No history has been located for this house, which is on the south side of a large parcel of land that was the property of D. D. Smith and later Robert Hart. There are several dormers, some fishscale shingles, and a front balcony.The porch, which...
Some older houses in the Nyacks retain their original architectural details. This residence on Elysian Avenue has sunburst bargeboards in both eaves, fishscale roof shingles, and a Palladian window on the third floor.
The small windows of the low second story of this dwelling indicate early nineteenth century construction.Stairways to the porch and lawn show the elevation of Summit Street, well above the main part of the Village of Nyack. Although this is an...
There is a row of houses on Depot Place that are the same style but differ in siding, roof shingles, and architectural details. When they were built, these houses faced the new railroad and were rented by railroad employees.
This is a detail of the window above the porch for 11 Washington Avenue, South Nyack. Several types of siding are visible - wavy clapboard, scallop shingles, and conventional shakes.
This Main Street residence may have been built in the early 1900s. It has retained its fancy gingerbread, scalloped shingles, and porch columns and details. The Nyack Library does not, however, have a history of this house.
This wedding cake house was built in 1884. It does not appear on the 1884 Burleigh view of Nyack on Hudson, but was included in the 1984 Hopper House exhibit of centennial houses in Nyack. It has every Victorian embellishment: bargeboard, brackets,...