Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 1790
Land area (2000): 3.722990 sq. miles (9.642499 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.188252 sq. miles (0.487571 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 3.911242 sq. miles (10.130070 sq. km)
FIPS code: 16958
Located within: New York (NY), FIPS 36
Location: 40.863398 N, 73.443116 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Cold Spring Harbor
Wikipedia
Cold Spring Harbor is the first studio album by American singer-songwriter Billy Joel, released on November 1, 1971. He had previously released albums as a member of the bands The Hassles and Attila.
Cold Spring Harbor can refer to:
-
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a genetics laboratory in New York.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, a published works department at the laboratory.
- CSH Protocols (Cold Spring Harbor Protocols), an online scientific journal.
- Cold Spring Harbor, New York, a hamlet on Long Island in New York.
- Cold Spring Harbor (album), Billy Joel's first album released in 1971.
- Cold Spring Harbor (LIRR station), a station on the Long Island Railroad.
- Cold Spring Harbor Jr./Sr. High School, a high school in New York.
- Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum, a maritime museum.
- Cold Spring Harbor State Park, a state park.
- Cold Spring Harbor Light, a light house.
- Cold Spring Harbor (novel), a 1986 novel by Richard Yates.
Cold Spring Harbor is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Jefferson Branch at West Pulaski Road and East Gate Drive, just south of Woodbury Road in Huntington, New York. It is the westernmost station along the Port Jefferson Branch in Suffolk County, New York. This train station is located in the South Huntington Union Free School District.
Cold Spring Harbor (1986) is a novel by American writer Richard Yates. It was his last published novel before his death, and is one of his most highly regarded.
Usage examples of "cold spring harbor".
Merrick, the English biophysicist, presented a paper to the Tenth Biological Symposium at Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island.
I thought of all those ships that had sailed the long way down the Sound to Cold Spring Harbor, and of the whalers coming into port.
The eye-level shelf behind the desk held familiar black plastic ring-bound books from Cold Spring Harbor.