Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know
Did you know?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/1
- ... that a coffee roasting plant has been built among the dairy farms historically located in the Coleman Station Historic District (landscape pictured) near Millerton, New York?
- ... that subwatershed covers 29,342 acres (11,874 ha) of land, is the largest tributary of the Fishkill Creek?
- ... that Shingle Style exterior with a Colonial Revivalinterior?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/2
- ... that the steeple of the Old Dutch Church(pictured)?
- ... that the Tobias Van Steenburgh House was one of the few buildings in Kingston, New York, not burned by British troops in 1777?
- ... that despite most of its interments later being moved to larger rural cemeteries, Sharp Burial Ground in Kingston, New York, still has the graves of two former U.S. Congressmen?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/3
- ... that Moodna Creek (pictured), a tributary of the Hudson, was originally known as "Murderers' Creek" after a family was massacred on its banks?
- ... that Orange County Community College in Middletown, New York, held its first classes in the Webb Horton House's garage?
- ... that the Kirkland Hotel in Kingston, New York, is a rare surviving example of a wood-frame urban hotel?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/4
- ... that Danskammer Generating Station (pictured) was among the top ten releasers of pollutants by weight in New York, releasing 560 tonnes of hazardous emissions, in 2000?
- ... that the main house at Gardiner, New York, was expanded in a similar styleand material 200 years after the first section was built?
- ... that the post office includes neoclassical arched windows in its Colonial Revivaldesign?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/5
- ... that the Hart-Cluett Mansion (pictured) in Troy, New York, is the only intact example of the luxury homes commonly built in early–19th century New York City?
- ... that Henry Dudley uncharacteristically used brick instead of stone for St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Hoosick Falls, New York?
- ... that the Capital District?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/6
- ... that the original Walden United Methodist Church was moved and bricked over to serve as the Sunday schoolwing when the current church (pictured) was built in 1893?
- ... that the post office was one of the last to be built in the state under Depression-era relief programs?
- ... that the Capital District?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/7
- ... that the Reformed Dutch Church of Claverack (pictured) is the oldest institutional building in Columbia County, New York?
- ... that the original land deed requires that a jail cell from the original Dutchess County courthouse be preserved in the current building?
- ... that the Federal style houses in Hudson, New York, because Williams came to Hudson from Connecticut instead of Massachusetts?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/8
- ... that Old Southeast Church (pictured), north of Brewster, New York, is the oldest house of worship in Putnam County?
- ... that the Walter Brewster House is the only Greek Revival home with a two-story colonnade in Putnam County, New York?
- ... that the Great Swamp in Putnam and Dutchess County, New York is one of the largest wetlands in the state?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/9
- ... that excavations near the Andries DuBois House (pictured) in Wallkill, New York, found evidence that it was built half a century later than previously believed?
- ... that all of Beekman Park in Amenia, New York, was once the site of a freshwater lake?
- ... that Madeleine L'Engle ran writers' workshops and retreats every January at Holy Cross Monastery in West Park, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/10
- ... that the Reformed Church of America?
- ... that musicians have recorded in the Widow Jane Mine at the Snyder Estate Natural Cement Historic District in Rosendale, New York because of the acoustics?
- ... that Satmar Hasidim, there is daily bus service to the store from Kiryas Joel, a Satmar enclave in Orange County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/11
- ... that the Delaware and Hudson Canal (pictured) was the first American business with a million-dollar market capitalization?
- ... that telegram?
- ... that the Walter Hand House, in Cornwall, New York, was built in 1870 to serve as both a farmhouse and a tourist boarding house?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/12
- ... that in 2009 the Wallkill Valley Rail Trail (pictured), a public walkway in upstate New York, nearly doubled in length?
- ... that the span bridge in the United States, was sold in 1986 for one dollar?
- ... that La Stazione, a restaurant and former train station in New Paltz, New York, burned down in 1907, killing the station agent's dog?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/13
- ... that Balsam Lake Mountain (pictured) in the Catskills was the site of the first fire lookout tower in New York State?
- ... that when New Paltz's Elting Memorial Library caught a possible ghost on its security camera, the YouTube video received more views than the village has residents?
- ... that a helicopter once crashed on Interstate 84 in New York, stopping traffic and causing a power outage?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/14
- ... that the Segway?
- ... that after the New York Central Railroad ended service to it, the Milton Railroad Station in Milton, New York, was used by a local winery for tastings?
- ... that Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. to make environmental lawhis lifelong work?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/15
- ... that water from Tin Brook (pictured) was diverted to create the first canal in New York history?
- ... that the tornado outbreakon July 10, 1989?
- ... that The Homestead, one of the oldest buildings in Haverstraw, New York, has been home to a state legislator and congressman, the county sheriff and the local school superintendent?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/16
- ... that the Shandaken Tunnel reaches its 2,215-foot (675 m) maximum depth below the surface at Deep Notch (pictured) in Lexington, New York?
- ... that the Dubois-Sarles Octagon in Marlboro, New York, has a recessed entrance and sidehall interior plan, both unusual in mid-19th century octagon houses?
- ... that serial killer Nathaniel White claimed his first murder was inspired by a scene in RoboCop 2?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/17
- ... that the colonial road to an early 20th-century summer resort town?
- ... that a attack?
- ... that the citizens of Carmel, New York, felt that "Shaw's Pond" was too modest a name for a local body of water, so they appointed a committee that renamed it Lake Gleneida?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/18
- ... that at the age of 74, Robert Sterling Yard (pictured) became a founding member and the first president of The Wilderness Society?
- ... that Orange County Route 9 in New York is, by itself, longer than five of the county's state highways?
- ... that the trees that gave Maple Lawn, a Frederick Clarke Withers–designed house in Balmville, New York, its name were later destroyed in a hurricane?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/19
- ... that the former Poughkeepsie?
- ... that the ?
- ... that the Survival of the Shawangunks is a Hudson Valley triathlon which requires competitors to carry their running shoes as they swim?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/20
- ... that according to legend, George Washington personally stopped an angry mob from burning St. Philip's Church in the Highlands (pictured)?
- ... that since 2002, principal resign and another suspended, had two student walkoutsand was ordered to reinstate a teacher?
- ... that Colonel Johnston de Peyster raised the first U.S. flag over Virginia's Capitol Building since the state's secession in 1861?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/21
- ... that Black Rock Forest (pictured) gets its name from visible magnetite deposits in it?
- ... that the town of molting and distributing the meatto the poor?
- ... that the post officehas been in ten different places since it was first established in 1796?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/22
- ... that the Mid-Delaware Bridge (pictured) over the Delaware River between Pennsylvania and New York is the uppermost four-lane bridge on the river's main stem?
- ... that after his Major League Baseball career, Baseball Hall of Famer Dan Brouthers once led the Hudson River League in batting average at the age of 46?
- ... that the creek, because it is impounded just before the confluence?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/23
- ... that St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (pictured) in Brewster, New York, had to be rebuilt months after it was finished due to a fire?
- ... that among the dead interred at the Calvert Vaux-designed Hillside Cemetery in Middletown, New York, are three Civil War Medal of Honor recipients?
- ... that the Somers Hamlet Historic District in Westchester County, New York includes the Elephant Hotel, considered the birthplace of the American circus?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/24
- ... that South Beacon Mountain, the highest point in the Fishkill Creek (pictured) drainage basin, is located just above its estuary?
- ... that the Catskill Escarpment is the only clearly defined boundary of the Catskill Mountains?
- ... that it took the U.S. government seven years to design, then two additional years to build, the post officeafter it acquired the land?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/25
- ... that the ?
- ... that Manor of Rensselaerswyckduring the 19th century, which he inherited at the age of five?
- ... that the New Paltz, New York, is the last 18th-century stone house in the area still owned by the same family that built it?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/26
- ... that Whipple truss railroad bridge in the state, was moved there from Kingston20 years after it was built?
- ... that after two previous buildings flammablematerial?
- ... that the Fort Orange, after the women in his life?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/27
- ... that marks remain on the Sloat House (pictured) in Sloatsburg, New York, from the accidental shooting death of John D. Sloat's father, who became the first burial in Old Sloatsburg Cemetery?
- ... that the former Monroe, New York, got its name because an early owner supposedly painted it in a checkerboardpattern to attract travelers?
- ... that the Village Diner in Red Hook was the first diner in New York to be listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/28
- ... that the Bull Stone House property (pictured) in New York, is home to the only surviving New World Dutch barn?
- ... that the construction of the Newburgh and West Point, New York, two cities only 10 miles (16 km) apart?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie, New York, could not operate at full capacity until Matthew Vassar's wife died and left it the money to do so?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/29
- ... that as the architect of the St. Luke's Episcopal Church (pictured) in Beacon, New York, Frederick Clarke Withers designed everything down to the altar cloth?
- ... that the Vassar Institute in Poughkeepsie, New York, now used for a local arts center, is on the former site of a brewery?
- ... that John Watts de Peyster prevented the Tivoli, New York, village board from meeting in the firehouse he had built for them, because of a tax dispute?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/30
- ... that the counterspace?
- ... that before restoring ?
- ... that the fire tower on Hunter Mountain in the Catskills is the highest in New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/31
- ... that the Astor Home for Children (pictured) in Rhinebeck, New York, was one of the first psychiatric facilities for children accredited by the Joint Commission?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie, New York?
- ... that the Protestant views of the role of deathin the later 18th century?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/32
- ... that high school and condominiums?
- ... that the historic district in the Village of Monroe includes the factory where Velveeta was first made and the oldest Masonic lodge in New York state?
- ... that the Red Hill fire tower was the last in the Catskills to be closed down?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/33
- ... that New York's Araxes River?
- ... that, in 1767, Union Street first connected Poughkeepsie, New York, to the Hudson River?
- ... that Sylvan Lake is the deepest in Dutchess County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/34
- ... that the Dunning House (pictured) in Wawayanda, New York, has features from several different 19th-century architectural styles?
- ... that hikers can take a commuter train from Grand Central Terminal in New York City to two request stops near trailheads in Hudson Highlands State Park?
- ... that Robert Parker Parrott's last home, Plumbush, outside Cold Spring, New York, is now a bed and breakfast?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/35
- ... that All Saints' Chapel (pictured), now a public library in Rosendale, New York, is faced in locally-produced Rosendale cement?
- ... that between its 1960 closing and its current use as a museum, District School No. 14 in Pine Hill, New York, was a coat factory and a furniture repair shop?
- ... that the Kingston–Port Ewen Suspension Bridge opened in 1921 to complete U.S. Route 9W, was built in part by a female welder?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/36
- ... that Culver Randel manufactured pianos at his mill (pictured) in Florida, New York?
- ... that the worst in over a decade, resulting in at least four deaths and more than a million utility customers left without power?
- ... that the Ulster cherry is named after Ulster County, New York, a region where sweet cherries are produced commercially?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/37
- ... that the hunting lodge at carved liquor bottle on the door to "pour" into a nearby shot glass, revealing a peephole?
- ... that Richard Upjohn's Gothic alterations to the Mandeville House, the oldest in Garrison, New York, were removed by a later owner?
- ... that the landmark libel case People v. Croswell was tried at the First Columbia County Courthouse in Claverack, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/38
- ... that Kingston City Hall (pictured) was built on the former boundary between Kingston and Rondout, New York, to unify the two villages when they merged into one city?
- ... that five historic districts in downtown Troy, New York were merged in 1986 to create the Central Troy Historic District?
- ... that St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Troy, New York, was originally built as a replica of a Church in New Haven, Connecticut?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/39
- ... that the farmhouse (pictured) at Lynfeld in Washington, New York, is built in a rough "C" shape, an unusual configuration for an Italianate-style building?
- ... that Sloat's Dam is the only remaining intact dam on the Rockland County stretch of the Ramapo River?
- ... that the first steeple of the Old Dutch Church in Kingston, New York, collapsed a year after it was built because slate roofing was substituted for the tin in Minard Lafever's design?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/40
- ... that St. James Episcopal Church in Hyde Park, New York held Sunday services for nearly 100 years in its chapel (pictured) during wintertime because it was too difficult to heat the main church building?
- ... that the Rushmore Memorial Library in Highland Mills, New York, takes its name from Charles E. Rushmore, the same man Mount Rushmore is named for?
- ... that Sugarloaf Hill, from which he then fled?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/41
- ... that when he transferred his house (pictured) near Millerton, New York, to his sons, Thomas N. Wheeler required that they allow their older sister to live there for the rest of her life?
- ... that two of the residents of the Richard Upjohn-designed James and Mary Forsyth House in Kingston, New York, left it after being accused of financial wrongdoing?
- ... that the 18th-century unit?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/42
- ... that Oscar Wilde praised the location of a resort hotel at the foot, rather than the summit, of the Catskills' Mount Tremper (pictured) because it provided better views?
- ... that the South Presbyterian Church in Dobbs Ferry, New York, is the only known work of architect Julius Munckowitz, despite his later career with New York City's parks?
- ... that William Shay, a ragman in ornamentedfor their time and region?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/43
- ... that weddings?
- ... that the first three residents of the John Kane House were a man nearly hanged for treason, a Patriot turned British Loyalist, and George Washington?
- ... that the Federal stylerural home?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/44
- ... that Jasper Cropsey may have helped design the Jacob Sloat House (pictured) in Sloatsburg, New York, which combines the Greek Revival and Picturesque architectural styles?
- ... that one-room schoolhouses remaining intact in Amenia, New York?
- ... that the distinctive rustic porch trim of the Fish and Fur Club in Nelsonville, New York, which earned it a listing on the National Register of Historic Places, has since been replaced?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/45
- ... that Old Albany Post Road (pictured) in Philipstown, New York, is one of the oldest dirt roads still in use in the United States?
- ... that it has been difficult to establish when the Oliver Barrett House near Millerton, New York, was built since there are no records of it until 14 years after its likely construction date?
- ... that the four rooms on the first floor of decorated in different architectural styles?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/46
- ... that Ellenville Middle School (pictured) abandoned an experiment with single-sex classes after the school failed to meet No Child Left Behind Actstandards?
- ... that 1050 AM ESPN Radio in New York City was launched by American politician Rob Astorino?
- ... that wood Montgomery, New York is on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/47
- ... that the renovation of ?
- ... that the construction of the John T. Loughran Bridge in Kingston, New York, led to the creation of the Rondout–West Strand Historic District?
- ... that the vegetable-powered vehicles, solar vehicles, and organic farmingexhibits?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/48
- ... that the unusual batten-plank structural system of frame houses in the Trapps Mountain Hamlet (remaining cellar pictured) on New York's Shawangunk Ridge suggests Lenape architectural influence?
- ... that as General Counsel, Michael C. Finnegan ended a century-old debate over New York City's water supply when he brokered the New York City Watershed Agreement?
- ... that modernist architecture?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/49
- ... that Gothic Revival architecture in Americanchurches?
- ... that the double motion pictureswhen that medium became popular in the 1920s?
- ... that the former General Foods Corporate Headquarters in Rye Brook, New York, have been described as an "Aztec Temple"?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/50
- ... that the 1835 Greek Revival Cannon Building (pictured) in Troy, New York was rebuilt with a mansard roof after several fires in the 1870s?
- ... that the largest derrick in New York State at the time was used to build the Broadway Theatre in Kingston?
- ... that the high school?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/51
- ... that even though Kaaterskill High Peak (pictured) was the first Catskill High Peak to be climbed, there is no official trail to its summit?
- ... that the Second Empire–style building in Wappingers Falls, New York?
- ... that Stony Clove Notch, a pass in the Catskill Mountains, was once so narrow that it could only be traversed by people walking in single file?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/52
- ... that meteorcrash?
- ... that artist and hotelier Emile Brunel's studio in Boiceville, New York, is an imitation of a European farmhouse, an unusual style in the Catskills?
- ... that the Haverstraw King's Daughters Public Library is the oldest chartered public library in Rockland County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/53
- ... that three of the 18 holes at the redesigned a year after they were built when the land they were on was condemned to build U.S. Route 9W?
- ... that the former parsonage, farmhouse and museum in over 200 years of existence?
- ... that three different owners of mills at mortgages and lost the mills to foreclosure?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/54
- ... that the Catskills' Esopus Creek (pictured, near Shandaken) is one of the most productive trout streams in the Northeast?
- ... that unlike most other Jewish communities in the Catskills, the congregants of Ulster Heights Synagoguewere farmers rather than resort operators?
- ... that the ?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/55
- ... that the Jewish Americanresidence?
- ... that the rooflines of the newest school in the Cornwall Central School District mimic the surrounding hills in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York?
- ... that the Florida Everglades?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/56
- ... that Newburgh, New York, holds enough water to supply the city for a year?
- ... that the main house of the Federal stylebuilding?
- ... that two local Torah scrolls and presented the congregation with a Bible?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/57
- ... that Boy Scoutuniform?
- ... that the summit of New York's Graham Mountain is unique in the Catskills?
- ... that the stones at Nuits in Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York are so finely cut that a penknifecannot fit between them?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/58
- ... that the 1977 Rosendale Village (pictured) in Upstate New York was viewed by its mayor as a work of conceptual art?
- ... that estate to be designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark?
- ... that the Hudson River Historic District is, at 35 square miles (89 km²), the largest Registered Historic District in the contiguous United States?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/59
- ... that after Moses Collyer built his retirement home (pictured) in Chelsea, New York, he cowrote the definitive history of the sail era in Hudson River navigation?
- ... that unlike other Dutch Colonial stone houses in the Hudson Valley, the Wynkoop House has no stone with the builder's initials?
- ... that the Great Swamp in Putnam and Dutchess County, New York is one of the largest wetlands in the state?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/60
- ... that in 1944, using a Karner Blue butterfly(pictured)?
- ... that the Beaverkill Valley Inn, near Lew Beach, New York, is the only remaining fishing lodge on the upper Beaver Kill from the early days of dry-fly trout fishing in the Catskills?
- ... that Tarrytown's Foster Memorial AME Zion Church is the oldest continuously-used black church in Westchester County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/61
- ... that Moffat Library (pictured) in Washingtonville, New York, was formally opened in 1887 but did not have any books until bookcases were bought a year later?
- ... that ?
- ... that the abandoned O & W Railroad Station at Port Ben, New Yorkis so well-preserved that coal remains in its bin more than 50 years after it closed?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/62
- ... that the Hyde Park Railroad Station (pictured) in Hyde Park, New York was a day away from demolition when it was leased to a local rail historical society?
- ... that after the First National Bank of Brewster, New York, closed in 1964 the Town of Southeast made the building its new town hall?
- ... that the Westchester Tornado of July 2006 was the strongest tornado recorded in Westchester County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/63
- ... that Gothic Revival style?
- ... that a 12-mile-long railway ride was planned to be built on Dunderberg Mountain in the 19th century, but was never completed?
- ... that the complex in the state?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/64
- ... that Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, and George Washington all visited the Yelverton Inn (pictured) in Chester, New York?
- ... that due to a lack of freight crossings of the Hudson River, trains must take a 280-mile (450 km) detour, the Selkirk hurdle, to cross into New York City from the south or west?
- ... that the Hunt Memorial Building in Ellenville, New York, has served as a public library, an appliance store, and several other things?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/65
- ... that the ornament compared to most Colonial Revival-style post offices in New York City?
- ... that one common route up New York's Balsam Mountain follows the steepest section of trail in the Catskills?
- ... that Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, New York, is the resting place of the progenitor of Uncle Sam, Samuel Wilson, financier Russell Sage, and educators Emma Willard and Amos Eaton?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/66
- ... that the war veterans' memorial (pictured) in Suffern, New York, is built on land where George Washington and Rochambeau camped with the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War?
- ... that future parsonage of the Old Stone Church in Rhinebeck, New York?
- ... that Brace Mountain, the highest peak in Dutchess County, New York, is a popular launch spot for hang gliding and paragliding due to the smooth geography of the area?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/67
- ... that the post office (pictured), features a reliefdepicting a semi-naked woman shooting a flaming arrow?
- ... that Slabsides, John Burroughs' historic log cabin in West Park, New York, is only open to the public two days every year?
- ... that in 1937, the slopes of Joppenbergh Mountain were coated with borax for a summer ski jumping competition?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/68
- ... that taxpayers of Palenville, New York argued so bitterly over the costs of Rowena Memorial School (pictured) that some called for it to be demolished?
- ... that Poughkeepsie's first plannedneighborhood?
- ... that the first child of European descent born along the Hudson River was born on Beeren Island near Albany, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/69
- ... that when Canterbury Presbyterian Church (pictured) closed in 2004, its congregants were absorbed by a nearby church that had split from Canterbury twice in its 178-year history?
- ... that the Montgomery Worsted Mills, a Registered Historic Place in Montgomery, New York, now earn most of their money by generating hydroelectric power from the nearby Wallkill River, rather than the manufacture of textiles?
- ... that Poughkeepsie's Market Street Rowincludes one of the oldest houses in the city?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/70
- ... that the modernist architect I. M. Pei?
- ... that a jury awarded an alleged robber $20,000 in 1935 for a botched 1931 burglary of the Harriman Erie Railroad stationafter the cops shot his leg?
- ... that the Newburgh, New York, has the most contributing properties of any Registered Historic Districtin the state?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/71
- ... that the expansion of the New York Central Railroad isolated Main Street (houses pictured) in New Hamburg, New York while making Stone Street more accessible?
- ... that New Paltz, New York, has no fireplaces?
- ... that the main house at the Dakin-Coleman Farm outside Millerton, New York, was at one point legally subdivided between two heirs?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/72
- ... that Abraham Lincoln's short speech at the Peekskill Freight Depot (pictured) was his only recorded public appearance in Westchester County?
- ... that one local architectural historian disparaged the combination of two older houses into the current Van Rensselaer Lower Manor House in Claverack, New York, as a "growth"?
- ... that the Garrison Union Free School in New York traces its origins back to 1793?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/73
- ... that the Huguenot building traditions?
- ... that the Reformed Church of Beacon has the only manual-tracker pipe organ in the Hudson Valley?
- ... that Daniel Chester French was never fully paid for his work on the Washington Irving Memorial in Irvington, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/74
- ... that the only Newburgh, New York's Old Town Cemetery?
- ... that the ?
- ... that 12,000-year-old Paleo-Indian artifacts, including a rare fluted point, have been found in a quarry near Goshen, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/75
- ... that Poughkeepsie, New York?
- ... that Thompson Pond and nearby Stissing Mountain were inspiration for the New York State Environment exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History?
- ... that the Ulster County?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/76
- ... that the Edward Salyer House (pictured), one of the few remaining wood frame Dutch Colonial houses in Rockland County, New York, is believed to be the oldest house in Pearl River?
- ... that novelist Amelia Barr's most successful body of work is called the "Cherry Croft novels", after the summer house where she wrote them?
- ... that Averill Park Central School District encompasses an area of approximately 120 square miles (310 km2)?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/77
- ... that New York's English descent?
- ... that the kitchen wing of the Lace House in Canaan, New York, deteriorated so badly during a probate fight over the house that it had to be demolished and rebuilt?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie Trust Company building has been described as the Hudson Valley's first modern skyscraper despite being only six stories high?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/78
- ... that the former Gothic Revivalelements in its design?
- ... that the First Presbyterian Church of Chester, New York, has worshipped in three different buildings, all in different locations, in its history?
- ... that the Esopus Wars led to the creation of the boundaries of Native American lands in 17th century New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/79
- ... that a local writers' group won a Philipse Manor train station (pictured) in Sleepy Hollow, New York?
- ... that four days after its building was moved to a new site and rededicated, Congregationalism to Presbyterianism?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/80
- ... that one of Albany Plan of Union?
- ... that 14 of the 16 founding congregants of New York's Peekskill Presbyterian Church were women?
- ... that music festival, was the basis for the Ang Lee film of the same title?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/81
- ... that Albany, New York, has a life-size sculpture of its coat of arms (pictured) that was sculpted by a local political cartoonist?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie, New York, was expanded 15 years after its designation to include two city blocks that had been originally scheduled for demolition?
- ... that before the construction of North Main Street School, schoolchildren in Spring Valley, New York, were attending classes in the local fire station?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/82
- ... that the Croton North station (pictured) in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, were never used in the state but are still contributing resources to its National Registerlisting?
- ... that post office was built in his hometown of Hyde Park?
- ... that the English building traditions?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/83
- ... that Chapel Hill Bible Church (pictured) was moved from midtown Manhattan to a farm in Marlborough, New York, almost 50 years after it was built?
- ... that hikers can take a commuter train from Grand Central Terminal in New York City to two request stops near trailheads in Hudson Highlands State Park?
- ... that in 2005 the that year?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/84
- ... that in the early years of the masters and slaveshad equal status as members of the congregation?
- ... that a post office, called Waiting for the Mail, shows how mail can reach even the most isolated person?
- ... that both the textile mills and residence of Nathan Wild, a prominent local figure in Columbia County, New York, are now listed on the National Register of Historic Places?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/85
- ... that Sing Sing Prison?
- ... that the black locust trees planted in 1767 when Cornelius Wynkoop's house was built along Main Street in Stone Ridge, New York, are part of its historic character?
- ... that Reed Memorial Library is the oldest library building in Putnam County, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/86
- ... that the 1872 main building (pictured) at the Otis elevatorinstalled?
- ... that the Rhinebeck, New York?
- ... that veterans?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/87
- ... that the , after his death actually made it more difficult to sell?
- ... that Poughkeepsie, New York, was architecturally inconsistent with the neighboring Balding Avenue Historic District, so it was later listed separately on the National Register of Historic Places?
- ... that the German-style vernacular home built to a one-room plan in Rhinebeck, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/88
- ... that New York's Hyde Park Reformed Dutch Church (pictured) secured its original building, a union church, by growing the fastest out of the several denominations that shared it?
- ... that although the Benjamin Ten Broeck House north of Kingston, New York, was built by Dutch settlers, the layout of one of its additions suggests its residents were Palatine Germans?
- ... that indoor plumbing was not installed in a former lock tender's cottage on the Delaware and Hudson Canal at High Falls, New York, until the 1960s, over a century after it was built?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/89
- ...that the volunteer firefightersquit because they were jealous of other companies' facilities?
- ... that in order to end the dispute over jurisdiction of ?
- ... that the Patroon Creek was listed in 1993 as one of the top 10 most polluted rivers in New York, and heavy metals such as depleted uranium were found in the creek in 2003?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/90
- ...that the Poughkeepsie YMCA building (pictured) is the only one in the city using glazed terra cotta?
- ... that Wood's Monument at West Point was used as a navigational aide for ships passing down the Hudson River?
- ... that the Terwilliger-Smith Farm in Kerhonkson, New York, has the only extant stand-alone slaughterhouse in Ulster County?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/91
- ...that since Thomas Jefferson designed his home, Franklin D. Roosevelt's Top Cottage (pictured) has been the only house designed by a U.S. President, although no President has stayed there overnight?
- ... that several fires and the construction of the Croton Aqueduct shaped the Downtown Ossining Historic District of New York?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie, New York?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/92
- ...that the Newburgh, New York that has been declared a National Historic Landmark, is considered the latest extant work of architect Alexander Jackson Davisthat still largely reflects his original vision?
- ... that Albany architect Marcus T. Reynolds' 1893 thesis, Housing of the Poor in American Cities, is still cited in scholarly work today?
- ... that the South Woods at Montgomery Place near Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, are the oldest oak forest in the Hudson Valley?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/93
- ... that the post office because it considered harness racing an inappropriate subject for public art?
- ... that Henry Fairfield Osborn almost doubled the size of Castle Rock, his father's Garrison, New York, mansion, to accommodate his family?
- ... that Highland Cottage, the first concrete house in Westchester County, New York, was nicknamed "Mud House" during its construction?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/94
- ... that Ward's Castle (pictured), on the state line between Rye Brook, New York and Greenwich, Connecticut, is believed to be the first reinforced concrete building in the United States?
- ... that the Bergh-Stoutenburgh House, one of only two remaining Dutch Colonial stone houses in Hyde Park, New York, has been converted into a Japanese restaurant?
- ... that the Peter C. DuBois House in Beacon, New York was reused as a sanatorium for much of the 20th century?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/95
- ... that the golf course (pictured) around the buildings of the Garrison Grist Mill Historic District in Garrison, New York helps preserve their historic rural character?
- ... that Poughkeepsie?
- ... that the Poughkeepsie, New York, still standing?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/96
- ... that the Rosendale Theatre (pictured) once banned popcorn because the "crackling paper bags disrupted quiet scenes"?
- ... that when a crowd that had gathered to hear Storm-Adriance-Brinckerhoff House in East Fishkill, New York, removed their hats, he told them to put them back on since he was just an ordinary man?
- ... that the Aaron Copland House in Cortlandt Manor, New York, is the only U.S. National Historic Landmark connected to a classical music figure?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/97
- ... that New York's Tarrytown Light (pictured) was ultimately located in the Hudson River as sites on land were too expensive?
- ... that Cornwall Friends Meeting House is the oldest religious building in Cornwall, New York?
- ... that the US$5 and sold it two years later for US$1?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/98
- ... that the land for the Captors' Monument (pictured) at Patriot's Park in Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown, New York, was donated by a free African American couple?
- ... that undefeated stem cell research?
- ... that to save money on the construction of St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Amenia Union, New York, the congregants brought building materials to the site with their own horse teams?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/99
- ... that the New York State?
- ... that one of the owners of Woodlawn Farm in Slate Hill, New York used the wild teasel from his fields to card wool at his nearby hat factory?
- ... that the houses built by Abraham and Adolph Brower in New Hamburg, New York have matching porch columns and front doorways?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/100
- ... that under the Poughkeepsie plan, Catholic children attended public schools taught by nuns wearing religious habits?
- ... that the Jug Tavern, possibly the oldest building in Ossining, New York, may not have been a tavern at all, or if it was did not serve liquor legally?
- ... that industries that have shaped the Hudson, New York, historic district include whaling, antique shops and prostitution?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/101
- ... that the Bronx synagoguesand shoot down military aircraft?
- ... that the initials of Warwick, New York show the influence of Germanic building traditions?
- ... that the Woodstock Festival, and located on its site?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/102
- ... that the ?
- ... that Boscobel mansion 15 miles (24 km) up the Hudson Riverto save it?
- ... that Greenville Presbyterian Church was the first non-Dutch church established in New York's Catskill region?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/103
- ... that consecratedfor nine years as it took that long to pay off the construction debt?
- ... that the Staten Island Peace Conference of September 11, 1776, only lasted three hours?
- ... that in order for the village of Millbrook, New York, to accept the donation of Thorne Memorial School, it had to incorporate?
Portal:Hudson Valley/Did you know/104
- ... that South Liberty Street in assassination of U.S. President James A. Garfield?
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