A Razey photo of the Presbyterian church manse with open sheds in the rear for tying horse and wagons during services.
The structure is still standing (as of July, 2007). Currently occupied by: Ralston-Lippincott-
Hasbrouck-Ingrassia Funeral...
The Manse house or the Parsonage was built in 1868. Reverend Herbert Ford is standing on the sidewalk with a small child. He was the pastor from 1890-1899.
Even a simple house like this, the former manse for the First Baptist Church of Nyack, is graced with a carved top floor window molding. Decorative elements were also added to the simple porch posts. This was one of many houses featured in a Hopper...
This is a John Scott photograph of an Edwin Dahlberg painting. The manse is the parsonage for the Tappan Reformed Church. the house overlooks a wide lawn which abuts the village square.
The Manse or parsonage of the Tappan Reformed Church faces the village triangle across a wide expanse of lawn. The barn to the right is part of the church property also.
The manse in Tappan was built in 1726. Its gables and wide porch face across the village green to the church. Domine Samuel Verbryck, friend of George Washington, lived here during the Revolutionary War. He was the founder of Rutgers College in New...
South Nyack watercolorist Edwin L. Dahlberg holds his painting, "The Manse at Tappan," one of a group of Rockland County's historic landmarks executed by the artist in honor of the Bicentennial. The series, which had been exhibited at the Tappan...