Fite's sculpture "Flame" stood at the center of his sculptural landscape prior to Fite's decision to replace this with the enormous uncarved monolith which stands on the site today.
Shown here as the girls dormitory known as "The Homestead", this house was later purchased and renovated by Saul Bellow. The house was subsequently purchased by Bard College for faculty housing (during which time it was known as "Bellows' House"),...
This is the front page of the "Pawling School Weekly," a newspaper published by students at the Pawling School. The article titled "Nothing But the Truth" - "Dramatic Club to present former Broadway hit" covered news of the upcoming performance of...
This is close up photograph of Henry Montgomery who played the part of Mrs. Ralston in Pawling School's theatrical production of "Nothing But the Truth," a play written by James Montgomery. The photograph is a cropped section of another image in...
Henry Doersch & Company was an old established grocer on South Broadway in Nyack. Three men stand in the doorway and a fourth holds a horse which is in harness for a wagon- possibly the delivery wagon. The four story building has several large...
This is a photograph of a house nestled into the back of a heavily-wooded property. In the foreground of the photograph, two women are seated on a hand-hewn wood bench. Behind this bench there is a stone wall. Another woman stands on the path...
Known as the Heldt House, this 1892 residence has an interesting history. The lot was part of the Peter J. Smith holdings, which ran from the river to the top of the mountain. There are more details in Terry Talley's book, "Gems of the Hudson."
This house at 104 South Broadway is one of a row of stately homes. The central Italianate tower is flanked by peaked dormers which have intricately carved bargeboards. This carving is repeated over the entrance.
In 1996, the Nyack businesses which occupied the street level of the Onderdonk Block were (left to right) Gourmet Goodies, Goldberg's Bagels, Hair's Marianne, Knuckleheads, Cards Plus, and Main Street Liquor.
An old, simple dwelling which has very little written history. These small houses near the Hudson River were originally constructed for working class families.
This brick building, which is on the 1884 Burleigh map entitled, "Nyack on the Hudson," has little known history. Was it perhaps a commercial building? Two houses with big yards are nearby on the map.The second floor center window was once larger;...
A clapboard-sided entry vestibule off of wide wooden steps is obscured by pine trees planted to either side of the steps. The home is brick and on the right side extends into a three-sided section which is covered by decorative window hoods on two...
13 Bridge Street is a brick dwelling attached to the one-story extension of the hardware store on Main Street. It is the first of several row houses which were built by John V. Onderdonk about 1875, at the same time he was building the Onderdonk...
Photographs; Houses; Roofs; Dwellings; Porte cocheres; Shutters; Gables; Shrubs; Stone walls; Towers; Porches; Garages; Spandrels;
Two bare trees line the sidewalk that runs in front of the low stone wall at the front of this property. A driveway with concrete curbing cuts through the stone wall and leads through a porte-cochere back to an opened garage. Under the...