I went to visit the Kripplebush Schoolhouse Museum over the holiday weekend to take a glimpse at school life at the turn of the last century. I discovered that not much has changed since the 1800’s. The teacher still sits in the front of the classroom with the students contently listening (with no cell phone use).
The sides of the classroom have all the things that a teach would need with books, maps and a potbelly stove to keep the children warm. What I thought was unusual about this school house is that it was in use until 1951 when the new school system was built. It still has a piano and art supplies showing that it was used for all classes at all ages.
It is not so different from elementary school classes of today which are handled in one room. It was at a time when things were much slower in life and getting an education was a privilege that was not taken for granted. It is a very unique museum.
Downtown Kripplebush
When you are finished, take time to explore the small downtown just up the road. It has many historical homes and beautiful gardens and a few small antique shops. The Methodist church sits in the middle of the town as a symbols of its religious past. The church is still active but sits on a country lane looking majestic.
It is an interesting museum but it is rarely open. It is open for two hours on a Sunday and only until the end of October. Then you will have to wait until May. Still it is worth the trip with the town’s beautiful little downtown and its picturesque fields of wildflowers and fields as you enter and leave town.
The beautiful wildflowers as you enter town.
The beautiful fields of flowering weeds and wildflowers
The History of the Museum:
(from the museum website)
The Kripplebush Schoolhouse, an original one room schoolhouse, and the Lodge Hall located behind it are proud examples of a community’s success in preserving its historical assets. This challenging restoration has required generous public support, in dollars as well as in labor. Our organization has been assisted in its efforts by membership contributions and by volunteer activities.
The museum property
The schoolhouse has been set up the way it was in the early 1900s. We have worked with local people concerned with preservation of local history, as well as with former students. Even a professional movie set designer has helped us pay careful attention to historical details.
The original school house
The Lodge Hall displays authentic furniture and articles common to the way that daily life was then lived. Our museum offers the possibility of taking a step back in time. Visitors find it a wonderful opportunity to see and understand subtle and significant ways in which our local culture has changed and how our society has progressed.
The school room classroom
The Back of the classroom
The history of Kripplebush is a rich story that shows us how a proud past can inspire the future of an ever changing community. We would greatly appreciate any help that you could provide for us in meeting our future goals for this lovely community resource.
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.
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 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.
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 Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site in Newburgh, NY
I spent an afternoon exploring the Beacon/Newburgh area with all its historical sites and homes and my last stop was the Washington’s Headquarters State Historical Site in Newburgh, NY. Surrounded by a quickly gentrifying neighborhood it really showed me the progress this area has made and how the site keeps reinventing itself. It shows this site’s resilience.
The Hasbrouck family farmhouse was General George and his wife, Martha’s home for over sixteen months.
For sixteen and a half months, the site was used by General George Washington, along with his wife Martha, his aides, guards and free and enslaved servants. They used the Hasbrouck family’s Dutch-style farmhouse as their home and headquarters. It was the longest time they spend at any military headquarters beginning in April of 1782 and ending in August of 1783 as the Revolutionary War was drawing to a close (Palisade Interstate Park Commission).
I was able to take the last tour of the day at 4:00pm and our tour guide was excellent. She really knew the history of the site and gave us a comprehensive tour of the home and the time before and after the war. We went room by room in the Hasbrouck family farmhouse and she described how the family had utilized the house and then how General Washington and his wife and staff used the home during the war years.
I started the tour in the Museum Building, which is a Federal style building that was erected in 1910 to house the collection of artifacts from that period. The collection includes the only surviving section of the boom that stretched across the Hudson River at West Point (Palisade Interstate Park Commission).
The main gallery housing equipment and the surviving piece of the boom.
The Boom that protected the Hudson River
The piece of the boom that survived and was dredged from the river in the late 1800’s.
The second gallery had the video history of the site and how Washington’s troops advanced in the area. It also went over the last years of the war and the progress American troops made.
The Video Gallery at the Washington Headquarters site.
The sign of the historic site.
After the tour of the museum on my own, we started the tour of the Hasbrouck family homestead. When we approached the house, you could see where the house was added onto from the original footprint. At the top of the doorway, we could see the cornerstone where the family name and year of the building of the house was built.
The cornerstone to the home with the family name and date.
Jonathan and Tryntje Hasbrouck built this Dutch style farmhouse between 1750 and 1770. They raised their family and ran their business here. The property stretched from the banks of the Hudson River to about two miles inland for a total of almost 200 acres. After his passing in 1780, his wife ran the home and the business successfully for the rest of her life (Palisades Interstate Park Commission).
The outside of the Hasbrouck family home. Notice the addition to the home.
The house itself has none of the original family furnishings but many period pieces including General George Washington’s desk from another location.
George Washington’s desk from another location that was brought here.
We started off the tour in the family kitchen and dining room which was one big room with a walk-in fireplace. The room was broken into sections as the food would be cooked in the giant fireplace and served at the family table off to the side. As more people visited the home, an area off to the side was used for plating and serving.
The Hasbrouck’s and Washington’s Dining Room
The walk-in fireplace for cooking and the dining space.
The plating area of the dining room that would be used by the Washington’s.
We next entered the battle room, where all the enlisted men would be doing all the General’s office work, correspondence and paying bills. Everything was done by hand and if multiple copies needed to be made, it was more work for the men working there.
The War Room where the enlisted men did all their work and corresponded with the troops and other officers.
General Washington’s office was off to the back. This is where all the strategic work of the war was performed and where General Washington worked with his staff.
General Washington’s office during the end of the war.
Once you passed through the front foyer again is where the enlisted men slept, two per bed which the tour guide said was uncomfortable for the men. Only in the summer months when half the staff was on leave could they sleep one per bed.
The enlisted officers sleeping chambers during the war years.
The three rooms on the other side of the house were used as the Parlor, where the Washington’s would entertain visiting dignitaries and guests. This was right off the main kitchen area.
The Parlor where the Washington’s entertained visitors and dignitaries.
The next two rooms were used as the Washington’s bedroom where we all noticed that the bed was so short. The guide informed us that even though George Washington was over six feet, people slept sitting up at that time as they considered it healthier.
The Washington’s bedroom
The next room over was the servant’s room where the free and enslaved servants would sleep and attend to the needs of the Washington’s. It looked to me that Martha contributed more than just entertaining the troops. She must have been the ear that her husband needed at wartime.
The Servant’s room
What I thought was interesting is the stairs going up did not lead to a second floor. The tour guide said that this was in the Dutch tradition of not having a second floor considering the Hasbrouck’s had ten children. She said only later on did families finish the house and construct the upstairs. Once the house tour was over and the tour guide answered all our questions, we were able to tour the grounds for the last hour before the park closed.
The property looking down the Hudson River to Bannerman Castle.
On the property was the Tower of Victory, which President Lincoln’s son built in honor of the Hundredth anniversary of the war. It was closed for touring. The details of the tower were really beautiful with the eagles adorning the sides of the building and the beautiful stonework.
The Tower of Victory sign
The “Tower of Victory”
The views of the Hudson River were breathtaking. On this beautiful sunny afternoon, you can see all the way into Beacon across the river and look as far down river as Bannerman Castle. Everything was so clear and beautiful from this site and you could see all the surrounding area. You could see why they picked this spot as the strategic headquarters for this part of the war.
The Minuteman statue on the property.
Artist Henry Hudson Kitson sculpted this statue and the Minute Man statue on the town green in Lexington, MA. These monuments commemorate the citizen-soldiers whose selfless bravery and sacrifice made this country possible (Palisades Interstate Park Commission).
Artist Henry Hudson Kitson was a British born artist who was educated at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He was known for his military statues (Wiki).
The Madam Brett Homestead at 50 Van Nydeck Avenue in Beacon, NY.
The Brett Homestead marker
The sign that welcomes visitors
I recently visited the Madam Brett Homestead on a walking tour and discovered that the family had a lot to do with the growth of not just Dutchess County but New York State as well. The house was the homestead for five generations of family members each who added to the home.
The homestead’s historic plaque
Since the family practiced thrift in the home and decor, we get to see the house with period furniture that has been donated back to the house from the family. Also, period pieces have been donated by other members of the community to show the home at different periods of time. It gave us a look into the home life of a prosperous farming and milling family.
The entrance of the Brett Homestead
The tour starts with a short video on the family and how Madam Brett got her inheritance from her father and built on the wealth that he had created. She leased out land with water and mineral rights thus adding to her wealth and had a grist mill that was the only one on the patent, so everyone had to go through her for grain processing.
The china cabinet with family related items.
The homestead was built by Roger Brett and Catherine Rombout Brett on land inherited by her father, which was part of the Rombout Patent (which covered much of lower Dutchess County). The couple had been married in 1703 and had originally moved in with her mother in the family’s manor home in Manhattan. Upon the death of her mother, Catherine inherited the land and the manor house in Manhattan. Land rich and cash poor, she and her husband mortgaged the manor house in Manhattan and built a small home and gristmill. They moved into their Dutch style home on Christmas Day 1709. The house was expanded in 1715. The home was later added on again in the 1800’s to the present house (Brett Homestead Pamphlet).
In the hallway on display is the original Rombout Patent, which everyone on our tour thought was very impressive. It had been found and was given back to the house. It shows the land deal that the settlers made with the Native Americans.
A copy of the Rombout Patent
We next headed to the Dining Room, where the family entertained guests. The room is full of period furniture and silver both family owned and donated to the homestead. The formality of entertaining is shown in the room set up.
The Dining Room at the Brett Homestead
Hannah Brett’s (Madam Brett’s granddaughter) bridesmaid dress was on display as well. This had been worn when she danced the Minuet with Marquis de Lafayette. I thought this was interesting in that she had this altered for the occasion and that it had lasted all these years. She had worn this for the wedding of Cornelia DePeyster, whose wedding dress in the New York Historical Society (Brett Homestead pamphlet). It was donated back to the house by the family descendants for display.
Hannah Brett-Schenck’s bridesmaid dress
Period furniture and decorations adorn the Brett Homestead
The decorative pieces in the Dining Room
The Dining Room fireplace
The kitchen was very interesting because when you walk through it you will see the modern kitchen in the front of the room that was put in around the late 1950’s and early 1960’s compared to the other side of the room which has the original fireplace and kitchen equipment. It shows the contrast in cooking and entertaining over the last two centuries.
The old versus the new in the Brett Homestead kitchen.
The house was constructed in three sections. The original section of the house from 1709, the addition in 1715 and then the grander addition in the 1800’s that gives the house the look it has now. You can see how the house evolved from a small residence to a grand showplace and you can see this in the way it was designed.
The upstairs hallway shows the contrast between the old home and the additions.
Each of the rooms were decorated with period pieces and some of the rooms has themes to them such as one was a Children’s Room, another was the family office and one contained farm equipment. All the items represented a different time in the home’s history.
The Children’s Room with a collection of dolls that creeped visitors out.
The upstairs bedrooms
The period farm equipment display.
The other bedrooms showed guest rooms for visitors to the area, the office where the Brett’s would have conducted business and rooms would have housed many family members.
The Master Bedroom with canopy bed and bedwarmer
The Guest Bedroom
The home office of the family.
The house stayed in the family until the death of Alice Sutcliffe Crary at 85 in 1953. The Melzingah Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution purchase the homestead to save it from becoming a supermarket. They have been lovingly restoring and holding events at the homestead as well as contributing to the community at large and promoting Historic Preservation, Education and Patriotism (Madam Brett Homestead pamphlet).
I recently visited the house with a group of people on a tour and we visited the house for Christmas and the local garden club had decorated part of the house for holidays with garland on the bannisters and on some of the mantels. The outside of the house was quite festive.
The house during the holiday season.
The house adorned with wreaths and garland on the holiday tour.
The welcoming entrance to the house during the holiday season.
The docent tours are very interesting and really give you a view of what life was like in the house for the families that lived here. They only take place on the second Saturday of the month so you need to plan ahead.