East Pine Street
East Pine Street ran from Pine Street east to Forest Hill Avenue; the whole length of East Pine Street has been renamed Forest Hill Avenue under the 911 Emergency Response System.{|-
|'Old Address||Post-911 Address||Building Name||Cure Evidence'/Notes|
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East Pine Street Bridge|, 1916]]|| |
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|8 East Pine Street|| ||Dysinger Cottage||SLA1935, TBSBC,
Cure Cottages, p. 86|
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|10 East Pine Street|| ||Pasho Cottage 2||DIS 1928|
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|14 East Pine Street||37 Pine Street||

14 East Pine Street]]||SLA1935, TBSBC|
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|16 East Pine Street||43 Pine Street||

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|24 East Pine Street|| ||Pasho Cottage 3||[[1]] 1928|
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|26 East Pine Street||55 Forest Hill Avenue||Shaw Cottage||Cure Cottages, p. 141|
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|32 East Pine Street||Forest Hill Avenue|| ||TBSWC, Stonaker rented Cottage, ghosts.
Cure Cottages, p. 136 & 142|
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|45 East Pine Street||94 Forest Hill Avenue||

45 East Pine Street]]||Boyce and Roberson Ice House|
|- |54 East Pine Street|| ||Peter Gowett Cottage||DIS 1929| |- |58 East Pine Street||Forest Hill Avenue||Gowatt Cottage/Meagher Cottage||TBSWC| |- |82 East Pine Street||Forest Hill Avenue||Mitchell Cottage||DIS| |- |84 East Pine Street||165 Forest Hill Avenue|| || | |- |86 East Pine Street||179 Forest Hill Avenue|| || |
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Chateaugay Railroad| as an extension of its narrow-gauge system. The railroad connection to Lake Placid aided substantially in the development of the Lake Placid Club, one of the large resorts in the region which benefited from easy access by rail. Adirondack Daily Enterprise|, November 17, 2012 ]]
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