Bergh–Stoutenburgh House

The Bergh–Stoutenburgh House is located on U.S. Route 9 opposite Mansion Drive in Hyde Park, New York. It is currently used as a district office by state senator Sue Serino.

Bergh–Stoutenburgh House
A small one-and-a-half-story stone building with a gambrel roof and one-story gabled wing on its left side photographed at an angle so that side is closer to the camera. Two chimneys rise from the roof; the wing and the roof apex on the side facing the camera are faced in vertical red boards.
North profile and west (front) elevation, 2013
Bergh–Stoutenburgh House is located in New York
Bergh–Stoutenburgh House
Bergh–Stoutenburgh House is located in the United States
Bergh–Stoutenburgh House
LocationHyde Park, New York
Nearest cityPoughkeepsie
Coordinates41°46′55″N 73°55′55″W / 41.78194°N 73.93194°W / 41.78194; -73.93194
Built1770s[1]
Architectural styleDutch Colonial
NRHP reference No.72000829
Added to NRHP1972

Description and history

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Built before the Revolutionary War, it is one of only two remaining Dutch Colonial stone houses in Hyde Park.[2] It is a five-by-two-bay one-story building with a slate-covered gambrel roof pierced by two brick chimneys at the gable ends. It is sided in uncoursed fieldstone, with clapboard on the gable ends.[1]

Two small frame wings project from the north and east (rear). An arched doorway on the south leads to the cellar. The main entrance has a flat-roofed wooden portico.[1]

John Bergh inherited the lands from his father Christian in the years before the Revolution, along with his brother-in-law Martin Dop. Both of them built houses on them sometime between 1771 and 1780, as they appear on a map of the Albany Post Road (later to become Route 9 through Hyde Park) drawn by Robert Erskine, Surveyor-General of the Continental Army, in the last years of his life, between 1778 and 1780.[1]

In 1788 Bergh sold a hundred acres (40 ha) to Jacobus Stoutenburgh II. His daughter Margaret, in turn, eventually inherited the property. It remained in use as a house throughout the 19th century and into much of the 20th. It was still a residence when it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972,[1] the first property in Hyde Park listed on the Register in its own right.[3] At some point since it was converted into Edo Sushi. The restaurant heavily remodeled the interior in keeping with Japanese dining traditions, though it still retains some of the original furnishings, such as the fireplace.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Weaver, Lynn Beebe (July 1972). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Bergh-Stoutenburgh House". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved May 20, 2009.
  2. ^ Marquez, Margaret Logan (1996). Hyde Park on the Hudson. Mount Pleasant, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-7385-6240-7. Retrieved May 20, 2009. The oldest houses in the village, of which only two are standing, are what we may call Colonial Dutch. Mr. Bergh bought the lot in 1771, which his son inherited and sold with the house to Jacobus Stoutenburgh II in 1780 — hence the designation of Bergh-Stoutenburgh House
  3. ^ The Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site and Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site were listed when the Register was created in 1966, but that was purely administrative as both had been designated as National Historic Sites many years earlier.
  4. ^ "Pictures of the Restaurant". Edo Sushi Japanese Restaurant. Archived from the original on February 19, 2009. Retrieved May 20, 2009.