<Li> Cronomer Valley--nestled between Fostertown and Cronomer Hill . The confusing, unusual junction of New York State Routes 32 and 300 in the hamlet has locally been known as Holt's Corner in honor of the family which has long owned property and businesses at and near the intersection, members of which live in the vicinity of the intersection to this day . The Cronomer Valley Fire Department is located on Route 32 about 2 / 10 mile southeast of Holt's Corner . </Li> <Li> Danskammer Point--is a small peninsula which juts into the Hudson River north of Roseton and south of Cedar Cliff, at the base of Soap Hill . "Danskammer" is Dutch for "dance chamber" and was so named by the earliest Dutch settlers because Native Americans would conduct ritual dances by firelight on this point . In the 1930s, the Central Hudson company built the Danskammer Generating Station, an electric generating plant, at this site . The plant was expanded in the 1970s in such a way that it eradicated most of the Hamlet of Roseton . Today, the power complex is owned and operated by the Dynegy company . The plant is oil generated, and the oil crisis of the mid to late 2000s rendered the plant uneconomical to operate . Accordingly, as of 2008, it is off line all but a handful of days a year . </Li> <Li> DuPont Park--an old subdivision laid out in the 1920s, but due to the Great Depression of the 1930s, most of the houses weren't built until the mid-1940s, immediately after World War II . The east - west street is Waring Road (named after original property owners) and the north - south streets were named Innis Avenue and DuPont Avenue . The original subdivision map indicated extremely small building lots by today's standards, but when actual home construction began, larger, more conventional size lots were utilized . Both the original lots and the lots actually used are indicated on the tax maps on file in the Town Assessor's office . An interesting facet of the subdivision is that the original plans called for a canal to be built equidistant between Innis Avenue and DuPont Avenue, between the back yards of the homes . The canal never came to be . In the early 1960s, the Town changed the name of DuPont Avenue to Algonquin Drive, to end confusion with the DuPont Avenue in the City of Newburgh . The subdivision is immediately across Powder Mill Road from Algonquin Park, and the original developers intended to extend the subdivision through that land, but instead donated it to the City of Newburgh for use as a park . </Li> <Li> East Coldenham--A hamlet and the site of the East Coldenham Elementary School disaster in 1989 . The hamlet is a part of the Valley Central School District . Named after Cadwallader Colden (1688--1776), last Royalist Lieutenant Governor of New York Province prior to the Revolutionary War, and an author, botanist, surveyor and farmer . His home was in the Town of Montgomery a few hundred feet west of the current Town of Newburgh boundary . The large Colden Park housing development, built in the mid-1950s on the south side of Route 17K, and the smaller Fleetwood Development on the opposite side of 17K, are located here . In recent years, the former Colden Park Homeowners Association has encouraged the use of East Coldenham as the name for the entire area . Although Colden Park is an extremely large development, Arbor Drive is the only entrance and exit . </Li>

How far am i from newburgh new york