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300 Years of History in the Heart of
New Paltz, New York

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Exhibits @ Historic Huguenot Streets

In addition to historic house museums, the Historic Huguenot Street offers both "traditional" exhibits on its six-acre site and online exhibits that are accessible via this website.

The Galleries

New Paltz Third Saturdays

Online Exhibits

The Galleries

Historic Huguenot Street is currently offering the following exhibit to the public:

Before Hudson, 8,000 Years of Native American History and Culture

An exhibit exploring local Native American history and culture based on artifacts found during recent archaeological digs at Historic Huguenot Street.  A companion online exhibit is available for viewing by clicking on the link below.

Gallery Space for Local Artists

In addition to this exhibit space, HHS also offers gallery space for local artists.  We are especially interested in showing work that highlights the beauty of the Street and the Mid-Hudson Valley region. 

Before Hudson and the gallery for local artists are both in the DuBois Fort Visitor Center. The galleries are free and open to the public.  From May through October, these galleries are open from 10:30am to 5pm every day except Wednesday.  In April, November and December, they are open on weekends from 11am to 3pm.  The galleries are also open for special events.

Portrait Exhibit Opening in July

In July, a yet-to-be-titled exhibit of portraits from the permanent collection of Historic Huguenot Street will open in newly-restored gallery space in the LeFevre House.  We are excited about

Binary Visions: Coverlet Exhibit Opening in October

In October, Historic Huguenot Street and the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at the State University of New York at New Paltz will be opened a collaborative show entitled Binary Visions.  The show, which will hang at the Dorsky Museum, will offer a rare opportunity to view the highlights of our extensive coverlet collection.

For more information about Before Hudson, please contact Leslie LeFevre-Stratton, Curator of Collections. If you are a local artist interested in showing your work in the first floor gallery at the DuBois Fort Visitor Center, please contact Rebecca Mackey, Director of Visitor Services.

All of these exhibits are free and open to the public during the hours stated above.

New Paltz Third Saturdays

Historic Huguenot Street is one of twelve venues participating in this monthly arts and cultural "open house" event. Third Saturdays is part of the larger Art Along the Hudson program.  The Gallery in the DuBois Fort Visitor Center will be open late until 7pm on third Saturdays.  Openings of new shows are timed to coincide with Third Saturdays.  For more information about New Paltz Third Saturdays, click on the logo at left.

 

Online Exhibits

Thanks to a partnership with Hudson River Valley Heritage, Historic Huguenot Street is able to offer a growing number of online exhibits.  For those thinking about a visit to the Street, the offer a glimpse into the stories found here.  For those who know and love the Street, the offer an opportunity to experience our extensive collections, no matter whether you are near or far.


As the Seasons Turn: The Greeting Card Collection of Historic Huguenot Street

A Sampling of the hundreds of greeting cards in the collections of Historic Huguenot Street.  Christmas, Valentines, Birthdays and more. 

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


The Colonial Manuscript Collection

The Archives at Historic Huguenot Street contains wills, legal papers, letters, receipts and additional documents dating back to the mid 1600s.  They are an excellent resource for those seeking to learn more about the earliest years of an immigrant community such as New Paltz. Viewed together, these documents also offer a window into colonial New York.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


Before Hudson: 8,000 Years of Native American History and Culture

This exhibit, which complements a traditional exhibit currently installed in our DuBois Fort Visitor Center, illustrates the history of the people living in this area prior to European contact. Based on archaeological finds from Historic Huguenot Street, this exhibit demonstrates that the history of this area did not start with Henry Hudson. Rather that for thousands of years prior to “discovery”, the people who inhabited this land had a developed, fascinating culture. More than eighty projectile points, pottery fragments, trade beads and other artifacts have been unearthed and cataloged into Huguenot Street’s collection.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


Missing Chapter:  Stories of Afrcian American Presence

The Missing Chapter: Untold Stories of the African-American Presence

in the Mid-Hudson Valley 

Based largely on documents found the Archives at Historic Huguenot Street, Archives Specialist Susan-Stessin Cohn has brought to life an important of the area's local history that more people need to know about.  Presented in cooperation with Hudson River Valley Heritage, a project of the Southeastern New York Library Resources Council.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


A Notion to Sew

A Notion to Sew: The 19th Century Needlework of Hylah Hasbrouck and Her Daughters at Locust Lawn

A Notion to Sew came out of a two year project to inventory the furnishings and household items of the Hasbrouck family at Locust Lawn, a striking Jeffersonian manse and farm complex built in 1814 by Josiah Hasbrouck.  In 1885, the family locked away all their personal effects and furnishings in part of the house.  The house was rented to tenant farmers for almost 75 years before it was given to Historic Huguenot Street in 1958.  The exhibit showcases the handiwork of four Hasbrouck women and puts their work into context with the social movements of their time.  For more information about Locust Lawn, which is open to the public for special programs, click here.

Exhibit currently installed in the Grimm Gallery at Historic Huguenot Street.  Click on image at left to view online exhibit.


Education in a Valley Fair

Education in a Valley Fair

The early American education system began with the small quaint interior of a local church and later flourished to include large institutions that prepared young adults for the world ahead. New Paltz experienced a similar development in its education system.  It began in 1689, in the modest log Walloon Church, when the small French-speaking community hired schoolmaster Jean Cottin. What followed was the New Paltz Academy, the Normal School, our Central School District and the State University of New York at New Paltz -- an institution that sits high on its hill to show stature of a great college that came about through these extraordinary changes in education.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


I Regret to Inform You: The Civil War Letters of Johannes LeFevre

This collection of letters reveals the story of young Civil War soldier Johannes Lefevre. While mustered in with the 156th New York Volunteer Army, Johannes fights in many battles including the famous Battle of Winchester. His letters cover many topics, from concern for girls to discussion of camp life and the horrors of war. Although he is severally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek, doctors assure his family that he will recover shortly. Tragically, however, Johannes succumbs to gangrene in a Virginia hospital far from his family back home in New Paltz.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


Mary Ann Thorne Chadeayne's Legacy

This collection contains photographs, genealogical information, letters, a signature album and images of quilts and other textiles, pertaining primarily to the family of Mary Ann Thorne Chadeayne.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


The Civil War Collection of James Thitchner

The Civil War Collection of James T. Thitchner

James T. Thitchner grew up in a small hamlet in the town of Plattekill, which is just south of New Paltz.  He was born in 1835 to Quaker parents.  Despite the Quakers' pacifist beliefs, he enlisted to serve for the Union in the Civil War at the age of 27.  This collection focuses on the letters written by Thitchner during his service.  Unlike the glorious, lofty letters written by wealthy, learned officers and later used to craft period novels, Thitchner's writings represent a rarer and perhaps more interesting glimpse into the realities of the War from the perspective of a poor soldier.  From his letters, we learn of the actual woes of combat and the fears of war from the front lines, where frequently not an officer was to be found.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit


Hidden Heritage:  The Story of Rev. James Murphy

Hidden Heritage: The Story of Reverend James Murphy

In the course of routine work in the Archives at Historic Huguenot Street, Archives Specialist Susan Stessin-Cohn and then intern Brandon Pendergast stumbled upon an intriguing document from the early 1800s, Letter to Rev. Particular, Synod of Albany, concerning "The Memorial of Ann Bevier and Rachel Westbrook, members of the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of Rochester."  Thinking it was a memorial testament, they read on.  It turned out to be nothing like what they thought.  This well-composed letter revealed a sad and forgotten tale involving a charismatic and loved minister, slavery, race and a lie.  The stage was rural Ulster and Dutchess Counties.  This exhibit illustrates the reality of race in early New York state and the lengths a man had to go to in order to live out his chosen destiny.

Click on the image at left to view this exhibit

The Photography of Erma Dewitt

An Exhibit Created by the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection

of the Elting Memorial Library

Erma Dewitt, who lived in New Paltz for over 70 years, documented life in this very special small town.  Her photographs of the 1940s and 1950s feature the stone houses that dot Ulster County, as well as events large and small.  A remarkable treasure of images curated by Susan Stessin-Cohn with the financial support of Dirk Dewitt, Erma's son.