New Paltz Town Historic Preservation Commission

New Paltz Town Historic Preservation Commission Explore what the New Paltz Historic Preservation Commission is doing to protect and promote our town.

This event of reflection, inspiration, and celebration on Wednesday evening, 2/19 - the annual Black History Convocation...
02/17/2025

This event of reflection, inspiration, and celebration on Wednesday evening, 2/19 - the annual Black History Convocation at SUNY New Paltz - is free and open to the public.

SAVE THE DATE: The 2nd Annual Black History Month Convocation is happening this month on Wednesday, February 19, 2025, at 5:30 p.m.

This celebration will feature a keynote address from Antonio Delgado, Lieutenant Governor of the State of New York.

Plus a special presentation for the Dr. Zelbert Moore Legacy Award that will be presented to one staff member or alum and one student! 🧡💙

*RSVP using the link đź”— below:
https://newpaltz.wufoo.com/forms/m1ekk4hx1qmh9na/

Lieutenant Governor Antonio Delgado

If you love historic houses, hamlets, and landscapes, check out this book presentation about Southern Ulster County on T...
10/15/2024

If you love historic houses, hamlets, and landscapes, check out this book presentation about Southern Ulster County on Thursday, Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. in the Plattekill Public Library.

Join us for this interesting book talk about historic homes in our local communities!
Please register: https://plattekill.libcal.com/event/13182197

07/27/2024

In these times, when right-wing extremist groups such as Moms for Liberty are putting heavy pressure on school boards to ban books...

The HPC has named Doree Lipson as the recipient of the commission's 2023 Partners in Preservation award. At its November...
12/06/2023

The HPC has named Doree Lipson as the recipient of the commission's 2023 Partners in Preservation award. At its November 21 meeting, the HPC presented the award to Lipson. The award is in recognition of her positive efforts and contribution to the town's historic fabric, through her preservation of 257 Main Street. Read about the award in the December 6 edition of Hudson Valley One. https://www.townofnewpaltz.org/historic-preservation-commission/news/hudson-valley-one-article-town-hpc-presents-2023-partners-in

Photo: Doree Lipson with HPC Chairman John Orfitelli

In case you haven't seen the post and link to a Hudson Valley One article shared late last week: The former home of the ...
08/14/2023

In case you haven't seen the post and link to a Hudson Valley One article shared late last week: The former home of the late Floyd Patterson, the famous boxer and New Paltz resident, has been nominated to be a designated local landmark. The HPC will hold a public hearing on the nomination on Tuesday, Aug. 15, at 7 p.m.

Find info on the HPC site and a link to the article:
https://www.townofnewpaltz.org/historic-preservation-commission/news/hudson-valley-one-article-the-main-event-patterson-home-up-for

Here's more background and a link to the nomination materials:
https://www.townofnewpaltz.org/historic-preservation-commission/news/town-of-new-paltz-hpc-considers-nomination-of-floyd-patterson

Very exciting!
08/11/2023

Very exciting!

Floyd Patterson, one of the best heavyweight boxers ever to enter a ring, spent decades of retirement as a trainer and mentor on Springtown Road in New Paltz. That home, with the original boxing ring Patterson built there intact, may be designated a town landmark. A public hearing on that very quest

This free exhibition, on view through Aug. 31, 2023, focuses on the changing neighborhood of Huguenot Street in the year...
07/16/2023

This free exhibition, on view through Aug. 31, 2023, focuses on the changing neighborhood of Huguenot Street in the years surrounding 1830 as a multicultural story of major developments in the New Paltz community.

Historic Huguenot Street is proud to present the exhibition "The Old Village," currently on view through August 31, 2023, at the DuBois Fort Visitor Center. The exhibition focuses on the changing neighborhood of Huguenot Street as major developments in the New Paltz community were taking place in the years surrounding 1830.

By the 1830s, the original patentee families had expanded, most descendants moving outside the early settlement, throughout the town of New Paltz, and beyond. New families of European descent began to arrive and establish themselves and their families in the community. New York’s legal, yet gradual, abolition of slavery, by this time, meant that some people of African descent could establish their own households nearby (albeit on the outskirts), while many continued to labor as servants, sometimes indentured, in the households and on the farms of their enslavers. At this time, the center of local commerce was shifting from the “old village”—as Ralph LeFevre had called it—to the “Road to Plattekill” and to the new Turnpike, finished in the 1830s, that linked the community to the Hudson River and the larger region. Not surprisingly, New Paltz’s growing population demanded new and bigger churches and schools and a range of businesses. This exhibition explores the stories of the evolving neighborhood that formed around the original old village, its people, where they lived and worked, and their interactions.

This multi-cultural story is revealed through census records and original documents from the Historic Huguenot Street Archives, as well as documents from the Town of New Paltz and Reformed Church of New Paltz Records and Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection, Elting Memorial Library.

The exhibition is free and open to the public. The DuBois Fort Visitor Center is located at 81 Huguenot Street in New Paltz. Hours are Wednesdays through Sundays: 10 am-4 pm, with a break from 1 pm-2 pm to allow for the staff to take lunch (Closed Mondays and Tuesdays).

Jean Hasbrouck House, late 1800s. Drawing by Alfred Hasbrouck. HHS Archives.

In case you missed this...
07/02/2023

In case you missed this...

Mohonk Preserve has been nominated for Best Park in the Times Union Hudson Valley's Best 2023!

Voting is open through July 7. Cast your vote here: https://www.timesunion.com/hvbest2023/

📸 Photo by Stephen D. Stewart-Hill

Times Union

Be sure to check out the annual juried Art Show at Elting Memorial Library's Steinberg Reading Room, up through May. The...
05/11/2023

Be sure to check out the annual juried Art Show at Elting Memorial Library's Steinberg Reading Room, up through May. The announcement of the Village of New Paltz Historic Preservation Commission and the Design Review Board provides details of the show, including this weekend's reception. The exhibit showcases works that depict local and area historic landmarks, architectural details, landscapes, and more.

The Village of New Paltz Design Review Board & Historic Preservation Commission is happy to announce that its annual juried Art Show will be held in person once again, at Elting Memorial Library’s Steinberg Reading Room!

Two-dimensional works depicting local and area historic landmarks, architectural details and landscapes, as well as impressions of life within a historic context and preservation’s role in promoting equality and justice will be on view from May 5th until May 31st.

A reception for the art show will be held on Saturday May 13th from 1 to 3PM. Winners will be announced at 2PM.

In light of successful past exhibits, the Design Review Board & Historic Preservation Commission hopes that this year's event will once again showcase the region's wonderful artistic talent, while bringing historic preservation to the fore and delighting area artists and art enthusiasts alike.

For more information please contact exhibit coordinator Kamilla Nagy at [email protected].

Address

3 Veterans Drive
New Paltz, NY
12561

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