Post-Dispatch. p. 5C. "Byting the Hand He Ain't Got No Body, but Stafford Huyler's Nettled Netboy Is the Satirical Scourge of the Internet". People Magazine
site of the downtown Passaic station, back when the latter was known as Huyler's. The name was changed to Prospect Street around 1882. After multiple attempts
sometimes known as the "Lower Closter Landing", later known as Huyler’s Landing or "Huyler's", on November 20, 1776. In an effort to ambush Washington and
British, and sold in 1784 to Captain John Huyler of the local militia. Huyler's son Peter built the main wing of the current house in 1836, according to
despite the latter rapidly gaining popularity. The first strip of Stafford Huyler's NetBoy was uploaded on the World Wide Web in July 1993.[citation needed]
100-acre Oak Knoll Grapefruit and Orange Company's farm (also known as Huyler's Grove). Located southeast of Parrish and just north of Bethany, Oak Knoll
events of the story have ended. Back in the present, the Chelgrian admiral Huyler's personality, kept alive from Quilan's Soulkeeper, and the real source of
Commander Lord Cornwallis landed a force of between 2,500 and 5,000 at Huyler's Landing on November 20, 1776. In an effort to ambush American General George
Acquackanonk. By April 1851, the station was renamed from Acquackanonk to Huyler's. On September 9–10, 1852, ownership of the railroads, along with the Union
Post-Dispatch. p. 5C. "Byting the Hand He Ain't Got No Body, but Stafford Huyler's Nettled Netboy Is the Satirical Scourge of the Internet". People Magazine