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The
Story of Huguenot Street
After
decades of sojourn and relocation, a group of twelve French
Huguenot refugees and their families linked by family,
religion, and friendship purchased nearly 40,000 acres
along the Wallkill River in the Hudson Valley from the
native Esopus Indians, thus establishing a permanent home
where they could pursue their Protestant faith free from
religious and political persecution. They named the new
town after die Pfalz, the region along the Rhine
River where they had found temporary refuge before journeying
to the new world.
The
families began replacing their temporary homes in the
early 1700s with stone houses along what is now known
as Huguenot Street, seven of which survive today.
The houses were added to over the first century or so
of their existence to provide more comfortable living
arrangements, and today the domestic environments of the
colonial period and the early years of the Republic are
preserved to inspire and to educate. While four of the
houses are similar to their early appearance, the National
Historic Landmark district also includes three original
stone houses that were altered in the 1830s, the 1890s,
and the 1940s, enabling three hundred years of history
to be told on the street, displaying both continuity and
change in American history.
Beginning
in the 1890s, these homes came into the possession of
the Huguenot Historical Society with the generous assistance
of its affiliated family associations, the members of
which are descended from the original founders and early
residents of the community. Today the houses are furnished
with period and heirloom artifacts, many of which descended
through the families. Through the preservation of
this remarkable site, we have the opportunity to enjoy
and investigate the origins and development of our distinctly
American culture.
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