Alexander Classical School

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alexander_Classical_School an entity of type: Thing

The former Alexander Classical School, today Alexander Town Hall, is located on Buffalo Street in Alexander, New York, United States. It is a three-story cobblestone building erected in the 1830s. It has a number of distinctions among cobblestone buildings, many of which are located in the region of New York south of Lake Ontario where the cobblestones used were sourced. It is one of the few to reach three stories high, and one of the few originally designed for educational purposes. It is the only one anywhere in North America currently used as a public building. The upper floor serves as a local history museum. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Alexander Classical School
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Alexander Classical School
rdf:langString Alexander Classical School
xsd:float 42.9022216796875
xsd:float -78.25944519042969
xsd:integer 15546210
xsd:integer 999297733
xsd:date 1973-10-25
rdf:langString A three-story building faced in small earth-toned rocks with a rounded cupola on top. There is an American flag on a flagpole at left and a blue-and-gold historical marker in front. Above the door are the words "Town Hall".
xsd:integer 1837
rdf:langString South elevation and east profile, 2010
rdf:langString New York#USA
xsd:integer 73001191
xsd:string 42.90222222222222 -78.25944444444444
rdf:langString The former Alexander Classical School, today Alexander Town Hall, is located on Buffalo Street in Alexander, New York, United States. It is a three-story cobblestone building erected in the 1830s. It has a number of distinctions among cobblestone buildings, many of which are located in the region of New York south of Lake Ontario where the cobblestones used were sourced. It is one of the few to reach three stories high, and one of the few originally designed for educational purposes. It is the only one anywhere in North America currently used as a public building. The upper floor serves as a local history museum. First home to a private school, it later became a public school building after the private school failed. When that ended, the building became the town hall. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, the southernmost listing in Genesee County and the only cobblestone building listed in the county.
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xsd:string 73001191
xsd:gYear 1837
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