Author: Friends ofAthens

  • 7 S Washington St

    7 S Washington St

    Nichols / Daley / Albright House (1846)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    The main structure of this two-story Federal-style brick house was built in 1846 Additions were constructed later in the 19th century, and a wood-framed addition was built during the 1920s. The floor plan and most of the moldings and basic structure are original.

    John Bennet, a merchant in Athens, purchased the property in 1846 and is believed to be the first occupant. John and his wife, Phoebe, were natives of Connecticut. Hobart Bennet, probably their son, and Elsie Scot were residents in the Village of Athens when they were married on February 18, 1849, by clergy of the Athens Trinity Episcopal Church.

    Hobart and Elsie took up residence with John and Phebe and started to raise a family. Sadly, the early years of their marriage were filled with tragedy. John Bennet passed away during 1852, and two years later funeral services were held at the Trinity Episcopal Church for four-year-old Abby and her younger sister Mary Elisa. Another daughter, Amanda, died in 1856 at the age of one year.

    This house was also owned by various members of the Coffin family, who were prominent citizens in Athens. From 1843 until its closing in 1941, the Coffin shipyards were the center of industry in Athens. At first, canal boars and barges were constructed, and later towboats, schooners, and steamboats.

    Sarah Nichols purchased the house from the Coffin family. After the death of Sarah in 1913, her children sold the house to Frank R. Shufelt and his wife, Annie Nichols Shufelt. The Shufelts presented the house as a wedding gift to their daughter Frances and Dr. Alton B. Daley.

    Numerous Athens residents passed through the doors of the wood-framed addition where Dr. Daley had his medical practice. After retiring, the doctor remained in this house until his death in 1971. His granddaughter Elizabeth and her husband, Timothy Albright, purchased the property from his estate. There son, Timothy, current owns the property.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Dernell-Clark House is diagonally across the street at 10 South Washington St.

  • 88 Second St

    88 Second St

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

  • 80 Second St

    80 Second St

    D. R. Evarts Library (1907)

    The Beaux-Arts style of architecture was quite popular in public buildings in the early years of the 20th century. Built in 1907, the D. R. Evarts Library is fine example of this style.

    Daniel Redfield Evarts came from a large family with limited income, and had no free access to books or a quiet place to study. He spent his formative years in Athens longing for books to read. Due to the kindness of the Dutch Reformed pastor and congregation, he was allowed to use a small room attached to the rear of the church as a place to study with access to books. Working after school in his uncle’s grocery and bakery, he then landed a position with the New York and Philadelphia Transportation Company. He left Athens to fill this position, but as he prospered he never forgot his home town and the kindness shown to him. On his death he bequeathed Athens the money to build a library, with additional funds to be invested for further income.

    The laying of the cornerstone in July of 1907 was a great occasion, touching off a three-day celebration called “Old Home Week” with speeches, parades, concerts, ball games, a motorboat race, and carnival. A church service closed the festivities. The cornerstone, laid with Masonic rites by the Civil War general George S. Nichols, assisted by S. H. Nichols, H. F. Dernell, Harmon Van Wort, and C. Porter, contains a box with copies of the wills of Daniel R. Evarts and his wife, Elizabeth, American flags, old coins and currency, an ice-tool catalog of H. F. Dernell and Company, business cards, and assessment rolls. The silver trowel used to lay the cornerstone hangs proudly, displayed on one wall of the library with portraits of D. R. Evarts and his children.

    When the library was opened to the public on June 18, 1908, the eloquent Reverend M. Seymour Purdy, pastor of the Reformed Church, said in his address, “Each age is the heir of all the ages that have come before us. The past is ours mainly through the medium of books. It is no slight gift that the donor has bestowed upon us in giving to Athens this library. Just how much benefit you or I derive from his gift depends altogether upon ourselves.”

  • 102 N Washington St

    102 N Washington St

    Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church (1853)

    The Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church is the oldest continuously active congregation of the Lutheran Church in America! The current red church building of classic design was erected in 1853. It was to cost “no more than $7,000.” The building was enlarged and remodeled first in 1897 and then again in 1924, 1953, and most recently in 1996. Straley Hall was built in 1963, named out of respect for Reverend Luther Straley who served as pastor for 44 years.

    Being much larger than the original church, the new building was erected farther back from Washington Street. The 1924 renovation included creation of a partial basement and the installation of electricity and central heating. Also, the arch behind the altar was created and the current altar, pulpit, and lectern installed.

    The Hook and Hastings tracker organ, donated to the church in 1913 under the terms of the will of Nicholas Van Hoesen, was replaced in 1971. The new organ was built by the L. A. Carlson Company of East Greenbush, at a cost of approximately $12,000.

    The actual date of the founding of the congregation is lost in obscurity. However, the fact that records begin in 1704 appears to indicate that there was an organization before that time. The Reverend Justice Falckner, whose 1703 ordination in Philadelphia is believed to be the first in America, was to be the minister of a congregation in Albany. However, when he reached Albany during June 1704, he found the congregation practically disbanded.

    Most of the members had moved south along the Hudson River to Loonenburgh [Athens]. While Pastor Falckner held services in both Albany and Loonenburgh, the new Loonenburgh congregation overshadowed the one in Albany. He made this his upstate headquarters and was still pastor at the time of his death in 1723.

    It is not known where the congregation first met, but it is generally agreed that the first building was constructed in 1724. That first building was known in the community as the “beehive” due to its unique shape: four roofs forming a peak topped by a small steeple. It served the congregation until the current one was erected. Reverend Wilhelm Chistoph Berkenmeyer was probably the first to preside over services in the beehive, since he was the second established minister of Albany and Loonenburgh.

    Reverend Berkenmeyer died in 1751 at age 69. At his request his remains were buried in the beehive. A sandstone tablet was placed over his crypt, situated either in front or beneath the altar. The tablet is now located on the outside east wall between the entrance doors of the present church. It is possible that it still identifies the location of Reverend Berkenmeyer’s tomb.

    Apparently the beehive was erected on Van Loan family land holdings, since in 1727 a farm of undetermined acreage, which came to be known as the “glebe farm,” was deeded by Jacob Van Loan, Albertus Van Loan, and Mathyes Van Loan for use by and on the behalf of the Lutheran minister and the Lutheran congregation. While a lot of approximately 150 feet by 100 feet on Washington Street was reserved as the church ground, the remaining land was to be the glebe, land used for the benefit of the church. The land was divided into lots, which yielded revenue to the church. Even today, while the present owners can own the buildings on this glebe land, the land itself is still subject to the glebe rent. This is the oldest and longest continuous glebe in New York state.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Gabriele / Mahar house is a few hundred feet north at 114 North Washington St. Two blocks south is the Albertus Van Loon House – built in 1724 by the son of the original patent-holder of this region.

  • 35 Second St

    35 Second St

    Titus / Conine / Palmateer House (c 1803)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    When historical research is undertaken it becomes obvious that many houses constructed in the 19th century manifest a blend of differing architectural styles. This fact is well illustrated in the stately red-brick residence of the Palmateer family. Located on the corner of Second and Warren Streets, the original section of the house was erected circa 1803, before the Village of Athens had even been incorporated. The symmetrical five-bay front was built in the Federal style. Yet the original section’s classic Federal front, with its symmetry and Georgian-style entrance, harmonizes perfectly with the late-1870s Greek Revival design used in the rear section. The blending of these two popular styles is seen in many structures throughout Greene County, and generally suggests the work of master craftsmen, as apparent in this attractive house.

    The building was constructed on a raised basement with the front steps erected sideways, leading to the handsome center portico. There, a heavy wooden doorway with egg-and-dart molding is flanked by fluted Ionic columns and a pediment. A center Georgian-type hall, replicated on the second floor, once led from the doorway to the rear of the house, but the building of a first-floor powder room in the 1950s interrupted this space. The windows, made beautiful by dark shutters contrasting with the brick, contribute to the total historic picture. “Eyebrow” windows were built into the heavy cornice surrounding the attic area. A striking cupola with eight windows tops the handsome historic structure.

    Fireplaces, many still working, enhance every room, including the attic and the basement. During cold winter days those working fireplaces provide a welcome aura of warmth. Three mantels on the first floor are of black marble, and glow with the flames reflection.

    Original inner shutters, most likely used in earlier times to shut out the winter weather, grace the three tall French-style windows. Two sections of six-over-six windows brighten the splendid southwest interior. Four rooms on each side of the first- and second-floor halls illustrate the mix of Federal and Georgian design. Surrounded by heavy original crown moldings, the high ceilings and early plaster work have been carefully preserved. A carved medallion centers the northwest formal parlor. The pineapple, the colonial symbol of hospitality, along with an acanthus leaf, is carved into the corners of door moldings.

    An original tin ceiling tops the attractive dining room just north of the kitchen. In the kitchen itself two large hearthstones, uncovered when flooring was installed in recent years, correspond with the antiquity of the building. One probably served as the base for a wood stove, while the other protected against fireplace ashes.

    Late in the 1980s, a fire destroyed sections of the roof while workmen were repairing the area. Luckily, the cupola suffered only slight damage. The roof was subsequently restored and an elliptical leaded-glass window, centered in the west peak, damaged when firemen were forced to enter the attic, was skillfully repaired by Michael Black, a well-known local artisan. This historically significant window illustrates outstanding artistry. Black used antique glass, creating two new casts of rosette moldings to produce the elegant restoration.

    The area on which the house is sited reflects the Dutch concept of building in a rural village along the Hudson River. That is, a house should be set on or very near the street, with an expansive ground area in the rear where family activities take place and gardens produce family provisions. In general this land was fenced to give privacy and safety from animals. In this instance the tall wooden fence, stretching for about 191 feet along Warren Street, encloses the large backyard and has illustrated this concept for over a century. The fence was completely restored in 2006. Within its boundary lie the flower/vegetable gardens and a rather unique building, the original two-sided privy; with three holes on each side. The sides sit back-to-back: one side for family, the other for servants.

    The Palmateers have refurbished both the interior and exterior with careful attention to historical and architectural detail. As they have phrased it, “It is part of your job and your responsibility to take care of historic sites when you purchase them.” Nancy and Lee Palmateer have embodied that principle since purchasing the property on August 25, 2000, and have enjoyed the professional advice of popular designer Timothy Albright, Jr., Nancy’s brother. Together with their three young sons (Benjamin and twins Elliot and Samuel), Lee, an attorney, and Nancy, an educator, represent the fourth and fifth generations of a family who has owned this residence since 1930. To maintain a safe environment for their family of three young boys, extensive lead abatement was done on the interior in 2002 and on the exterior in 2004.

    Rumor suggests that at one time this property was known as Goose Meadow, although the reason for this nomenclature has not yet been uncovered. While it is known that the house was constructed circa 1803, the history of owners at that time is vague. The first known owner was James Koster, who sold the house to a William Tolley in 1838. While it is possible that Koster could have erected the house 35 years earlier, it is probable that both Koster and Tolley were farmers. In 1866 a Fred Tolley sold the property to Epenetus Titus for the sum of $5,000, a hefty sum indeed for that day and age! Epenetus had the greatest impact on the early significance of the house, and it was most likely he who constructed the Greek Revival rear section of the house in 1870.

    Born in New Baltimore in 1822, Epenetus married Catherine Miller, a Greene County woman. Together they birthed five children. George Titus, Epenetus’ bachelor brother, also lived with them in this beautiful house, and probably worked with Epenetus on their extensive farm. Various censuses describe Epenetus as follows: farmer (1850), boatsman (1855), and retired farmer (1870). In 1870 he recorded $5,000 worth of real estate and $45,000 in personal property.

    George’s statistics are less varied until 1870. Listed as a farmer in the 1850 federal census, 1855 New York state census, and 1860 federal census, he reported $20,000 worth of real estate and $4,000 of real property. But by the 1870 federal census he regarded himself as a retired manufacturer, with $6,000 worth of real estate and $125,000 of real property. The Titus brothers were arguably the wealthiest farmers in Greene County at that time.

    When Epenetus died in January 1903 his executors, daughter Emily Day Seymour and grandnephew Fred Titus, recorded the house—by then “very much out of repair”—at a value of $4,000; cash on hand was listed at $29.53, and total worth was $138,613.63.

    By 1914 the structure was involved in the brick industry, which had arisen in parts of Greene County, notably Catskill and Athens. The Stanley Gladfelters, shipbuilders and major owners of the Athens brickyard, purchased and began to refurbish the house when, unfortunately, the brickyards folded. On September 22, 1930, Jennie Gladfelter, in payment for a large loan on the brick industry and house, transferred the property’s title to Eleanor D. Lassen, Annie Shufelt, and Dr. Alton B. Daley, the latter an Athens physician. Dr. Daley bought out his two co-owners.

    Thus, in 1930 the modern family ownership began. With the approach of World War II, and during the war as well, the house was leased to several families as new industries supporting the war became an important economic feature in the Hudson River Village of Athens. In 1955 title was transferred through purchase to Frances Daley Conine, whose family had been dwelling in the residence for several years. Their daughter, Elizabeth Conine Albright, was raised in this home since she was a toddler. In 1987 Elizabeth and her husband, Timothy Albright – current owners of another historic house – received title to this house, which they sold to their daughter and son-in-law, current owners Nancy and Lee Palmateer.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Dimmick House is diagonally across the street at 64 Second St.

  • 30 S Franklin St

    30 S Franklin St

    Matthias Van Loon / Palmer House (c 1900)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    Matthias Van Loon, who was a descendant of one of Athens’ earliest settlers, Jan Van Loon, owned the Athens Shipyard. Among other vessels, this shipyard produced the day boat Kaaterskill the largest boat constructed in Athens.

    In 1872, Matthias had a house constructed for his personal use. This transitional house in the Italianate style, it incorporated the elements of large Doric columns of the Greek Revival period. The interior has ten-foot-high ceilings and wide, distinctive moldings.

    Matthias Van Loon, born in 1822, was a direct descendant of Matthias Van Loon, the youngest son of Jan Van Loon. In 1871, with Peter Magee as a partner, Van Loon bought the shipyard that had been established in 1843. This shipyard of Van Loon and Magee became the most important shipyard on the Hudson River, building a variety of boats including a three-masted schooner, a steam yacht, barges, ice barges, tugboats, and the ferry boat the A. F. Beach.

    The house was purchased in 1900 by William C. Brady, the founder of W. C. Brady’s Sons, Inc., funeral home. First based in Athens, it is now located in Coxsackie.

    When the funeral home maintained its office in Athens, it became the gathering place for retired old men and unemployed seasonal workers. In fine weather, they would sit on chairs outside; in inclement weather they met in the front room. They referred to these visits as “going to the morgue.” The rear room would contain the cadavers.

    In 1910 the marriage of the Bradys’ daughter Edith to Benjamin Whiting was held on the front lawn. At William Brady’s death in 1938, the Whitings moved into the house to to care for their widowed mother. When Edith Whiting was widowed, her daughter Jeannette and her husband, Harry Palmer, came to be with their mother and to raise their family here. Since 1900, three generations have lived here.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Bedell-Nichols House is two houses north at 27 South Franklin St. The Haight-Gantley House is a block south at 38 South Franklin St.

  • 89 Second St

    89 Second St

    Cornelius Van Loan House (1795)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    Built in the Georgian style during the Federal period, this house was constructed in 1795 for Cornelius Van Loan. The fine entrance door is within an arched and recessed vestibule. The archway over the entrance is of painted marble, as are the lintels under the front windows. The Palladian window above repeats the delicate design in the fan and sidelights of the door. The American eagle symbol of the Federal period can be seen in the center of the fanlight over the door and the Palladian window.

    From 1795 to 1923 Cornelius Van Loan, and his descendants, retained ownership of the property. But through the years after that the house was altered, abused, and allowed to deteriorate to the point that, by 1993, it was no longer habitable. It was from 1993 to 1996 that Robert Keeper and Arthur Marquis began the essential task of restoration, retaining as many of the original features as possible and removing the extra kitchen and two side porches not appropriate to the original house. The present owners, Robert and Andrea Smallwood, now maintain this home in pristine condition.

    In 2007, Andrea was elected mayor of Athens, the first woman to hold that position.

  • 10 S Washington St

    10 S Washington St

    Dernell-Clark House (c 1840)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    In 1854 Herman F Dernehl, age 18, arrived in the United States from Germany. Four years later he settled in Athens, where he began general blacksmithing. The rapid rise of the ice harvesting industry on the Hudson River caused him to concentrate on ice tools. Due to the quality of his work and certain inventions, he soon became a leading manufacturer of ice tools in the United States, with additional customers in Germany and Sweden.

    Dernehl anglicized the spelling of his last name to Dernell and was locally known in Athens as Harmon Dernell, Harmon being the Dutch version of Herman. As Harmon Dernell, he served as the Athens Village president three different times: 1870-71, 1884-85, and 1902.

    The present property was acquired by Dernell in three stages. The original oblong structure, built circa 1840, consisting of two rooms downstairs and two rooms upstairs, was purchased in 1861. In 1868, after buying the lot to the north, he added a wing to the house. In 1893 the lot and house to the south were acquired, and by moving the second house back he could add another “wing,” making the house T-shaped and allowing more room for a garden. The structure moved to the back housed his full-time gardener, and provided temporary quarters for the immigrants working for his ice tool foundry.

    This Victorian house, with Stick, Queen Anne, and Second Empire architectural touches, was purchased in 1921 by William J. Clark from the estate of Emilie Dernell Lang, the deceased sister of Herman Dernell. William Clark was the owner of Clark’s Variety Store, and was the father of subsequent owners Harriet Clark Peloubet (deceased), and Franklin B. Clark and his wife, Winifred. For a number of years Harriet was the Town of Athens tax collector, with her office in this house, and Franklin, as a New York State Superintendent of Schools, had his office here for most of his tenure.

    Herman Dernell also had his office in this house. It was located in the southeast room with a secondary front access. The room now serves as the Clarks’ living room, which still contains Dernell’s standup desk and his numerous built-in bookcases.

    There are still a few Dernell plantings in the Clarks’ garden: deutzia bushes, cabbage roses, ribbon grass, tree peonies, and sweet woodruff. The huge Norway spruce planted by Dernell, which survived being struck by lightning in 1978, was pronounced unsafe in 1990 and had to be removed. Since the tower was now the tallest structure in the area, lightning rods were installed on the house.

    If you are walking through Athens today, nearly across the street is the Nichols / Daley / Albright house at 7 South Washington.

  • 85 N Washington St

    85 N Washington St

    Albertus Van Loon House (1724)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    This early-18th-century Dutch stone house was built by Albertus Van Loon, the fourth son of Jan Van Loon, the original patent holder of Loonenburg, the original name for the Athens area. An erection date of 1724 was established by two date stones, one in the lower southwestern corner of the house and the other, newly uncovered, on the upper southeast corner.

    The southern half of the stone house was first erected with a very steep gable roof of 60 degrees, in the common urban Dutch style of the time; one entered the premises from the north wall side. About the middle of the 18th century, the northern half of the stone house was added and the orientation of the entire house was shifted west, to the road side. The English-style gambrel roof is original over the northern half, but the southern half of the roof is framed differently. The dormers were added in the 1830s.

    The original one-room stone house had a jambless fireplace and one or two garrets, but was renovated in the 1760s to the Georgian style, and retains its paneling and elaborate fireplace mantel. At about this time the clapboard addition on the south end was added. The Georgian room is known as “the Dueling Room.” A liquor license was obtained in 1774, and it is possible a tavern was operated in the southern addition at that time. The many pieces of pottery shards, musket balls, and coins attest to a great deal of activity in this area.

    The wooden addition to the north end may have been on-site earlier than the stone building, as a reference to its existence in 1717 is mentioned in The Albany Protocols. That building used an even earlier Dutch construction type than the stone house, but shows evidence that it may have been moved from elsewhere. Connecting two wooden additions at the rear of the stone house, facing the Hudson River, is a Victorian addition from approximately the 1880s that enclosed what was originally a long Dutch porch.

    The property descended down to the fourth-generation Albertus/Albert Van Loon, who died in 1838. According to his will the house was bequeathed to an adopted daughter, Cornelia. The will was contested by relatives and a lengthy trial ensued. The challenge led to an argument between Anthony A. Livingston, one of the executors, and the attorney James Byrnes. It is said that Byrnes stabbed Livingston in this house, so perhaps this is where the legend of the Dueling Room materialized. The lengthy 140-day trial ended on November 7, 1839, with the will being sustained.

    The house then passed through several private owners, followed by the New York Ice Company in 1858, and the Knickerbocker Ice Company in 1867. After numerous years of deterioration, the house was purchased in the late 1990s by current owners Randall Evans and Carrie Feder of the Athens Architectural Workshop who have performed a great amount of preservation work to stabilize and restore the structure.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church – the oldest continuously-active Lutheran Church in America – is two blocks north at 102 North Washington St.

  • 12 S Water St

    12 S Water St

    Livingston / Coffin / Apfel House (1825)

    This private residence is not open for interior tour.

    Built for Anthony Livingston in 1825, this high-style Federal brick building was designed by the “master builder” Barnabas Waterman, who also designed the House of History across the Hudson River, in Kinderhook, New York. Anthony Livingston was the kin of Philip Livingston, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The house, with its double-storied portico, four 22-foot Corinthian columns, and its Hudson River location, was a tribute to the Livingston’ wealth and prestige. The doors and windows are trimmed with Vermont marble. The interior has 12-foot ceilings, seven working fireplaces, a Dutch oven, 12-inch crown moldings, and three Bohemian crystal chandeliers.

    In 1845 the house was sold to Judge Sylvester Nichols, a respected justice as well as the Athens town supervisor and Village clerk. By 1871 the property had new owners: Lydia and Reuben Coffin. Lydia was the daughter of William Coffin, the founder of Athens’ largest shipyard. The current door, which shows Lydia’s taste for the Italianate style, with its ornate detailing, was meant to impress visitors and announce the family’s prominence in the community. Lydia held a large wedding reception at her home in 1897 after her granddaughter married a nephew of President William McKinley.

    Unfortunately, between 1906 and 1935 the house was not kept up to standards set by the previous owners. In 1935 James Hyer, a prominent lawyer, purchased the house. To provide ample living space for his growing family of a dozen children – eleven of whom survived childhood – and the need for office space, the original ell-shaped building was extended. Hyer’s law office, library, and insurance company were located in the basement (i.e., the ground floor). The kitchen was moved from the basement to the first floor, and central hearing and modern bathrooms were installed.

    In 1972 the balusters around the portico and the four Corinthian columns were removed due to decay. The property was acquired in 2003 by Richard and Janet Apfel who re-created the portico to its former glory of Corinthian column supports encased by 19th-century-styled balusters. The current owners have maintained this appearance.

    The property includes the bay area of the Hudson River adjacent to the Athens Riverfront Park.

    If you are walking through Athens today, the Stewart House Hotel is one block north at 2 North Water St.