Hidden treasures spice up the Hudson Valley
So, you're done the Roosevelt Estate,
the Vanderbilt Mansion and
you think you've seen all the points of interest worth seeing in the
mid-Hudson Valley?
Maybe you;re sitting there with a self-satisfied smile on your mug. Like,
no matter who comes visiting, you'll know where to take them.
W-R-O-N-G.
There are some really neat places you may not have heard about.
You may have seen the best, now here's a tour of some of the rest.
Like artist Peter
Wing's castle in the Town of Washington; the largest Celtic
cross in the country on Salt Point Turnpike in Poughkeepsie; the
meteor crater in Ulster County; Top
Cottage, FDR's getaway in Hyde Park; Jimmy Cagney's farm in
Stanford; and Cruger Island,
a Hudson River island off Red Hook where a retired mayor of New
York City lived amidst artificial Mayan ruins he had an architect
construct. (Because he liked Mayan ruins, that's why.)
"We get phone calls about (the artificial Mayan ruins) every now
and then from people who hear about it or see it on maps and are trying
to connect it with pre-Columbian civilization or to the meteor crater
across the river,'' says Eileen Hayden, executive director of the Dutchess
County Historical Society. "We get people with very unusual ideas
who contact us for verification of their information.''
Peter Wing's house is a castle. His castle is built from rocks big and
small found in and around the Town of Washington. Look for it as you drive
along Duell Road.
But Wing's Castle is not a tourist stop. Nor is the modest stone ranch
house that's the centerpiece of a Town of Stanford farm off County Route
76. The Cagney Farm was the home of the late screen idol, Jimmy Cagney.
The meteor crater?
Back about 200 million years ago, a large meteorite caught Ulster County
in the mid-section. The confirmation of long-held theories came just a
few years ago thanks to photographs taken by the LANDSAT satellite. Ground
zero would have been Panther Mountain around Shandaken. The crater's diameter
would have been about eight miles, according to Karl Loatman of the Mid-Hudson
Astronomy Association.
But don't go looking for evidence. Most rim-like evidence was buried
under sedimentary deposits that has flowed into the region from New England.
Not far from Dutchess Community College
in the Town of Poughkeepsie is St. Peter's Cemetery. If you ask
someone if they've seen the Celtic cross and they reply, 'Which
one?,' then they haven't seen THE one.
Built during World War I, the 35 1/4 feet tall is the largest Celtic
cross in the nation. It was recently reconstructed as part of the cemetery's
ongoing rehabilitation, thanks to the McCann Foundation, which will pay
as much as $3 million for the entire project.
But, then, the McCann family and his wife and her family are buried at
St. Peter's.
"The original cross was made of precast concrete and it was disintegrating,'''
says John Gartland, executive director of the foundation. "We've
duplicated the original in granite and they say it will last a thousand
years.''
No insider's tour would be complete without a stop at the Dutchess County
Courthouse.
It was there that the U.S. Constitution was ratified. The vote in New
York was the turning point in the great debate.
"Were it not for the vigorous insistence of the delegates at Poughkeepsie
in the summer of 1788, we might not have had the same Bill of Rights we
have today,'' says Albert M. Rosenblatt, a justice of the New York State
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, from Poughkeepsie.
No claim about the importance of what took place in Poughkeepsie at that
time would be too extravagant, says Justice Rosenblatt.
There's a plaque commemorating the ratification on the outside of the
courthouse. A more detailed explanation can be found in the lobby. Look
for a display case.
At Poughkeepsie's Rural Cemetery, look for the Livingston family plot.
There are a lot of Livingstons buried there -- 74 to be exact -- in a
plot that predates the cemetery. Tradition holds that the marshy area
east of the cemetery is the "little resting place'' that named Poughkeepsie.
Presidential retreat
Further to the north in Hyde Park, off Dutchess Road at Vallkill
Drive and Potter Bend, is Top Cottage,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's getaway.
"He was in love with the place and was going to retire there after
his last term. He'd contracted with Colliers' magazine to write articles
after his retirement,'' says Raymond Delamater, a history buff and researcher
from Poughquag.
He'd read references to this presidential retreat, but no one could tell
him precisely where it was. So he went driving around one day and found
it.
Delamarter describes it as a "big fieldstone house with a 40-foot
living room and an 18-foot high cathedral ceiling.'' FDR designed the
house … including a special bathtub that was narrow and long.
While Eleanor Roosevelt's Val-Kill
getaway is a historic site, FDR's getaway is privately owned.
The headquarters of the U.S. Chess Federation is in New Windsor.
And since you're over there, take Route 207 from New Windsor into
Campbell Hall. You wouldn't want to miss seeing the site of the
first butter factory in the United States, would you? The spring
they used for the factory and the site of the creamery are marked.
And you might want to stop off at West
Point where they have three links of the 800-link wrought iron
chain that was spread across the Hudson River on April 30, 1778,
to block the advance of King George's forces.
A few stops in Ulster
You probably know about Huguenot Street
in New Paltz, Ulster County, where visitors can tour several stone
houses that remain from the settlement established in 1677 by religious
refugees.
But do you know about the Tuthill Town Grist Mill on Albany Post Road
in Gardiner? It's the only mill in the U.S. that grinds matzah flour for
Passover by the old method.
Or the Trolley Museum in Kingston
-- a collection of trolleys, rapid transit and subway cars.
Then there's the Gomez Mill House,
the earliest existing Jewish residence in North America, located
in Marlboro and operated by the Gomez Foundation for the Millhouse
(236-3126).
Back across the Hudson, there's Manitoga
in Garrison, Putnam County, Russel Wright's environmentally designed
68-acre landscape.
Moving north to Beacon, stop off at the Howland Center on east Main Street.
Commissioned by Civil War General Joseph Howland, the center was designed
by his brother-in-law, Richard Morris Hunt, who also designed the base
of the Statue of Liberty and a wing of the Louvre.
Drive by the Fishkill Reformed Church
on Route 52 in the village. It's a great looking church that happens
to be the earliest house of worship in Dutchess County.
The congregation formed in 1716 with help from Catharyna Brett, she of
the Madame Brett Homestead,
the oldest house in the county. Ms. Brett's body lies under the
church pulpit.
There are many more neat places to tell you about, but we'll have to
end the tour here.
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