Where is hudson ny




















The landscape in this region shifts from the urban cityscapes of Manhattan to the marshes and hills of the Hudson Valley. Here, a dense concentration of historic sites and estates were built by wealthy entrepreneurs.

In the s, two Dutch families—the Van Cortlandts and the Philipses—owned much of the land here. Most of the historic sites you see today were preserved for the public through the generosity of the Rockefeller family who built Kykuit pictured at right , their country estate, at Pocantico Hills.

Instead, founders and owners Carla Perez-Gallardo and Hannah Black are running a pop-up called Fuego 69 on the lawn of the Rivertown Lodge hotel for as long as the weather holds. A gigantic light-strewn tree has been turned into the order and pick-up counter with the outdoor, fire-focused kitchen right next to it, while a canvas tent and outdoor tables provide cozy seating. Best of all, 69 cents from each item ordered goes to a different racial justice cause each week.

Customers can also pay it forward by adding any amount to help buy a meal for someone in need in the community. Dine on seasonal dishes like heirloom potato salad with smoked New York trout and delicata squash with chile vinegar and crispy buckwheat sprinkled on top. Save room for the gooey Smore Mornings should be spent in the ever-present line outside Breadfolks , a new Warren Street bakery that opened in August and has been mobbed ever since.

And for good reason: the wizards in the kitchen will put your sourdough bread to shame sorry and supply you with impeccable croissants, danishes, canelles, kouign amanns, and cruffins in flavors like baklava and dulce de leche praline. On the way back, get some energy at the Black-owned Juice Branch , which recently opened their second location here in Hudson.

The little city of Hudson has the distinction of being the first city in the United States—that is, it was the first city to be incorporated after the thirteen colonies became the United States. The idea of Hudson started even before the Treaty of Paris was signed. Their location made them and their livelihood especially vulnerable, so early in , two brothers, Thomas and Seth Jenkins, representing an association of men involved in maritime commerce, set out to find and purchase a safe harbor where they could relocate their families and their ships.

Sailing up the Hudson, they found what they were looking for about a hundred miles north of New York Harbor: a high bluff on the east bank of the river with a natural harbor on either side.

They bought the land on the bluff and along the river from Dutch families whose ancestors had purchased it from the Mohicans generations before, and they set about to create there a seaport far from the sea. Early Hudson was a vibrant place. The Proprietors, for that is what the members of the association called themselves, let no grass grow under their feet.

In , Thomas Jefferson and James Madison visited Hudson on a northern tour they took together, ostensibly for their health though it may have had a political purpose. They came to talk with Seth Jenkins, now the owner of the prominent distillery mentioned above, to try to persuade him to use French wine instead of molasses from the West Indies to produce his rum, thereby shifting some American trade, in the years after the Revolution, from Britain to France.

Jefferson plays a role in another noteworthy moment in early Hudson history. Croswell was found guilty, and the case was appealed to Supreme Court in Albany. In his second trial, Croswell was defended by Alexander Hamilton. For so small a city, Hudson has seen much fame and notoriety. In , it came just one vote short of becoming the capital of New York State. In the mid th century, it was a center and inspiration for the Hudson River School of landscape painters.

Frederic Church came down from Olana to Hudson to buy his paints and visit friends. The vista of South Bay was the most painted landscape of the time. In February , the train carrying Abraham Lincoln to his first inauguration stopped in Hudson, and in April , the funeral train carrying his body back to Springfield stopped here, too.

By the middle of the 19 th century, the era of whalers and merchants had come to an end. The last whaling ship had sailed from Hudson in



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