A postcard with a black and white photo of the the Hendrick Hudson House, also known as the Robert Jenkins House, where the chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolition reside in Hudson, NY. The builidng is located on 113 Warren Street.
A postcard with a black and white photograph of the Hendrick Hudson House, where the chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution resides in Hudson, NY. The building is located on 113 Warren Street.
The Hudson House of Nyack, a restaurant, was once the Village Hall. The building just beyond, now Bourbon Street, another restaurant, was once a grocery. In the brickwork can be faintly seen, 'Grocery Market Meats Poultry.'
Three Main Street brick buildings near the corner of Franklin Street are of varying heights. On the left is a three story structure housing Hickory Dickory Dock. In the middle is a two story building which has Hacienda on the first floor. The...
Piermont Avenue in Nyack has been plowed and a lone pedestrian walks towards Hudson Avenue.The large white house in the center, once owned by the DePew family, is known as the Hudson House and is owned by the Nyack Library.
In 1967 the Nyack Village Hall was at 134 Main St. and was entered through a door on the left of the building. The police department was on the right. An awning covers the front, ground floor window. Three windows are on the street side of the...
At the corner of Hudson and Piermont Avenues in Nyack is the 1854 Hudson House, once part of the DePew farm that extended from the present Route 9W to the Hudson River. Simple and elegant - the house, porch, cupola, and four chimneys make a...
Patrolman Joseph O' Connor and Joseph (David) McBrien stand in front of the Water Commissioner's office on Main Street. The police department was located in the same building, which is now the Hudson House Restaurant.
In 1967, the Nyack Village Hall was at 134 Main Street, between Glynn's Shoes and Stern's Meat Market and Groceries. The police station was on the ground floor and the offices of the village government were on the second. This building is now the...
A crane lifts steel beams into place for the 1973 addition to the Nyack Library. The Hudson House, one of the houses owned by the DePew family of Nyack, is in the background.
The Italianate DePew or Hudson House is one of the most architecturally pleasing and historically significant houses in the village of Nyack. The Depew family owned much land in the village and were successful in business and real estate. This...
The house at 50 Piermont Avenue is hidden by a high picket fence and many trees. In the carriage on the left is Elsa DePew Stevenson, a daughter of Tunis DePew who built the Hudson house. An unidentified girl sits next to Elsa in the carriage....
The Nyack Library's latest expansion was on this small bit of land between it and the Hudson House on Piermont Avenue. Houses on DePew Avenue are in the background.