1946 Map of Greenville
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1946 Map of Greenville

USGS Topo · Published 1946

About this map

Greenville and South Westerlo anchor this mid-century portrait of the upper Hudson Valley borderlands between Albany and Greene Counties. The landscape is defined by the hydraulic infrastructure of the Basic Reservoir and its associated Filtration Plant, which manage the flow of Basic Creek through the rural townships. The settlement pattern is traditional and dispersed, marked by family-named crossroads like Smith Corner, Lambs Corner, and O'Hara Corners. Several rural schools, including School No 3 and School No 5, remain visible alongside numerous burial grounds such as Westerlo Central Cem and Craw Cem. The southwestern corner of the sheet transitions into the Helderberg foothills, where Catskill Creek and Thorp Creek converge near Norton Hill, illustrating the transition from agricultural plateaus to the more dissected terrain of the Catskill fringe.


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Map Details

Date Portrayed1946
Date Published1946
PublisherU.S. Geological Survey
Map TypeTopographic
Scale1:24,000
Physical Dimensions22 x 28.4 inches

Editions of this 1946 Greenville Map

This is the sole edition of this map. No revisions or reprints were ever made.


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Source Details

CopyrightPublic Domain