News

Villa Encanto” — financed by Lin-Manuel Miranda — tells the story of Ulster County’s Las Villas on the big screen.
In 1796, when slavery remained both legal and common in New York, a white man named Aquila Giles set out to free Hannah, a 30-year-old woman he enslaved, and her daughter, Abigail, who was about 5 ...
An Ulster County resident has tested positive for the mosquito-borne eastern equine encephalitis virus, health officials say. ... New York confirms its first case of EEE since 2015.
Ulster County rejected a motion seeking a civil penalty of over $100,000 against Dr. Margaret Carpenter of New Paltz over a missed court appearance for prescribing mifepristone to a Texan.
Perrine’s Bridge, a public covered bridge over the Wallkill River, built in 1844 and located off state Route 213 on the border of Esopus, N.Y., and Rosendale, N.Y., is seen Friday, April 4, 2025.
On September 20, the New York State Department of Health (DOH) identified its first human case of Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) since 2015 in Ulster County. On Monday, Governor Kathy Hochul ...
The new York County History Center will hold a three-day grand opening celebration, starting Friday. It cost more than $30 million. Skip to content. NOWCAST WGAL News 8 at Noon.
Ulster County rejected a motion seeking a civil penalty of over $100,000 against Dr. Margaret Carpenter of New Paltz over a missed court appearance for prescribing mifepristone to a Texan.
In 1977, with dozens of fires set daily and tourism in freefall, New York hired an artist to save the city. His infamous sketch in the back of a yellow cab became the most imitated logo in history ...
Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Monday statewide actions to protect public health following reports that the first human case of eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) in New York since 2015 has died.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is warning residents about the dangers of mosquito-borne diseases after New York's first death from the eastern equine encephalitis virus, or EEE.. The death of the ...
According to the New York State Covered Bridge Society, both were built by Salem Jerome Moot, a barn and bridge framer who lived in and operated a sawmill in the Dry Brook area.