Prohibition Park

Prohibition Park was a temperance town used as a summer colony on Staten Island.[1]

Residents

References

  1. ^ "Prohibition Park". Sunday Herald. August 11, 1895. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=AWomAAAAIBAJ&sjid=AAAGAAAAIBAJ&pg=5669,3470601&dq=prohibition-park&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-05-03. 
  2. ^ "William H. Boole". New York Times. February 25, 1896. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0A10FD3F5F1B738DDDAC0A94DA405B8685F0D3. Retrieved 2011-05-03. "William H. Boole. The Rev. William H. Boole, D.D., a prominent clergyman of the Methodist Episcopal Church and widely known as a temperance lecturer and evangelist, died at 1 o'clock yesterday morning at his Home, Prohibition Park, Staten Island. Dr. Boole, who was sixty-eight years old, had been slightly indisposed for a week, but was preparing to fill several engagements to lecture this week. ..."