List of the oldest buildings in New York
This article attempts to list the oldest extant buildings in the state of New York.
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Building | Image | Location | First Built | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
A carpenter's shed | Gardiners Island | 1639 | Possibly oldest building in New York | |
Old House | Cutchogue | 1649 | One of the oldest houses in the state; moved in 1661 to present site from Southold | |
Pieter Claesen Wyckoff House | Brooklyn | 1652 | Oldest surviving structure in New York City | |
Home of General Abraham Staats | Columbia County | 1652 | Henry Hudson reportedly landed at this spot in 1609 | |
Lent-Riker-Smith Homestead | East Elmhurst | 1656 | Oldest inhabited private dwelling in New York City and possibly the country[1] | |
Old Halsey House | Village of Southampton | 1660 | 1660 build date according to the local historical society in Southampton http://www.southamptonhistoricalmuseum.org/ | |
John Bowne House | Flushing | 1661 | Oldest surviving structure in Queens; once hosted a well-known Quaker meeting | |
Billou-Stillwell-Perine House | Staten Island | 1662 | Oldest surviving structure in Staten Island | |
Bronck House | Coxsackie | 1663 | Oldest house in upstate New York | |
Brewster House | East Setauket | 1665 | One of the oldest houses on Long Island | |
The Old 76 House | Tappan | 1668 | Oldest surviving building in Rockland County; third oldest public house in America; Maj. John Andre held before trial and hanging in Tappan | |
Cornelius Tappen House (Vandenburgh-Hasbrouck House) | Ulster County | c. 1670 | Reputedly the oldest house in the Kingston Stockade area and the first post office.[2] Currently a restaurant, The Tappen | |
Cubberly-Britton Cottage | Staten Island | 1670 | ||
Manee-Seguine Homestead | Staten Island | 1670 | ||
Timothy Knapp House | Rye | 1670 | Listed on National Register of Historic Places | |
Ariaanje Coeymans House | Coeymans | 1675 | There is another Coeymans house a mile south of this one, on the Hannacroix Creek. Date unknown. | |
Conference House | Staten Island | 1675 | Listed on National Historic Landmark | |
Jans Martense Schenck house | Brooklyn | 1675 | Originally in Flatlands; installed within the Brooklyn Museum 1964 | |
Old Senate House | City of Kingston | 1676 | New York State Constitution written and signed here | |
Van Leuven-Bevier House Museum | Marbletown | 1680 | Built by Andries Pieterse Van Leuven in 1680, on land he purchased from the Esopus Indians. Currently houses the Ulster Co. Historical Society | |
Van Nostrand-Starkins House | Roslyn | 1680 | Main Street Historic District (Roslyn, New York) | |
Philipse Manor Hall | Yonkers | 1682 | Oldest surviving structure in Westchester County. | |
Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow | Sleepy Hollow | 1685 | Possibly the oldest surviving church in the state. May date only to 1697, which would place it 2nd to Flushing Meeting House, Queens. | |
Bedell House | Bellmore | 1689 | The oldest house in Bellmore, NY the original portion of the Bedell House was built circa 1689. | |
Alice Austen House | Staten Island | 1690 | Built by a Dutch merchant then remodeled in the Gothic Revival Style in 1844 | |
Jeremiah Conklin House | Amagansett | 1690 | Built by Jeremiah Conkling and his wife Mary, daughter of Lion Gardiner, first English settler of New York colony | |
Joseph Whitman House | West Hills, Long Island | 1692 | ||
Old Quaker Meeting House | Flushing | 1694 | Oldest religious building in New York City still standing [3] | |
Abraham Manee House (Manee-Seguine Homestead) | Staten Island | 1600s | Built by Abraham Manee | |
Voorlezer's House | Staten Island | 1695 | Oldest school house in America | |
Beekman Arms and Delamater Inn | Village of Rhinebeck | 1700 | Oldest surviving inn in America and oldest structure in the village | |
De Wint House | Tappan | 1700 | Washington Revolutionary headquarters; one of the oldest surviving buildings in Rockland County | |
Ezra Carll Homestead | South Huntington, Long Island | 1700 | ||
Jarvis-Fleet House | Huntington, Long Island | 1700 | ||
Lispenard-Rodman-Davenport House | New Rochelle | 1700 | ||
Tobias van Steenburgh House | Kingston | 1700 | One of the few buildings in Kingston not burned in 1777 by British troops | |
Treasure House | Staten Island | 1700 | ||
Tysen-Neville House | Staten Island | 1700 | ||
Crailo | Rensselaer | 1704 | Residence of Hendrick van Rensselaer | |
John Wood House | Huntington Station, Long Island | 1704 | Built by a Dutch merchant then remodeled in the Gothic Revival Style in 1844 | |
Jan Van Loon House | Village of Athens | 1706 | one of the oldest houses in Greene County | |
Madam Brett Homestead | Beacon | 1709 | oldest building in Dutchess County, first house on Rombout Patent, on National Register | |
Gomez Mill House | Town of Newburgh | 1712 | Oldest known extant residence of a Jewish American | |
Lewis Pintard House | New Rochelle | 1710 | Home of Revolutionary War patriot Lewis Pintard | |
Fraunces Tavern | Lower Manhattan | 1719 | Etienne "Stephen" DeLancey built the current building as his house; tavern since 1762 | |
Pieter Winne House | Selkrik, Albany County | 1720 | Purportedly the oldest house in the Town of Bethlehem | |
Bull Stone House | Hamptonburgh | 1720s | Property also contains the oldest intact Dutch barn in the state | |
Hendrick I. Lott House | Brooklyn | 1720 | ||
Jan Van Hoesen House | Claverack | c. 1720 | ||
John Oakley House | West Hills, Long Island | c. 1720 | The original structure was built about 1720 and expanded in the 1780s. | |
Kreuzer-Pelton House | Staten Island | 1722 | ||
Albertus Van Loon House | Village of Athens | 1724 | Possibly the second-oldest house in Greene County | |
Abraham Yates House | Schenectady | ca. 1725 | Possibly the oldest house in Schenectady | |
French Castle at Fort Niagara | Village of Youngstown | 1726 | Oldest building on the Great lakes and one of the longest continuously run military bases in the United States, 1726–present-day | |
48 Hudson Avenue | Albany | 1728 | Oldest stand-alone structure in Albany | |
Lent Homestead | East Elmhurst, Queens | 1729 | The western portion of the house may date to 1654 | |
Benner House | Village of Rhinebeck | 1730 | Oldest house in the village; a rare example of German vernacular architecture, and the sole remaining house in Dutchess County with a one-room floorplan built to German traditions rather than Dutch. Here was held the first Methodist church services in the town conducted by the Rev. Freeborn Garrettson from 1791-1793. | |
King Mansion | Jamaica | 1730 | The rear section of the house dates to 1730, the left section to 1755, the main structure (right section) to 1806. | |
Suydam House | Centerport, Long Island | c. 1730 | ||
John Rogers House | Dix Hills, Long Island | 1732 | ||
Queen Anne Parsonage | Fort Hunter | 1734 | ||
Cornelius Van Wyck House | Douglaston | 1735 | ||
Nicoll-Sill House - Bethlehem House | Albany County | c1735 | Home of Rensselaer Nicoll and Elizabeth Salisbury Nicoll | |
Jacob Smith House | West Hills, Long Island | c. 1740 | The home consists of a three-bay, 1 1⁄2-story saltbox built about 1740 and a five-bay, 1 1⁄2-story dwelling with a shed roof wing added about 1830. | |
Lake-Tysen House | Staten Island | 1740 | ||
Kasparus Westervelt House [4] | Town of Poughkeepsie | 1745 | ||
Stoothoff-Baxter-Kouwenhoven House | Brooklyn | 1747 | ||
Van Cortlandt House | Van Cortlandt Park | 1748 | Oldest building in the Bronx | |
Creedmoor (Cornell) Farmhouse | Glen Oaks | 1750 | ||
David Conklin House | Huntington, Long Island | c. 1750 | ||
Ireland-Gardiner Farm | Greenlawn, Long Island | c. 1750 | ||
Isaac Losee House | Huntington, Long Island | c. 1750 | One of the oldest private residences on Long Island | |
Henry Smith Farmstead | Huntington Station, Long Island | c. 1750 | Built about 1750 and remodelled in the 1860s | |
Steenburgh Tavern | Rhinebeck | 1750 | German vernacular stone house built into a hillside with an unusual sweeping Dutch roof | |
The Christopher House | Staten Island | 1756 | ||
Valentine-Varian House | Norwood | 1758 | Second oldest house in the Bronx | |
Strawberry Hill | Rhinebeck | 1762 | The National Register of Historic Places called this the most monumental stone farmhouse in Northern Dutchess County. Built by Henry Beekman in 1762. | |
St. Paul's Chapel | Manhattan | 1764 | Third oldest surviving church in New York City, after the Flushing Friends Meeting House (1694) and St. Andrew's Church, Staten Island (1709). | |
Morris-Jumel Mansion | Manhattan | 1765 | ||
Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead | Brooklyn | 1766 | ||
Indian Castle Church | Danube | 1769 | Only colonial Indian missionary church surviving in the state, and the only Iroquois building surviving from its time[5] | |
Boehm-Frost House | Staten Island | 1770 | ||
Kingsland Homestead | Flushing | 1774 | ||
Lefferts Homestead | Brooklyn | 1777 | Moved to Prospect Park from its original location at 563 Flatbush Avenue | |
Dyckman House | Inwood, Manhattan | 1784 | Only remaining original farmhouse in Manhattan | |
Edward Mooney House | Manhattan | 1785 | Oldest surviving row house in Manhattan | |
Stone-Tolan House | Brighton, New York | c. 1792 | A Federal-style structure said to be the oldest surviving building in Monroe County | |
Joost Van Nuyse House | Flatlands, Brooklyn | 1793 | ||
Bridge Cafe | Manhattan | 1795 | Oldest wooden building in Manhattan | |
Flatbush Dutch Reformed Church | Flatbush | 1796 | ||
Van Nuyse-Magaw House | Brooklyn | 1800 | 1041 East 22nd Street 40°37′36.5″N 73°57′15.5″W / 40.626806°N 73.954306°W | |
The Wadsworth Homestead | Geneseo, New York | 1804 | Built in 1804 by James Wadsworth a pioneer from Connecticut who came to Geneseo in 1790. Originally a two story four square home with an east west central hallway dividing four rooms on the first and second floor. The house was enlarged to in 1815 adding two large rooms to the south end first floor and a nursery on the second floor. In 1875 Emmeline Austin Wadsworth had her son William move the house 100 yards to the south, using oxen. At this time Sturges and Brigham architects were hired to add a third floor and fine embellishments throughout, including carved fireplace mantels and a grand central stair. The home continues to be occupied by the Wadsworth's. http://www.wadsworthhomestead.com/ | |
J. Crew and liquor store | Manhattan, New York | 1809 | 235 W Broadway. Small Federal style row house | |
Willets Point Farmhouse | Bayside, now Fort Totten | 1829 | Built by Charles and Martha Willet and eventually moved to Fort Totten. The fort itself was built in 1857, and an Officer's Club was built in 1870 which is now home to the Bayside Historical Society. | |
Clarkson Community Church | Clarkson, New York | 1825 | This Protestant church, perhaps the oldest in western Monroe County, was established in 1816 and has operated continuously since that date. The original 1825 Colonial structure, with a 100' steeple, has had two subsequent additions (in 1967 and in 1985). | |
Anshe Slonim Synagogue | Lower Manhattan | 1849 | Oldest surviving synagogue building in New York City | |
Notes
- ↑ http://www.rikerhome.com/
- ↑ "Building History". The Tappen. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
- ↑ Landmarks Preservation Commission. “Friends Meeting House.” August 18, 1970. Vertical files, Queens Borough Public Library.
- ↑ http://www.thewesterveltfamily.com/genealogy/021.html
- ↑ "Indian Castle Church data pages". Historic American Buildings Survey. Library of Congress. 2007-11-16.
External links
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