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Boston Post Road Historic District (Rye, New York)

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Location
  
Rye, New York

NRHP Reference #
  
82001275

Added to NRHP
  
29 October 1982

Built
  
1838-1854

Designated NHLD
  
August 30, 1993

Boston Post Road Historic District (Rye, New York) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Architectural styles
  
Gothic Revival architecture, Greek Revival architecture

Similar
  
Jay Heritage Center, Grove Street Cemetery, John Jay Homestead State Hist, Playland, Rye Town Park‑Bathing Complex

The Boston Post Road Historic District is a historic district including three pre-Civil War mansions and their grounds, a 10,000-year-old Paleo-Indian meadow and viewshed, a cemetery, and a nature preserve. It touches on the south side of the nation's oldest road, the Boston Post Road (US 1) in Rye, New York, where a sandstone Westchester Turnpike marker "24" inspired by the original mile marker system of Benjamin Franklin is set into the perimeter wall; from there the landmarked area of 286 acres (1.16 km2) expands down to the Milton Harbor of the Long Island Sound. Two of the mansions included in the landmark district are Greek Revival; the third is Gothic Revival and was designed by Alexander Jackson Davis.

This site with its archaeological significance and importance to American heritage was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1993. The three-quarters-mile (1.2 km) meadow and viewshed is one of fewer than a dozen such identified Paleo-Indian sites in all of New York State.

Included within the district are the following historic structures, associated buildings and grounds:

  • The 1838 Peter Augustus Jay House, now being restored by the not-for-profit Jay Heritage Center, is one of two Greek Revival residences. It is situated on the Jay Property, the boyhood home of American Founding Father John Jay. The existing house was built upon the footprint of an older 18th-century farmhouse, "The Locusts", and replaced with the current mansion by John Jay's eldest son, Peter Augustus Jay. The mansion was erected according to specifications in a contract between Jay and a builder named Edwin Bishop, and details appear to have been drawn from architectural pattern books by Minard Lafever and Chester Hills. Restoration of the house is an official Save America's Treasures project. The site is on the Westchester County African American Heritage Trail, and was designated a member site of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area in January 2009. The house and property are open to the public.
  • 1907 Van Norden Carriage House(designed by Frank A. Rooke)
  • 1907 Zebra House(designed by Frank A. Rooke)
  • Tennis House (1917 or earlier)
  • Estate Cottage on Barlow Lane (19th century or earlier)
  • Summer House (1957-8, non-contributing)
  • Estate Cottage B (demolished)
  • Bowling Alley (demolished)
  • Four outbuildings (demolished)
  • Gazebo (demolished)
  • Gardens designed by Jay family, Brinley & Holbrook and others; includes stone ha-ha walls (1822).
  • Lounsberry (1831), also known as the Parsons House, is a second Greek Revival residence in the district; notably it has a library designed by Delano & Aldrich
  • Gardener's Cottage
  • Carriage House and Stable
  • Outbuilding with five bays
  • Poultry and Wood House
  • Greenhouse
  • Whitby Castle (1854), Gothic Revival residence, which is now the City of Rye Golf Club. This was designed by Alexander Jackson Davis for William Chapman
  • Caretaker's house
  • Pool house and golf cart garage (non-contributing)
  • Starter's House (non-contributing)
  • Maintenance building (non-contributing)
  • Also included are:

  • Jay Family Cemetery (1805, three acres [1.2 ha])
  • Marshlands Conservancy (created in 1967; formerly part of the original Jay family estate, 137 acres [55 ha])
  • References

    Boston Post Road Historic District (Rye, New York) Wikipedia