swimming beach bocce Manursing Island Club 1912 65 acres tennis swimming beach Rye Golf Club 1921 126 acres formerly known as Rye Country Club 81 and Ryewood golf swimming Shenorock Shore Club 1945 former site of defunct Milton Point Casino 12 acres tennis swimming beach Westchester Country Club 1922 Main Club 583 acres Beach Club 62 acres 645 Total acres golf tennis squash paddle swimming beachRecreation facilities edit Access to recreation in Rye is plentiful with numerous public private and shared sports facilities from tennis to ice hockey to boating Rye recreation facilities 79 acres total city owned and operated edit Damiano Recreation Center 1 5 acres Disbrow Park 51 acres 4 tennis courts baseball 12 acres dedicated as a park in 1930 with acreage added in 1931 by Mayor John Motley Morehead 82 83 Includes a former city landfill Gagliardo Park 2 5 acres Rye Nursery Park 6 74 acres natural grass soccer and lacrosse fields Rye Recreation Park 17 acres tennis courts soccer fieldsOther recreation facilities owned by city edit Rye Boat Basin Marina boating Rye Golf Club 126 acres golf swimming course designed by Devereux Emmet in 1921 84 Rye High School football tennis track the Rye High School sports teams are named the Garnets Osborn School Midland School Milton SchoolRecreation facilities not owned by city edit Playland Ice Casino skating hockey Row America Rye rowing Rye Country Day School skating hockey the Rye Country Day teams are named the Wildcats Rye YMCA swimming fitness School of the Holy Child 18 acres Tide Mill Yacht BasinEducation editNursery school programs edit Rye Presbyterian Christ s Church Community Synagogue of RyePublic schools edit Most of the city is in the Rye City School District 85 Rye is served by three public elementary schools Osborn Milton and Midland Rye Middle School and Rye High School are part of the same campus and the two buildings connect The Greenhaven and The Preserve at Rye neighborhoods of the City of Rye citation needed are served by the Rye Neck School District 85 Rye Neck High School and Middle School are on one campus also located partially in the City of Rye Rye High School has been named a Gold Medal school and the 61st best high school in the U S ninth best in New York state and best in New York state if test in schools are disregarded according to U S News amp World Report s 2013 Best High Schools The annual Rye Harrison football game has been played for more than 80 years and is a top high school football rivalry in Westchester County Rye schools were recently ranked 18 in New York State with A ratings in all aspects except diversity 86 Private schools edit Rye Country Day School Pre K through 12th grade a college preparatory school Resurrection Elementary School grammar school middle school is a Catholic school located in Rye School of the Holy Child 18 acres for girls grades 5 12 is in Harrison New York with a Rye postal address 87 The school was founded in 1904 88 Media editNews websites edit MyRye com since 2006 89 Newspapers edit The Rye Record The Rye Record has been Rye s community paper for 22 years 90 The Rye Chronicle out of print Rye Rising Yonkers The Rye City Review White Plains Cable edit Rye TV municipal programmingForums edit Rye MomsInfrastructure editTransportation edit The Rye train station provides commuter rail service to Grand Central Terminal in New York City or Stamford and New Haven Union Station via the Metro North Railroad s New Haven Line The Bee Line Bus System provides bus service to Rye on routes 13 and 61 with additional seasonal service to Rye Playland on routes 75 and 91 nbsp Rye Fire House on Locust 1907 Police department edit The City of Rye police department has 36 sworn in officers police officers and about six auxiliary police officers They operate a fleet of Ford Crown Victorias Chevrolet Tahoes and one military surplus truck used for emergency services There is also one Toyota Prius for parking enforcement The Rye Auxiliary Police is an all volunteer force that provides assistance when needed The Westchester County Police also patrols several areas of Rye such as Playland Park and The Marshlands New York State Police patrols Interstate 95 and 287 while the MTA Police patrols the Rye Train station and property within the Metro North right of way Fire department edit The City of Rye Fire Department is a combination department consisting of 100 volunteer firefighters only 20 active and 21 career firefighters of which 4 5 are on duty at all times The department has two fire stations and man three engines two ladders two utility units and two command vehicles The Rye Fire Department responds to approximately 1 000 emergency calls annually and does not respond to medical calls Emergency medical services edit Emergency medical service is provided by Port Chester Rye Rye Brook EMS at the Advanced Life Support Level ALS They are a combination agency with 50 members 30 paid EMTs 15 paramedics and five volunteers They operate up to five ALS ambulances and three paramedic flycars from their station in Port Chester and responds to over 5 000 calls a year between Port Chester Rye and Rye Brook Notable people editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Roz Abrams former WABC TV and WCBS TV news anchors Christopher Atkins actor Raymond E Baldwin US Senator Lex Barker actor Jason Bateman actor Justine Bateman actress James Roosevelt Bayley Catholic bishop John Bello founder SoBe Beverages former president NFL Properties Greg Berlanti TV writer Junius Bird archaeologist Roland T Bird paleontologist Alex Blum cartoonist Roy J Bostock Former Chairman of Yahoo James Bradley author Ralph Branca Major League Baseball pitcher Daniel Burke Former President of The American Broadcasting Company Barbara Bush First Lady attended Milton Elementary School Doja Cat rapper and singer partly raised in Rye by her grandmother Nelson Chai Former CFO of Merrill Lynch and Bank of America Bud Cort actor Eamonn Coghlan Olympic track and field athlete Buster Crabbe actor and Olympic swimmer Mike D Antoni head coach of the NBA s Houston Rockets William Davis golfer Jennifer Donnelly author Eddie Eagan sportsman Amelia Earhart aviator first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean Born in Atchison Kansas Betty Francis fictional character Mario Gabelli stock investor investment advisor and financial analyst David Gottesman businessman and billionaire Michael Grabner professional hockey player Molly Guion artist 91 Sean Haggerty born 1976 ice hockey player Mark Halstead footballer citation needed Irving Harper industrial designer Justin Henry actor Thomas B Hess art writer and curator Alan J Hoffman famous mathematician Harold Holzer Lincoln scholar Iakovos Archbishop of America 1911 2005 Marc Jacobs fashion designer Ajit Jain head of several reinsurance businesses for Berkshire Hathaway Elizabeth Janeway author John Jay Founding Father negotiator of the Treaty of Paris first Chief Justice of the United States two time Governor of New York State anti slavery advocate and diplomat Peter Augustus Jay lawyer President of the NY Manumission Society John Clarkson Jay physician and notable conchologist Mary Rutherfurd Jay landscape architect Pierre Jay first chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Arthur Judson artists and orchestra manager Megyn Kelly Today Show contributor Christopher Kimball chef publisher of Cook s Illustrated and Cook s Country co founder of America s Test Kitchen and founder of Christopher Kimball s Milk Street Kitchen Ralph Kiner professional baseball player and broadcaster Robert A Kindler Global Head of Mergers and Acquisitions and Vice Chairman of Morgan Stanley George Kirby professional baseball player Nick Kroll actor comedian George Latimer New York politician politician Westchester County Executive David Lee physicist Brendan McCole Gaelic footballer 92 John Mack Morgan Stanley CEO Wellington Mara owner of NFL New York Giants William Moulton Marston creator of Wonder Woman Eugene R McGrath former Chairman and CEO of Consolidated Edison Allegra Mertz championship sailor Charles E F Millard President of PBGC Diana Millay actress Jay Pierrepont Moffat US Ambassador John Motley Morehead III mayor of Rye chemist philanthropist Ogden Nash poet Eric Nisenson author Caroline Love Goodwin O Day US Congresswoman Nicholas Patrick astronaut Mission Specialist 1 on 2006 Discovery STS 116 mission George P Putnam author Steven C Rattner owner of Hard Rock Casino in Las Vegas Edith Gwynne Read conservationist Joy Reidenberg television star of nature documentaries on PBS NatGeo Wild Discovery Blanche Ring Broadway actress and singer Zelia Peet Ruebhausen policy advisor UN observer James Sands professional soccer player for NYCFC and USMNT 93 Will Sands professional soccer player for Columbus Crew 94 Tatiana Saunders soccer player in Iceland France and England 95 Liz Sheridan actress Debora Shuger author Adam Silver commissioner of NBA Bill Stern actor and sportscaster Stuart Sternberg born 1959 owner of the Tampa Bay Rays B J Surhoff Major League Baseball player John Thain former Merrill Lynch CEO Edgar Wachenheim III investor and author 96 Diana Williams WABC TV news anchor Kimberly Williams actress Bob Woodruff ABC television journalist Sean Young actressIn popular culture editThe 1995 music video for Mariah Carey s Fantasy featuring Ol Dirty Bastard was shot at Rye Playland 97 In the television series Mad Men Rye is the home of Henry and Betty Francis and Betty s three children from her previous marriage to Don Draper The Francis family lives there from 1965 to 1970 citation needed One of the early scenes from the 1988 movie Big was shot at Rye Playland Several episodes of Season 3 of Apple TV s show Dickinson about the poet Emily Dickinson were filmed at the Jay Heritage Center in 2021 98 The Vampire Weekend song Finger Back 2013 references the town Rye is mentioned in the song American Pie by Don McLean good old boys were drinkin whiskey in Rye 99 In the book series The Destroyer by Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir the headquarters of CURE is inside Folcroft Sanitarium in Rye New York References edit a b Office of the Comptroller 2013 Fiscal Profile PDF Retrieved 2019 12 14 ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2022 09 20 a b Population Housing Units Area and Density 2010 State Place and in selected states County Subdivision United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2016 12 23 Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 Demographic Profile Data DP 1 Rye city New York United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2011 11 15 a b c d City of Rye Local Waterfront Revitalization Program PDF Retrieved 2022 10 11 Brown Betsy 1988 01 10 IN THE REGION Westchester and Connecticut Rye Weighs Plan to Preserve Waterfront The New York Times Retrieved 2022 10 11 Hazard Mitigation City of Rye PDF Westchester County Retrieved 2019 12 14 a b City of Rye LWRP NY Department of State Office of Planning and Development Retrieved 2022 02 03 Selleck Rev Charles M 1896 Norwalk The author p 371 Robert Bolton 1848 A History of the County of Westchester from its first settlement to the present time Alexander Gould a b c d e f g City of Rye NY 1985 Development Plan PDF City of Rye Planning Commission 1985 Retrieved 2019 11 03 Boards and Commissions City of Rye Retrieved 2022 02 03 NYS Statute on Comprehensive Planning PDF New York State Retrieved 2022 02 03 Rye Master Plan First Public Session Tuesday 7pm 2017 09 24 Retrieved 2022 02 03 Status of Comprehensive Plans Municipalities in Westchester County NY PDF Westchester County October 2018 Retrieved 2022 02 03 What is a Comprehensive Plan Westchester County Retrieved 2022 02 03 Looking to Update the 1985 Rye Master Plan Tuesday 7pm My Rye 2016 03 29 Retrieved 2022 02 03 Bill Lawyer 2016 04 10 Remastering the Master Plan The Rye Record Retrieved 2022 02 03 Chapter 195 Wetlands and Watercourses Retrieved 2019 12 14 Bill Lawyer 2016 01 22 Sustainability in Rye Looking Back and Looking Forward The Rye Record Retrieved 2022 02 03 Howard Husock 2021 09 11 The importance of Dublin and Limerick and the future of affordable neighborhoods American Enterprise Institute Retrieved 2022 02 03 RYE NEIGHBORHOODS FORM CITY WIDE ASSOCIATION Rye Chronicle 1961 10 26 p 10 Quarry History of NY Retrieved 2019 11 23 City of Rye Chapter 195 Wetlands and Watercourses Retrieved 2019 12 14 NYS Senator Seeks Greater Protection for Wetlands 2017 03 27 Retrieved 2019 11 03 Chronological Review of 1975 Seen in Chronicle Headlines The Rye Chronicle 1976 01 01 p 11 Robert D McFadden 2007 04 17 Storm Leaves a Toll of Flooding and Hardship The New York Times Jay Sears 2007 04 15 Rye Hit By Second Flood In Six Weeks My Rye Retrieved 2022 02 06 Renea Henry 2011 09 08 Not Again Rain Causes Flooding in Indian Village Rye patch Retrieved 2019 11 03 Hurricane Sandy Hits Rye Hard Rye Fire Department 2012 11 04 Retrieved 2019 11 23 RISING Community Reconstruction Plan Rye NY PDF Governor s Office of Storm Recovery December 2015 Retrieved 2019 11 28 Robin Jovanovich 2018 10 17 Council Makes a Timely Decision on NY Rising Projects The Rye Record Retrieved 2019 11 28 Ida Flood Review City of Rye 2021 09 22 Retrieved 2022 02 06 Miller Ryan Henri dumps rain causes flooding in New York How much to expect in each region The Journal News Retrieved 2021 09 20 Rain from Henri causes flooding concerns in Rye News 12 Westchester Retrieved 2021 09 20 PHOTOS Massive Flooding Across Rye MyRye com 2021 09 02 Retrieved 2021 09 20 Rye residents stunned by the amount of rain that fell during the storm News 12 Westchester Retrieved 2021 09 20 CULTURAL RESOURCES INVENTORY LONG ISLAND SOUND DREDGED MATERIAL MANAGEMENT PLAN Long Island Sound Connecticut New York and Rhode Island VOLUME I Contract W921WJ 08 R 002 WHG PAL0002 PDF PAL Publications August 2010 pp 103 105 Retrieved 2020 05 18 Lucianne Lavin and Birgit Morse 1985 Ceramic Asemblages from the Rye Marshland Area of Southern New York PDF The Bulletin and Journal of Archaeology for New York State Retrieved 2020 06 07 Stuart J Fiedel 1988 Orient Fishtail Points from the Rye Marshlands Conservancy PDF Archaeology Society of Connecticut pp 111 124 Retrieved 2020 06 07 SIXTEEN GRADUATE FROM RYE HIGH SCHOOL Rye Chronicle 1926 10 16 p 3 Historical Rye Chronicle 1965 11 18 p 13 Charles Washington Baird 1871 Chronicle of a Border Town History of Rye Westchester County New York New York Anson D F Randolph amp Company p 193 Whitman Bailey 1941 08 15 Historic Milton Road Rye Chronicle p 1 Historic Land Arrowheads Found at Indian Hill Off Milton Road Rye Chronicle 1926 10 16 p 16 MR MOREHEAD SUGGESTS DISBROW PARK FOR PUBLIC RECREATION Rye Chronicle 1945 07 13 p 5 John Milner Associates Inc July 2012 Phase IA Archaeological Investigation Playland Parkway Pathway City of Rye Westchester County New York Prepared for Westchester County Department of Planning Report Marguerite Ward 2013 08 16 Archaeological dig uncovers Westchester s past The Harrison Report Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved 2016 06 04 Quick facts Rye city New York United States Census Bureau Milton Point Mansion Given by Owner for Religious Work Rye Chronicle 1951 03 22 Home for Laymen s Movement for a Christian World The New York Times 1951 06 13 Edwards Mark Thomas 2019 Faith and Foreign Affairs in the American Century Lexington Books p 109 Wainwright House on the Rebound The Rye Record 2013 07 18 Diana Marszalek 2008 09 14 Members Questioning Center s Priorities New York Times Retrieved 2022 02 02 Honoring Our Veterans The Rye Record 2020 11 11 Lions Club Gives Us Community Honorees to Roar About The Rye Record 2017 11 06 Vivian J Dennis 1983 02 20 The Sound Shore also offers diverse historic landmarks Gannett Westchester Newspapers Field Horne 2018 Westchester County A History Westchester Historical Society Cary Bill 2015 02 27 Jay gardens in Rye to get sustainable makeover lohud Welcome to the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area hudsonrivervalley com African American Heritage Trail The Westchester Way Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2010 06 01 Futrell Jim Amusement Parks of New York Stackpole Books Pennsylvania 2006 Munch Richard 1982 Harry G Traver Legends of Terror Mentor OH Amusement Park Books Inc ISBN 0935408029 Historians Make Tour of Heritage Of Rye Landmarks Rye Chronicle 1960 11 24 Goddard Light 1960 03 17 The Timothy Knapp House Oldest Structure in Rye Rye Chronicle p 13 National Register of Historic Places Listings Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties 1 31 11 through 2 04 11 National Park Service 2011 02 11 Visitors Admire Mural of John Jay in Rye Post Office The Rye Chronicle 1938 01 28 p 4 African American Heritage Trail brochure Westchester County New York Retrieved 2021 12 17 a b c Cemetery Offers Life Lessons The Journal News 1999 05 08 p 2A Historic Map of Rye Village The Rye Chronicle 1928 12 08 Peter Disbrow The Rye Chronicle 1960 04 21 Karen T Butler 2011 11 03 Vintage Rye Ode to the Odell Family The Rye Record City of Rye New York November 2001 Flood Mitigation Plan Retrieved 2020 02 16 Open Space Planning Guide PDF NY State DEC Retrieved 2019 12 06 Elsa Brenner 2001 07 01 In the Region Westchester Land Trust Helps Preserve Sites Throughout County New York Times Retrieved 2019 11 21 Final List Water Quality Improvement Projects Under The Clean Water Clean Air Bond Act of 1996 NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION 2003 Retrieved 2019 11 21 NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION 2013 04 18 Long Island Sound Enhanced Implementation Plan PDF Retrieved 2019 11 21 Debbie Reisner 2019 02 08 Rye Town Park Secures Funds For ADA Compliant Upgrades Retrieved 2019 12 07 Clary Suzanne Sailing and Tennis and Golf Clubs Oh Rye Rye Magazine Weston Publishing July 2015 Meeting Here Tonight of the New Rye Club The Daily Argus 1921 07 14 Disbrow Park The Rye Chronicle 1930 02 15 J M Morehead s Gift to Village Former Mayor Presents Property for New Parkway Leading to Disbrow Park in Milton The Rye Chronicle 1931 12 05 New Rye Country Club Rushing Work of Construction of 18 Hole Course New York Evening Post 1921 08 13 a b 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Westchester County NY PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved 2023 04 07 RANKING PUTS RYE SCHOOLS AT 18 IN STATE WITH A C GRADE FOR DIVERSITY My Rye Retrieved 2020 01 18 Zoning Map Harrison Town Retrieved 2023 04 07 Compare to the address 2225 Westchester Ave Rye NY 10580 Mission School of the Holy Child Retrieved 2019 02 13 My Rye com Jay Sears Retrieved 2019 11 28 The Rye Record Retrieved 2019 11 05 Feron James 1977 10 23 INTERVIEW The New York Times Retrieved 2020 09 04 O Kane Cahair 2022 05 23 McCole finding his way The Irish News Retrieved 2022 05 23 Rye New York at Soccerway Retrieved December 12 2021 https guhoyas com sports mens soccer roster will sands 12794 Tatiana Saunders Lewes FC goalkeeping and a finance career Sportageous 2020 11 14 Archived from the original on 2022 06 26 Retrieved 2022 01 17 Edgar Ed Wachenheim III CNBC 2018 07 10 Retrieved 2019 05 24 Genius 2018 11 16 Mariah Carey Breaks Down Her Iconic Hits amp Songwriting Process Genius Level retrieved 2018 11 20 Mary Elizabeth Andriotis How Two Historic House Museums Were Transformed for Season Three of Dickinson House Beautiful Retrieved 2021 11 11 Burns Joseph E 2012 Chapter 1 A Long Long Time Ago A Lyrical Interpretation In Schuck Raymond I Schuck Ray eds Do You Believe in Rock and Roll Essays on Don McLean s American Pie McFarland pp 21 22 ISBN 9781476600369 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rye New York Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rye New York amp oldid 1194641058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.