Category: Exploring the Island of Manhattan

Pascack Reformed Church                                                                  65 Pascack Road                                                                           Park Ridge, NJ 07656

Pascack Reformed Church 65 Pascack Road Park Ridge, NJ 07656

Pascack Reformed Church

65 Pascack Road

Park Ridge, NJ 07656

(201) 391-4066

https://www.pascackreformedchurch.org/

https://www.facebook.com/PascackChurch/

Open for Service: Sunday Service-Please check the website for times

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46713-d33069980-Reviews-Pascack_Reformed_Church-Park_Ridge_New_Jersey.html

The Pascack Reformed Church at 65 Pascack Road

The Pascack Reformed Church is one of those historic centers to a town that dot New England and set the tone for a town. The church gives a town its ‘classic’ look and it bases for the development of the town. This elegant church is located on Pascack Road, one of the early Colonial byways of Bergen County, NJ and is one of the few remaining churches from the Revolutionary War era.

Built in 1813, it has that unique look of a time when religion played a more important role in people’s lives and was the center of the community. Its cemetery is the resting place of many of the ‘first’ families of Bergen County including the Demarest, Wortendyke, Bogart, Terhune, Van Ripper and Haring families whose names are still part of the county.

Walking in the cemetery is a experience to know the history of our State and the contribution that these families had in the creation of the State of New Jersey. There is a quiet elegance of a historic cemetery in the fall around Halloween. It is as if the spirits of the past remind us of the future that lies ahead of us. Plus it has the classic “New England” look of a church and its cemetery. It is a piece of Bergen County history that most people just pass. Please take time to walk the grounds in the Fall and Spring and experience an open air museum of what has made our County what it is today.

Please also show respect to the people buried there.

The History of the Pascack Reformed Church:

(from the Pascack Reformed Church website)

In the 1700’s the early settlers of the Dutch Reformed faith in the Pascack Valley attended the churches of Tappan, Schraalenburgh, (Bergenfield-Dumont), Paramus and Saddle River.  As the population increased they desired a church in their own vicinity.  On May 27, 1787, residents of Pascack petitioned the Classis of Hackensack to form a church.  Another meeting was held in Hackensack for the purpose of forming a church, but since no one from the Pascack area attended, the matter was closed.​

Over the next 25 years several attempts were made to establish a church in Pascack.  In 1812, following the separation of the Saddle River church from the Paramus church, the people of Saddle River offered to unite with the people of Pascack and to assist them in building a house of worship.  The two congregations would be one church, with services held on alternating Sundays at Pascack and Saddle River.​

The Pascack Reformed Church Historic Marker

On October 23,1812, Peter Wortendyke his wife Matze, and Abraham Campbell and his wife Margaret deeded one acre of land to John J. Demarest, Garret J. Ackerson, Albert Wortendyke and John J. Blauvelt, appointed trustees for the building of the Reformed Dutch Church as Pascack, for the sum of $60.00 (current New York State money).

The historic church graveyard next to the church in the Fall of 2024

At this time, the church building was begun as members of the Saddle River and Pascack congregations took part in the construction of the edifice.  The shell of the building was completed that fall, and the Rev.  Stephen Goetschius presided at its dedication.  The interior was completed in the spring of 1813, and the founding date of the church has been reckoned as May 3, 1813.  The front and Pascack Road side of the church was constructed of sandstone quarried locally while fieldstone was used for the rear wall and east side.​

The Demarest/Wortendyke/Banta family graveyard

In 1814 the boundary line of the Paramus church located one quarter mile to the south of the Pascack was annulled.  A plan for the new church to be constitutionally organized was drawn up once consent was gained from consistories of neighboring congregations (whose members might wish to join the new congregation).  On the third Tuesday of June in 1814, the Classis of Paramus met at Pascack and selected a committee to elect a consistory for the church.  Those chosen Elders were John T. Eckerson, John Campbell, Garret Duryie, Esq., Jacob Banta, Esq.  Deacons chosen were Garret J. Ackerman, Edward Eckeson, Hendric Storm and John F. Demarest.  The newly installed pastor of the Saddle River Church, the Rev.  Stephen Goetschius, became President of the Consistory.

The church sign outside the church.
 
On August 29, 1814, with about 48 members, the new church was officially organized and incorporated as “The Consistory of the Congregation of Pascack in the County of Bergen.” This declaration was signed and sealed by all members of the Consistory on that date.

The historic graveyard next to the church
 
Following its organization, the Pascack Church and the Saddle River church became separate congregations served by one pastor, the Rev.  Stephen Goetschius, who resided in the Goetschius family home (which still stands at East Saddle River Road and Lake Street in present day Upper Saddle River).  Goetschius continued to be pastor of both churches until 1835 when he resigned due to old age.  When he was over 80 years old, he could still ride a horse between the two churches!  He passed from this life in the year 1837.​

The Historic graveyard during the Fall of 2024

In 1834 with the advanced age of the previous pastor, the Rev.  John Manley was called and become pastor of both churches upon the resignation of Stephen Goetschius in 1835.  During this year there was some sentiment for separation between the two churches, as it became apparent that each congregation desired a minister of its own.  Manley continued to serve as the pastor of the Saddle River Church until 1866 and served the Pascack Church as minister until 1853 when the latter church desired to have a service every Sunday.  He lived on a small farm in the present day Upper Saddle River and was also engaged in farming.  Manley died in New Brunswick, NJ on May 21,1871.   
 
The year 1853 saw the start of a movement to obtain additional land for the expansion of the church cemetery and the erection of a parsonage due to the calling of a full time minister to serve the congregation at Pascack. On August 24,1855, a deed was given by Peter P. Wortendyke and Polly, his wife, to the Consistory of the church at Pascack for 15 acres of land for the consideration of $1,600.00. (Of this 15 acre parcel a portion was later sold to the Hackensack Water Company and another portion to the Borough of Park Ridge.  Of the remaining 7.98 acres, 3.7 acres are in cemetery usage; the remainder is used for the parsonage and the Park Ridge Barrier Free Housing.) The first parsonage was built in 1855 on the site of the present church parsonage at Pascack Road and Fremont Avenue.  

The inside of the church:

The interior of the church before service

The beautiful stained glass windows

The beautiful stained glass windows of the church
 
Upon the departure of the Rev.  John Manley in 1854, a call was made upon the Rev.  John T. Demarest, who accepted the call and became the third pastor of the church and its first full time minister.  Pastor Demarest and his family were the first to occupy the newly built parsonage. In 1857 John Demarest received an Honorary Doctor of Divinity Degree from Rutgers College and remained at Pascack until 1867.  He died in New Brunswick, NJ on January 30,1897 and was buried at New Prospect, NY.  
 
In 1868 the Rev. Benjamin Bartholf became pastor and served for five years.  In 1872 a plan was put forth to tear down the church and replace it with a $12,000 edifice.  That plan did not succeed and the original building remained.  
 
The years 1873-1875 saw the church without a pastor.  During this time the original stone building was remodeled at a cost of nearly $4,000, and its interior was renovated and refurnished.  The parsonage was also rebuilt at this time at a cost of $1,000.  A minister of the Classis, the Rev.  Alexander McKelvey, served the congregation as its “Stated Supply Pastor.”  
 
On April 20,1875, the Rev.  Edward Lodewick was installed as pastor; his tenure continued for the next 28 years.  On May 11, 1900 a reception was held for Rev.  Lodewick and his wife in honor of the 25 anniversary of his pastorate.  After his passing in the year 1910, Mrs. Lodewick erected a plaque to his memory at the rear of the Sanctuary.  
 
Work was begun on the Parish House (Sunday School Building) in 1885 and was completed in 1887.  The Church Sunday School–in existence as early as 1841, and which had previously met in the church balcony and the barn of G. J.  Ackerman on Werimus Road in the present day Woodcliff Lake–now had a home of its own.  
 
Another unsuccessful attempt was made to replace the church building in the year 1890.  The next year saw the original church remodeled with the balcony lowered to its present form.  A new bell was installed above the tower.  A few years later the bell became the first fire alarm system for the newly formed Park Ridge Fire Department when its pull rope was extended to ground level on the outside of the tower.  Further remodeling in the year 1893 included an addition to the rear of the church, and the choir was relocated from the balcony to a new loft behind the pulpit.  
 
With the resignation of Mr. Lodewick in 1903 the church was once again without a pastor; on April 10, 1904, the Rev.  Francis A. Seibert was installed as the new minister. On October 9, 1912, the congregation celebrated the 100th anniversary of the passing of the deed for the church property.  The Sunday School’s celebration continued the next evening.  
 
In 1921 the church received its first pipe organ, which was given by the family of J. Boyce Smith in his memory. During the month of April 1929 the church observed the twenty-fifth anniversary of Mr. Seibert’s pastorate and at a public reception the membership presented him with a fully equipped insured and licensed Chevrolet Coupe along with $125.00 for operating expenses of the vehicle.  In addition to his faithful devotion to the congregation, Mr. Seibert was very much involved in service to the community; he served as Mayor of Park Ridge from 1914 to 1918.  
 
On September 12,1931, the church was re-incorporated as “The Pascack Reformed Church of Park Ridge, New Jersey, Inc.” Six years later in 1937 the congregation celebrated its 125th year of ministry.  
The end of the decade saw the passing of Mr. Seibert after 35 years of service to the Pascack Reformed Church. His pastorate is the longest on record, and he was the last minister to occupy the old parsonage.  
 
The Rev.  James Reid served as the next pastor for a short time, and was followed by the Rev. Francis E. Potter, who along with his wife moved into the newly constructed parsonage, which had been erected at a cost of $6,000.  His ministry to the congregation was interrupted from 1944 to 1946 while he served as a Chaplain in the U.S. Navy.  During that time the Rev.  Gordon Markey served as the Interim Pastor.  
 
During the 1940’s the church moved forward with an active Women’s Missionary Society, which maintained projects at home and abroad along, as well as a Ladies Aid Society which was active in fundraising activities. The Youth Group was very active at this time and an Evening Guild was established.  In 1949 the Choir produced a show which raised enough money for new robes, and the first Men’s Club came into existence at this time.  The same year saw the departure of Mr. Potter and shortly after, in September, the Rev.  Wilbur E. Ivins was installed as pastor.   

During the 1950’s the Upper Pascack Valley area grew and developed and so did the church.  With greater activities it was necessary to renovate the basement of the Sunday School Building (previously known as the Parish House) along with an addition in 1953 with a complete renovation of the remainder of the building.  
 
In 1955 the Evening Guild oversaw the work of illuminating the steeple.  The same year saw the beginning of a weekly newsletter now known as “THE SPIRE.” Also in 1955 a retirement dinner was held for Mrs. George Bennet who retired after 50 years as Church Organist.  In 1959 the 1893 addition to the church was demolished and replaced with the present much larger structure.  Extensive rebuilding was done to the original portion of the church building (including removal of the wooden floor and the installation of a concrete floor topped off with tile).  In 1960 the present pipe organ was installed in memory of Elsie Holloway Gowell, and in 1961 the Edward J. Sisley Memorial Carillon was dedicated.  The year 1962 marked the 150th year of the life of the congregation and was celebrated by a year-long series of services and activities, including a Historical Pageant on October 28th.  
 
In 1963 Mr. Ivins moved on to another church and a seminary student, Robert H. Pope, arrived for a summer assignment to fill in the gap until a new minister could be found.  Mr. Pope liked the church and a delegation from the congregation informed him that they would be willing to wait until his graduation if he would accept a call to be the next pastor of the Pascack Reformed Church.  He accepted and was ordained and installed in June of 1964, thereby becoming the tenth pastor in the history of the church.  
 
Like many congregations Pascack Reformed Church felt the need for more space in the early 1960’s; therefore the Sunday School Building was renovated Fellowship Hall added to the Sunday School Building in 1965. (Previous plans for the Hall were for the erection of a separate building on a portion of land purchased in 1957, land now used for the church parking lot.) With the addition of Fellowship Hall the church opened its doors as a meeting place for various groups, a tradition that continues to this day.  
 
In the nation’s bicentennial year, 1976, Pascack Reformed Church was honored with the erection and dedication of the Historical Marker which stands adjacent to the original church building on Pascack Road.  
 
With the need for handicapped housing in the area becoming apparent in the early 1980’s, numerous members of the congregation led a movement which resulted in the erection of the Park Ridge Barrier Free Housing Complex (Woodland Gardens) on the unused portion of the Church Cemetery.  The complex is accessible to Sulak Lane, and provides access for people with handicaps to reach various businesses and local facilities.  
 
The 175th Anniversary celebration began with a church picnic in September of 1987, followed by various events to mark the occasion, and ended with a closing service on May l, 1988, in which former pastor Wilbur Ivins took part.  The day concluded with refreshments in Fellowship Hall, during which historical items were on display.  
 
Mr. Pope and his family were honored for his twenty-fifth anniversary as Pastor of Pascack Reformed Church on June 11, 1989, at a well attended luncheon after the Sunday morning service.  Less than a year later, in March of 1990, he announced his plans for retirement and that December 30th would be his last Sunday.  
 
In 1990 the congregation learned of the passing of former Pastor Francis E. Potter. On the afternoon of December 9th a “Retirement Worship Service” was held for Mr. Pope which was attended by well over 200 people.  After the service a reception, which lasted well into the evening, was held in Fellowship Hall.  Robert Pope along with his wife, Joey, departed for their retirement home in Walton, New York early the next month and shortly after Rev.  David H. Smith became the interim pastor, who served until the arrival of the Rev.  Paul G. Janssen in October of 1991.  
 
The pastorate of Rev. Janssen had an unusual beginning when shortly before his installation service at 4:00 p.m. in the afternoon of Sunday, October 20,1991, the ballast of a fluorescent tube in the church balcony burned out.  The ballast’s untimely death caused a smell of smoke in the building, so the Park Ridge Volunteer Fire Department was called to the scene and after a thorough check of both the church and Sunday School Building the service began 35 minutes later.  At the conclusion of the service the packed church emptied into Fellowship Hall for a reception honoring the new pastor, the eleventh in the history of the church.’  
 
On October 4th, 2015, Pascack Reformed Church installed it’s twelfth minister, the Rev. Larissa Romero – the first minister serving Pascack Reformed to graduate from Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. She was also the first woman minister installed at the church, as well as its youngest, accepting the call at age 28. Sunday, January 1, 2023 launched the next pastorate at Pascack Reformed Church with our thirteenth minister, Sharon Gross-Gills.​

Much more will be written as we travel into the future.  The Pascack Reformed Church has a wonderful history of over 200 years of proclaiming the Gospel and ministering to the needs of people, and now looks forward to continuing into the future!​

Carl W. Weil, Church Historian
Larissa Romero, Sharon Gross-Gill, Editors 

The History of their Historic Cemetery:

(from the church website)

The Pascack Reformed Church Historic Cemetery

In 1813, shortly after the founding of the church, a cemetery was established at the rear of the building.  At that time a one room schoolhouse, built in 1808, stood at the north end of the church property.  This school eventually evolved into Park Ridge High School.  Years later a 10 x 12 inch bronze plaque on a metal pole was installed at the site of the original building.  The plaque remained until early 1989 when it was discovered missing.​

The first burial in the cemetery was that of six year old Katherine Blauvelt in 1813; the most recent burial occurred in 1972.  After 180 years the gravestone for the first interment is still legible. In 1893 several graves were moved due to the construction of an addition to the rear of the church.  At this time the graves and their new locations are not known.​

​In 1959 49 grave sites were removed to permit construction of the present addition at the north end of the church.  The remains of all were reburied in a vault, the front of which has a plaque containing the names and year of passing of all of the deceased.  The gravestones for the aforementioned are mostly on the embankment at the east end of the cemetery and plans are being made to re-erect the stones at a suitable location in the cemetery as memorials. In 1912 and 1913 the New Jersey Historical Society did a study of this portion of the church cemetery and noted a 1745 gravestone with no further reference.  The inventory received is incomplete and an attempt to obtain a complete reference will be made to the Society.​

The historic cemetery

On at least two known occasions, graves were moved to Pascack from other locations.  One such occasion involved two members of the Wortendyke Family who were previously buried on a farm in Wyckoff.  The other involved several graves from an old cemetery in Hillsdale west of Broadway and slightly north of Parkview Drive.  Evidence of another possible relocation, a rough stone with the initials “L.H.”, is located next to the grave of Ellen Holdrum, who died in 1820.  It is possible that the grave marked “L.H.” is that of a member of the Holdrum Family who died earlier whose remains and stone were moved to Pascack after the establishment of the church cemetery.​

While records and maps for the cemetery at the rear of the church may exist, they are not in the church’s possession.  Many mysteries, therefore remain, including the discovery of human bones uncovered in 1965 when a trench was excavated for a new sanitary sewer line from Fellowship Hall to Wampum Road.  When the time comes to replace the parking lot surface it is hoped that the area can be x-rayed for more remains especially the portion next to the cemetery directly behind Fellowship Hall.

The Hopper and Wortendyke family plots

When the church purchased the larger (southern) part of the church cemetery from the Wortendyke family in 1855, three older cemeteries already existed on the property: the Wortendyke Family Cemetery, the African American Cemetery, and the American Indian Cemetery.​

The exact age of the Wortendyke Family Cemetery, located at the northeast corner of the larger cemetery, is not known, but the two oldest legible stones date to the year 1780.  There may be older graves, however, since the Wortendyke Family had bought the property in 1735 and rented out land to several tenant farmers who lived in log cabins until Wortendyke moved from the present day Harrington Park in the year 1750.

The historic Demarest-Wortendyke-Bogart-Terhune family plots
 
The previously mentioned 1912 and 1913 inventory by the New Jersey Historical Society noted about 100 rough stones in the areas of the present day church cemetery all of which were noted as having “no marks” (inscriptions of any kind). Several Terhune family field stones are listed as being somewhere in the church cemetery by the Ackerman and Goff study dated May 1946.  The oldest Terhune burial is listed as “1766 I.T.H.” and, along with the others, could be in the Wortendyke Family Cemetery. As of now only about 30 of the rough stones are visible and a future historical project is planned to raise all to their original elevation above ground and clean and study them for markings.​

The African American Cemetery is located adjacent to the cemetery building directly behind the church parsonage and, like the Wortendyke Family Cemetery, is 50 feet by 100 feet in area.  Its oldest known burial dates to 1834.  Buried here are members of the families of Bergen County’s Free Blacks of the pre-Civil War periods.  In addition, many of the men buried in the African-American cemetery were Civil War Veterans who had served with a Connecticut Regiment.

To the east of this cemetery in a rectangular hollow, cleared at a very early but unknown date, lies the American Indian Cemetery. There are no markings of any type in this area and knowledge of the burial grounds existence has been passed on by word of mouth through the years.

The Wortendyke/Demarest family marker.
 
The remaining area of the larger cemetery was laid out into 16 grave plots in 1855.  Many of these plots were bought by the older area families, probably because the four and five hundred acre farms in the northern Bergen County area were being broken up into smaller parcels in the middle of the 19th century, and little room was left for family cemeteries.​

With most of the older families leaving the area in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries many of the plots were no longer used and in time the church saw fit to reclaim them through legal means and sub-divide the plots into smaller units.

In more recent times church members have purchased available smaller plots or single grave sites.  There are now about six burials per year in the Pascack Reformed Church Cemetery.  Burials are limited to owners of plots, and new sales of the very limited number of plots is restricted to members of the Pascack Reformed Church. It is hoped that in the near future all gravestones that are downed will be raised and those that are broken in both the main part of the cemetery and the one behind the church will be repaired.  ​

The Wortendyke family plot at the Pascack Reformed Church

When research concerning the three older cemeteries in the southern portion of the cemetery continues, an application will be made for the erection of a second historical marker which will be an additional tribute to the American Indian tribe of the area and the early African and European American settlers of the Upper Pascack Valley area of Bergen County.​

The beautiful historic cemetery is so breathtaking in the fall months.

Carl W. Weil, Church Historian
Larissa Romero, Editor

Visit from Bergen Community College for the Bergecco-Parc Consulting Inc. project ‘The Bergen 250-the 250th Anniversary of the Revolutionary War’:

As part of the Team project, I took my students on a tour of the church and its historic graveyard, which is home to the Wortendyke family plot. As part of the project’s ’Farm to Table Dinner’, there is to be a ‘Candlelight Walking tour’ of the graveyard after dinner. I also challenged the students to create a ‘Halloween Walking tour and Spaghetti Dinner’ fundraiser for these historic churches.

We were given private tour by the new church pastor, Pastor Sharon Gross-Gill, whose pride in this church and its history was shared with the students.

The tour started with a talk of the church’s place in Bergen County and its history. Then we toured the bell tower and the students got to ring the bell

The students touring the Bell tower

The students were given an opportunity to ring the bell

We then toured the historic graveyard after the tour of the church. This is the resting place of the Wortendyke family plot as well as members of the Demarest, Banta, Bauvelt, Van Ripper, DeBraun and Terhune families.

Barbara, one of the church historian’s and tour guide, explained that some of the graves dated back to 1635 long before the founding of the country.

Before we moved onto the next site, we took a group shot with Pastor Gross-Gill. It was a very informative and interesting afternoon.

The Easter Holidays:

During the Holy Week I visited the church after visit to say ‘Thank you’ for the tour. I went for the Palm Sunday services and the sun finally broke and it was a nice day. The flowers were blooming and it was nice to be outside. It was a very nice Palm Sunday services.

The church on Palm Sunday morning

The front of the church on Palm Sunday 2025

The front of the church in full bloom during the Easter holidays

The inside of the church during Palm Sunday morning

Museum of Broadway                                           145 West 45th Street                                          New York, NY 10036

Museum of Broadway 145 West 45th Street New York, NY 10036

Museum of Broadway

145 West 45th Street

New York, NY 10036

https://www.themuseumofbroadway.com/plan-your-visit

Open: Sunday-Tuesday 9:30am-6:30pm/Wednesday 9:30am-2:30pm/Thursday-Friday 9:30am-6:30pm/Saturday 9:30am-8:00pm

Admission: Adults $49.00/Seniors $32.00/Students $29.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/AttractionProductReview-g60763-d25074776-Museum_of_Broadway-New_York_City_New_York.html

The entrance to the Museum of Broadway at 145 West 45th Street

The front of the Museum of Broadway

I visited the newly opened Museum of Broadway recently and what a nice surprise the museum is with a great depth in the collection. There was the history of the theater in New York City and how it progressed from small theaters downtown to the theater’s progression uptown to it home now in the core of Times Square.

The Make-Up Room on the way up the stairs.

The Call Board display.

The museum is very interesting in that when you enter the back of the museum you feel that you are going backstage at a theater and preparing for a show. You head up the stairs past make up rooms, wardrobe rooms and the star’s rooms. The you head out the door like you are going out on stage. You feel that rush of the stage.

The Stage Door stairs.

The Broadway Playbill Room exhibit

The Playbill Room display

As you head up the stairs to the exhibition the museum makes you feel like an actor on opening night. The sounds of the stage and the noises of the crew in the background make you feel like you are part of the show. The Playbill Room displays some of the popular shows from the past and present.

The Props of the backstage.

Then you open the door, and you enter the main museum with displays on the history of the theater. As you progress through the museum, you will see displays on popular shows through the years from Flo Ziegfield and the Ziegfield Follies to the modern shows on Broadway.

The Ziegfield Room

The Ziegfield Room

Costumes that were found in a box in the attic of the theater.

Ethel Merman in “Anything Goes” when she first started her career. She was so young. I pulled the movie that featured a lot of the Broadway cast. Ethel Merman never lost her touch throughout her career.

“Anything Goes” from the movie.

From there, I explored the museum and many of the most famous shows on Broadway had their own displays with props, scripts, pictures and costumes from the shows. Not just the revivals but the original shows as well. It was interesting to see what the original stars wore in the shows as well as these costumes still existed after all this time. I kept the pictures in order as I toured through the displays of the Broadways most popular productions.

The Oklahoma! exhibit with costumes and scenery from the show.

The Oklahoma set props from the recent revival

The West Side Story set

The West Side Story set from the recent revival

When the original “Hello Dolly” came out in the 1960’s, it made a huge star of Carol Channing, who owned the role until the day she died. I had seen her revival production in the early 1990’s and I will tell you that even in her 80’s, she had more pep and vitality than any one person had. She went on tour with the company after the show closed in New York to China and all over Asia. When you hear her sing “Hello Dolly”, you knew it was her.

“Hello Dolly” with Carol Channing’s original outfit from the show.

The display on the original show “Hello Dolly” with Carol Channing.

The video from London’s West End

The original show “Cabaret”

The costumes from “Cabaret”

The costumes from the show “Hair”

There was a large display to the late and great Stephen Sondheim:

There was a large display of props, scripts, costumes and pictures from all of his show especially the groundbreaking show “Company”. Today it might not seem so unusual for a thirty year old not to be married but in 1970 when the show came out, it was rare. Since the passing of Mr. Sondheim, there has been more interest in his life and his productions that he created. I have seen so many of his show especially his last show “Bounce”, when I was seeing his retrospect at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC.

The groundbreaking show “Company”

“Company” is an excellent show.

The original cast of Company in the 1993 revival.

The revival of company with the production that my father and I saw in 2010.

The “A Chorus Line” display

“The Wiz” display

The “Cats” display and costumes

The Broadway Timeline

Phantom of the Opera

Phantom of the Opera

The Costumes for Evita and Phantom of the Opera

Me in the Hallway of Mirrors

“The Producers” display

The “Avenue Q” display

The ‘Making of a Broadway Show’

The costumes of a Broadway show

The “Chicago” display was the last show display before I got to the gift shop.

The museum progresses room by room and display by display showing the costumes and props of some of the most popular shows on Broadway and shows from the past. The collection has an extensive selection of memorabilia from productions of the past through today and showcases them in such an interesting way.

The Museum of Broadway is such an engaging museum from start to finish and I can see more shows of the future will be displayed here as well. The staff is available to answer any questions you might have and they also have an extensive gift shop in the front of the museum.

Sherman Creek Park                                           3725 Tenth Avenue                                              New York, NY 10034

Sherman Creek Park 3725 Tenth Avenue New York, NY 10034

Sherman Creek Park

3725 Tenth Avenue

New York, NY 10034

(212) 720-3480

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/sherman-creek-park

Open: Sunday-Saturday 24 hours

My review on TripAdvisor:

When I was recently walking around Washington Heights for the “Great Saunter” perimeter walk around the coast line of Manhattan over the summer, I revisited this little park that is tucked away inside Highbridge Park that lines the eastern side of Upper Manhattan. This is the Sherman Creek Park and Swindler Cove. I just thought it was a small extension of the park but it is way more.

The is a once dumping ground for garbage and waste that has been reclaimed and given a rebirth as a ecologically created watershed that is not only helping clean the East River with its plantings but also a sanctuary for birds, butterfly’s and other small creatures when they are migrating.

The paths are well landscaped and offer a sense of quiet and relaxation from the noise of the neighborhood especially in the summer when families are barbecuing and having parties in the small strip of part that is Highbridge Park. Small streams, a waterfall and river plantings plus a boathouse for canoes and Kayaks gives a different more relaxing view of the park.

The entrance to Sherman Creek Park.

Sherman Creek Park

(from the park website)

Sherman Creek Park, a former illegal dumping site, began as a shore cleanup and now encompasses 15 beautifully reclaimed acres along the Harlem River including Swindler Cove, Riley-Levin Children’s Garden, and a living shoreline installation. The neighboring Harlem River Greenway includes a sprawling esplanade, bike path, and a cherry tree planting framing the Harlem River Drive.

The pathways in Sherman Creek Park.

The park serves to demonstrate sustainable management of public lands in an underserved neighborhood, from hosting a major community green space in Northern Manhattan, to implementing organic gardening techniques and best horticultural practices on a daily basis.

The waterfall in Sherman Creek Park

NYRP’s work in Sherman Creek and the surrounding landscape recognizes the remarkable value of natural resources found in Northern Manhattan and works to improve and support public access to Manhattan’s largest remaining wetland complex.

The pathways through Swindler Cove Park.

SWINDLER COVE

(from the park website)

NYRP is responsible for conceiving, developing, executing and maintaining the vibrant and versatile Swindler Cove at Sherman Creek Park, a former illegal dumping site transformed by NYRP into a gorgeous green space. The 5-acre space is home to the Riley-Levin Children’s Garden.

Swindler Cove represents the crown jewel of New York Restoration Project’s public park projects. Opened to the public in August 2003, Swindler Cove represents the full spectrum of NYRP’s mission to restore open space as a catalyst for community revitalization and environmental conservation.

The restoration of the Manhattan coastline.

In 1999, in partnership with the State of New York Department of Transportation and acclaimed landscape designer Billie Cohen, NYRP transformed the land into an oasis of native natural habitats with a lush array of restored woodlands, wetlands, native plantings and a freshwater pond, accented by a gracious pathway.

LIVING SHORELINE

(from the park website)

Sherman Creek Park is threatened by climate change-induced erosion and sea level rise and in 2020 we introduced an ecosystem-based solution called a living shoreline.

Replanting and renovating the coastline.

Integrating native plantings and an artificial oyster reef, our living shoreline design aims to not only attenuate waves that wash away sediment but also enhance the native wetland habitat—one of the last of its kind in all of Manhattan. By stacking specialized concrete blocks called Oyster Castles, its design helps build new habitat for marine species that, over time, could transform the dynamics of a park that we might otherwise lose.

We continue to monitor the shoreline’s evolution to better understand and quantify the ecosystem services that urban wetland restoration projects like ours might offer. “We know that, acre per acre, wetlands are better than forests at fighting climate change,” says Director of Northern Manhattan Parks Jason Smith. “It just requires shifting our relationship with the landscape and realizing it’s not about building a big project and walking away; it’s about staying engaged, stewarding it, and learning from it.”

Video on the New York Restoration Project: Rebuilding parks and gardens.

Hurley Heritage Society Museum                                      52 Main Street                                                 Hurley, NY 12443

Hurley Heritage Society Museum 52 Main Street Hurley, NY 12443

Hurley Heritage Society Museum

52 Main Street

Hurley, NY 12443

(845) 338-1661

https://www.facebook.com/HurleyHeritageSociety/

Home

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Monday-Friday Closed/Saturday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Walking tour of the historical Town of Hurley on the fourth Sunday of each month from May to October.

Admission: Free

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g47943-d26586303-r913514426-Hurley_Historical_Society-Hurleyville_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=19905

The Hurley Heritage Society and Museum at 52 Main Street.

The sign that welcomes you to the museum.

The first thing you will notice is the section of the blue stone road that is displayed in the museum’s yard.

You can still see the grooves in the road that were left by the stone wagons that once traveled through the town.

The Front Hall has an exhibition of Revolutionary items and Native American everyday objects.

The showcase of Native American artifacts, located in the upstairs hall, features a timeline of projectile points(spearheads) from the earliest prehistoric times to 1350 AD.  Many early tools and stone tools used by the River Indian Tribes are displayed with explanations and documented dates. The history of early pottery tells how and why the Indian settlers crafted utensils from local clay pits and kilns (from the museum website).

Hurley played a pivotal role in the American Revolution. Following the burning of Kingston (then New York State’s Capital) by British troops on October 16, 1777, General George Clinton made Hurley’s Main Street a military outpost. Immediately after the burning of Kingston, the Capital was moved to Marbletown until November 18, when it was relocated to Hurley. The Safety Council (which represented the combined legislative and executive functions of the state government) met in the Van Deusen House (from the museum website).

The Dutch Room:

The Dutch Room showcases how a living area might have looked in the Dutch and Colonial period in the 17th and 18th centuries. All curated items—Dutch bible, antique chairs, tables and cupboards, baby cradle, canvas floor cloth, butter churn, Dutch oven, pewter and china dishes—are typical of ones used by Hurley’s early Dutch settlers (from the museum website).

The Dutch Room

The inside of the museum offers you a glimpse of the past of the town of Hurley and in the time of the Dutch settlers.

The front Hallway Gallery is the old Dining Room.

The old Dining Room of the home has a wood burning fireplace for cooking with an old-fashioned toaster and pots for making stew. To the side is a butter churner and a spinning wheel for making clothes.

Off to one side of the room shows life at that time.

The historic kitchen with wooden shoes and a sausage machine next to the butter churner. The armoire is filled with linens.

The kitchen utensils and cooking materials.

The table had a cake mold and a cabbage shredder. The cabinet was filled with pewter and dishes. Home life in a Dutch home was a lot of work.

On display was a Dutch Bible and a felt hat and other items of Dutch life in the Hudson River Valley.

The History of Post Offices:

In the other room has an exhibition of post offices of the local area and their history and development.

The museum was able to replicate old post office of Hurley by saving pieces of it and brought them to the museum. This if the old front of the Hurley Post Office.

This is the original sorting station from the of post office.

The history of the Hurley Post Office.

Visitors entering the exhibition room are transported into the reconstructed interior of a vintage post office. A dozen display panels circling the room guide the visitor through the seven (yes, seven) iterations of the hamlet of Hurley post offices and through the upheaval caused by reservoir construction of the Ashton, West Hurley, Glenford, and Spillway post offices (from the museum website).

The artist Winslow Homer’s Hurley-An Arist’s View art exhibition:

The pieces of his work are shown took place when the artist lived in the area.

Winslow Homer, one of America’s greatest painters and illustrators, visited Hurley, NY, during summers of the 1870s to sketch and paint views of American pastoral life.  It has been a not-so-well-kept secret that that Homer’s famed Snap the Whip is a Hurley scene.  Now, recent research has unearthed a trove of his artworks that were inspired by Hurley homes and landscapes (from the museum’s website).

The exhibition on the Eagle’s Nest Community:

EAGLE’S NEST: EXPLORING THE MYTHS AND REALITY explores the history and lore of the Eagle’s Nest, a multi-racial community that resided on Hurley Mountain dating to the 19th century. The Eagle’s Nest exhibit looks at who settled and lived on Eagle’s Nest – not just the myth and hearsay, but a look at the archival records and documentation.

The Walking tour of the town every forth Sunday:

Every last Saturday, the museum has a walking tour of its historic downtown. The town is steeped in history and played a role after the burning of Kingston, NY by the British. It seemed that people escaped to Hurley to get away from the ruin.

The docents run an hour tour of the downtown historical area and give the history of the businesses and buildings that made up this historical town. With the threat of rain and dark clouds above us, our tour guide, Michael, took us on a modified version of the longer tour that was very interesting.

Two different docents gave two different approaches towards the tour and both were excellent. Try not to miss this when it happens at the end of each month from May to October.

The Start of the tour with our tour guide Richard:

The video:

Now a quiet picturesque town, the tour takes you past the historic houses, the Dutch Reformed Church and through their old Dutch cemetery where the remains of many of the first families of the area now reside.

The start of the walking tour

It is an hour-long tour packed with information and interesting stops along the way.

The Van Deusen House when it was the temporary Capital of New York State

The Van Deusen House-the former headquarters of New York State after the burning of the Captial of New York State-Kingston, NY.

The video of the tour of Downtown

The Pietrus Crispell house has served as the Parsonage since 1839.

The Dutch Reformed Church and the Parsonage.

The tour continued

Talking more about the historic downtown

We toured the Hurley Dutch Reformed Church and the parthage next door. We got to see the inside of the church and the pews of the main room. There were dedications to former ministers along the walls. The services are said to be interesting and engaging.

The Dutch Reformed Church of Hurley, NY at 11 Main Street.

http://hurleyreformedchurch.org/

The pews inside the Dutch Reformed Church of Hurley, NY

The Rooster Weathervane of the Dutch Reformed Church.

The Rooster Weathervane is a tradition of the church. The tour guide said that it was replaced by a cross which is a more Christian symbol of the church.

One of the older houses of Downtown Hurley. Built in 1715 it operated as the Half Moon Tavern in the18th century.

The Old Guard House

The Guard House where a British spy was held until his hanging in retaliation for the Nathan Hale hanging in New York City. It seems that a British spy did the same type of treason as the British felt Nathan Hale had done and hung him in the town the same way as retaliation for his crime.

The Old Burying Ground sign

Touring the Historical Cemetery in Hurley, NY:

The Video of the Tour

The sign at the entrance of the Old Burial Ground in Hurley, NY.

The Old Burial Grounds was the most beautiful part of the tour. The cemetery sits on a bluff overlooking the Catskill Mountains and offers the most beautiful view on a sunny blue day. It makes you less afraid of cemeteries after touring this well-kept burial ground. The tombstones are well maintained for their age, and you can see the family plots of the first families of the area.

The Old Burial Ground with a view of the Catskill Mountains in the background.

The family plots in the cemetery.

The cemetery after it received a lawn cut from the town.

The view from the burial grounds with the Catskills in the background.

Revolutionary War Hero Colonial Charles DeWitt gravesite.

The dogs that will greet you when you exit the cemetery.

These two friendly dogs wanted to join the tour with us by the cemetery.

The house that General George Washington was given a reception during the war.

The General was entertained at this spot during the war with people grateful for his service.

The house General George Washington visited when he was in Hurley NY. This is is Abe Houghtaling House, where a reception was held for General George Washington when he visited Hurley on 1782.

The side view of the house.

The “Stone Road” pieces outside the museum.

There are two sets of street tracks to see at the museum.

The “Blue Stone Road” pieces outside the museum.

We finished the tour outside the museum with a talk about the museum. I highly recommend going to the museum on the fourth Sunday of the month from May to October (must be nice when the leave change colors) while the tours are still running and take this very interesting historical tour of this small town. it is packed with information and interesting sites to see.

Frankenstein and his bride from the recent Scarecrow Festival at the museum.

Christmas time in Hurley and at the society are really charming. I stopped by the society (it is closed for the season) to see how they decorated the building and the whole town was decorated for the Christmas holidays with garland, wreaths and decorated trees. The local church was decked out in wreaths and lights and the whole town looked like a wood carving from Currier & Ives.

The outside of the Hurley Historical Society at Christmas time.

The Society at Christmas time all decked out with decorations.

I decided to take the same walking tour as above on my own to see the town of Hurley during Christmas time.

I started at the sign at the Historical Society sign.

The Old Guard House at Christmas time.

The Reformed Church at Christmas time.

Downtown Hurley at Christmas time.

The Gazebo decorated for the holidays.

I doubled back and walked to the other side of the downtown towards the cemetery. The historic homes in the downtown were decked out with garland and wreaths and the downtown looked very picturesque.

One of the historic homes in Downtown Hurley.

Another one of the historic homes in the downtown area.

Another home on the tour route.

Before I left Downtown Hurley, the Hurley Fire Department added to the festive environment by having their fire truck drive by for their “Santa Around Town” event. It was kind of sad considering there was only myself and another person walking around, and their first stop was a grocery store down the road with two cars in the driveway. Maybe more people were planning on showing up later that afternoon.

The Hurley Fire Department at “Santa Around Town” in Downtown Hurley.

It was a relaxing afternoon in Hurley before I moved on to other parts of the Hudson River Valley for the afternoon.

The 2025 Tootsie Exhibition (in conjunction with the Hurley Public Library):

The Official Trailer to the film

When I visited the museum in August of 2025, the museum in conjunction with the Hurley Public Library was honoring the filming of the movie ‘Tootsie’, which had been filmed at an historic farmhouse just down the road from the museum along with the Hurley Mountain House sports bar just down the road from the museum. Dustin Hoffman, Jessica Lange and Charles Durning were in Hurley for three weeks filming the Upstate New York scene.

The ‘Tootsie’ exhibition

The display

The pictures and articles from the filming

The articles from the filming

Pictures from the day of the film shooting from locals Cindy Gill Lapp, who was a teenager when she visited the set (pictures above with Mr. Hoffman) and Viola Opdahl, who owned the historic house.

After the tour of the museum, there was a special screening of the movie ‘Tootsie’ at the Hurley Public Library with local resident, Cindy Gill Lapp who talked about her times visiting the set with her friends from high school.

Cindy Gill Lapp talking about visiting the set of ‘Tootsie’ in 1981

Ms. Gill Lapp with Dustin Hoffman on the set

Then a group of twenty of us stayed to watch the movie at the back room of the library. It was a really nice special event.

After the movie was over, I stopped down at Stewart’s Shops at 6 Main Street, down the street from the museum for a snack. It is one of only three places near the museum to eat.

The Stewart Shops at 6 Main Street in Hurley

https://locations.stewartsshops.com/ll/US/NY/Hurley/6-Main-Street

My review on TripAdvisor:

The inside of the Stewart Shops

For a gas station snack shop the Pepperoni Pizza was actually quite good and had a nice flavor

It was a very nice afternoon out.