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Dobbs Ferry, New York

Dobbs Ferry is a village in Westchester County, New York, United States. The population was 10,875 according to the 2010 United States Census.[2] In 2021, its population rose to an estimated 11,456.[3] The village of Dobbs Ferry is located in, and is a part of, the town of Greenburgh. The village ZIP Code is 10522. Most of the village falls within the boundaries of the Dobbs Ferry Union Free School District.

Dobbs Ferry, New York

United States

3.17 sq mi (8.22 km2)

2.42 sq mi (6.27 km2)

0.75 sq mi (1.95 km2)

210 ft (64 m)

11,541

4,763.10/sq mi (1,839.25/km2)

UTC−4 (EDT)

10522

36-20698

0970074

Dobbs Ferry was ranked seventh in the list of the top 10 places to live in New York State for 2014, according to the national online real estate brokerage Movoto.[4] Dobbs Ferry is also the first village in New York State certified as a Climate Smart Community and was granted in 2014 the highest level given out in the state.[5][6]

Juhring Nature Preserve, a 76-acre wooded park with trail entrances from the Ardsley Park (Juhring), Northfield, and Knoll neighborhoods in Dobbs Ferry.

Waterfront Park on the shoreline with playground, soccer field, and open space. It serves as the site of the Dobbs Ferry Union Free School District graduation ceremony, summer concerts, and Independence Day fireworks.

Hudson River

Gould Park in the center of the Village, with a public swimming pool, playground, basketball court, and multi-sport ballfields.

Memorial Park has a wading pool, baseball field, basketball court, and bocce court. In 2014, the American Legion Post 148, which leased space in the park, collapsed and was razed.[32][33]

[31]

Chauncey Park along the

Saw Mill River

actress[35]

Jane Alexander

author, sportswriter, and journalist

Maury Allen

novelist, essayist[36]

Jacob M. Appel

novelist, playwright, and Olympic water polo player, whose most famous novel is commemorated by the Spoiler's Run walking/bike trail.[37]

Rex Beach

NBA basketball player

Mark Blount

film producer

Jason Blum

(1925–2019), voice actor

Bradley Bolke

(1920–2009), federal judge for the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York[38]

William C. Conner

(1918–2008), actress

Augusta Dabney

(1922–2014), Major League Baseball player and manager

Alvin Dark

inventor of electromagnetic trans-Atlantic telecommunication

Cyrus West Field

(1901–1983), film and television character actor

Paul Fix

author

Jean Fritz

actor

Max Greenfield

pioneer in trans-racial adoption movement

Bernice Gottlieb

early 20th century railroad executive and son of robber baron Jay Gould

Edwin Gould

retired MLB player, played for NY Mets

Keith Hernandez

(1874–1940), sociologist and photographer

Lewis Hine

actor

Joel Higgins

(1833–1899), lawyer, politician, orator, advocate of agnosticism

Robert G. Ingersoll

Civil War brevet Brigadier General

J. Howard Kitching

NBA basketball player

Eric Paschall

actress

Sarah Jessica Parker

(born 1954), former co-anchor of Dateline NBC

Stone Phillips

baseball player, member of 1954 World Series champion New York Giants

Dusty Rhodes

(1823–1905) 19th-century American physician, and the inventor of the Salisbury steak.

James Henry Salisbury, M.D.

(1883–1965), artist and photographer

Charles Sheeler

(1844–1928), co-founder of the NAACP, and leader of women's suffrage movement

Fanny Garrison Villard

(1835–1900), journalist, newspaper publisher, financier and railroad baron.

Henry Villard

co-founder of Facebook[39]

Mark Zuckerberg

Marketing Director of Facebook

Randi Zuckerberg

Head of Corporate Strategy & Development of Forge Health

Robert D'Annibale

Borkow, Richard. George Washington's Westchester Gamble: The Encampment on the Hudson and the Trapping of Cornwallis. 2011.  978-1609490393.

ISBN

Dobbs Ferry travel guide from Wikivoyage

Village of Dobbs Ferry official website

The Rivertowns Enterprise, hometown newspaper

Dobbs Ferry Conference 1781