No, not the Indian Point nuclear plant, just upriver and visible from some parts of the hamlet.
It has since reopened, as have other businesses that were in the lower part of the hamlet near the river.
The central part of the hamlet is S-shaped with bends in the road.
The parish also encompasses part of the nearby hamlet of Holywell.
The latest parts of the hamlet were presumably built around the end of the 18th century, when the village reached its greatest population.
Slightly further affield several other houses and barn conversions also form part of the hamlet.
Nichols Run flows through the south part of the hamlet.
Miller's family expanded well into the 18th century and continually developed houses near the northern part of the hamlet.
The old name was revived in 1912, when part of the hamlet near the bay became the Village of Woodsburgh.
The oldest part of the hamlet is along the main street, Bridge Street.