Wappingers Falls Historic District
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Wappingers Falls Historic District | |
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(U.S. Registered Historic District) | |
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Location: | Wappingers Falls, NY |
Nearest city: | Poughkeepsie |
Coordinates: | Coordinates: |
Area: | 90 acres (36 ha)[1] |
Built/Founded: | mid 18th-mid 20th century |
Architectural style(s): | Late Victorian |
Added to NRHP: | 1984 |
NRHP Reference#: | 84002380 |
MPS: | Wappingers Falls MRA |
Governing body: | Village of Wappingers Falls; private residences and businesses. |
The Wappingers Falls Historic District is in the center of that village in Dutchess County, New York, United States. It is a 90-acre (36 ha) area roughly centered along South Avenue and West Main Street NY 9D and Wappingers Creek. It includes Mesier Park in the center of the village and many adjacent residential neighborhoods, roughly bounded by Elm, Park, Walker, Market and McKinley streets.
Much of the district was built in the wake of the industrialization of Wappingers Falls in the 19th century, and its styles represent a cross-section of that century. However, the contributing properties include older buildings, like the ca. 1740 Mesier-Brewer House, and newer ones like the Village Hall, formerly a post office designed under the supervision of Franklin D. Roosevelt during his presidency.
[edit] History
In 1819 a small cotton mill was built in the hollow created by the creek as it descends from Lake Wappinger to drain into the nearby Hudson River. By 1856 it had become one of the largest printworks in the country. A fire that year destroyed the original buildings completely, but they were immediately rebuilt and continued in operation until 1931. The streets on the hillside opposite the mill are lined with frame houses, mostly duplexes, built by the mill for its workers. The two halves of the district, and the village, are connected by an 1884 stone arch bridge that replaced earlier wooden structures.[1]
The village's business district, along West Main Street north and south of the creek, is lined with three-story Italianate row buildings dating to the years after the Civil War. The residential streets to the southwest are filled with larger houses in a variety of 19th-century styles, from Greek and Gothic Revival to Second Empire and Queen Anne.[1]
Two significant contributing properties separately listed in the Register date to the pre- and post-industrial eras. The Mesier-Brewer House in the center of the village is a well-preserved pre-Revolutionary stone and wood home common in the region. Across from it at the junction of West Main Street and South Avenue is the fieldstone village hall. It was originally built as one of five post offices in the county designed in stone at the insistence of Roosevelt, a native of nearby Hyde Park.[1] In the late 20th century a new post office was built several blocks to the east and in 1995 the village moved its operations there from an old savings bank building downtown. The police, who had been working from the Mesier House, joined them.[2]
In 1984 the district was added to the National Register of Historic Places. It is described as a "collection of distinct nineteenth-century structures linked to the development of an important Hudson Valley industrial center."[1] The village is currently proposing efforts such as traffic calming to make the commercial portions of the district more friendly to pedestrians[3]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e Larson, Neil (1984-08-03). National Register of Historic Places nomination form, Wappingers Falls Historic District. Retrieved on 2008-03-24.
- ^ Community Facilities and ServicesPDF
- ^ Draft Wappingers Falls Vision PlanPDF, 2006, 22.
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