Warwick Village Historic District
Warwick Village Historic District | |
Old Masonic temple and shops along Main Street, 2008 | |
| |
Location | Warwick, NY |
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Nearest city | Middletown |
Coordinates | 41°15′23″N 74°21′35″W / 41.25639°N 74.35972°WCoordinates: 41°15′23″N 74°21′35″W / 41.25639°N 74.35972°W |
Area | 130 acres (42 ha)[1] |
Built | 1750s-1930[1] |
Architectural style | Federal, late Victorian and various 19th- and 20th-century revival styles |
NRHP Reference # | 84002886 |
Added to NRHP | 1984 |
The Warwick Village Historic District is located in the center of the village of Warwick in the U.S. state of New York. It takes up an irregularly-shaped 130 acres (42 ha) of residential and commercial neighborhoods centered on NY 94 and 17A).
Buildings within the district reflect Warwick's growth over almost two centuries, from its origins as a rural settlement in colonial times through its mid-19th century industrialization as a rail hub to its development as a weekend summer resort town in the early 20th century. It was designated as a historic district and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
Geography
The district begins at the intersection of Oakland and Galloway avenues, where the two state highways begin their concurrency. Here the neighborhoods are almost all residential, except along Oakland where older houses have become restaurants and bed and breakfasts. On the west side it remains along Oakland until Campbell Road, where it starts to take in the houses on the west of the street. The Galloway Avenue boundary continues to Clinton Avenue, including all properties on the street to South Street but then excluding most of Belmar Court before returning to South.
At the railroad tracks the district Oakland becomes Main Street and the district boundaries include only it. Here the street lined with stores and multistory buildings, culminating in the village hall and Albert T. Wisner Library. At this busy four-way junction, Main becomes Maple Avenue.
The eastern boundary expands again at the Church Street junction to take in all properties (mainly on half that street, then follows Forester Avenue to Colonial Avenue (Orange County Route 13) in the residential neighborhoods there. All property on the north side to the village's northeastern boundary is included in the district.
West of the intersection, at Pine Island Turnpike (Orange County 1B), the district takes in the properties associated with St. Anthony's Hospital, Cherry Street and Van Duzer Place. It meets the northern boundary again at Robin Brae.
History
The Colonial-Main-Forester triangle is the oldest part of the district, built when the future village was mainly a stopover along the King's Highway that connected Phillipsburg, New Jersey to Newburgh. The Shingle House, built in 1764 and the oldest house in the village, is located at 7 Forester Avenue. Baird's Tavern, a stone structure with a gambrel roof built in 1766, is located nearby at 103-105 Main Street. Other buildings in this area, particularly the Old Baptist Meeting House, built in 1810 by a Connecticut congregation that had migrated west, date to the early 19th century.[1]
The area along Main Street to the immediate south reflects the explosive growth of the village in the latter half of the 19th century, after the Civil War. Early industrial development in the Town of Warwick had passed the village by, since it lacked effective water power. But the coming of the Lehigh & Hudson River Railroad in 1862 changed that. It connected to the Erie Railroad's Main Line, which ran through the center of the county on its way to New York and other major cities, providing a market for the farmers around Warwick, particularly the nearby Black Dirt Region. Half of the district's buildings were built between 1860 and 1900.[1]
The railroad continued to benefit the town in the early 20th century, when the descendants of the area's prosperous farming families built weekend cottages, large and small, for themselves to return to on weekends. Other city residents came to take advantage of the fresh air and country living, making the village an early resort destination mentioned in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.[2] The houses and bungalows from this period can be found along the northern and southern ends of the district and its side streets, such as the Warwick Inn on Oakland.[1]
Some of these residences were designed by two local architects, Clinton Wheeler Wisner, and Ernest George Washington Dietrich. Wisner's Warwickshire at 12 Linden Place is his most significant house within the village, and Dietrich's work dominates Oakland Avenue.[1]
The onset of the Great Depression in 1930 curtailed further resort development, and by the end of that decade passenger rail service to the village ended (freight service via Norfolk Southern continues today, however). The rise of the automobile after World War II opened up newer areas to weekend travelers, and the village went into a decline, with little new architecture of note in its core.[1] At the end of the century, it began to revive as an exurban home for commuters to New York City seeking a small town lifestyle.
Significant contributing properties
All but 21 of the 229 properties within the district are considered contributing resources to its overall historic value. The remainder are mostly buildings erected after 1930, such as the village post office, a Burger King, and a brick gas station at the Main-Maple-Colonial junction.[1]
None of the properties in the district are currently listed separately on the National Register. Some notable ones include:
- Shingle House: Saltbox house built by Daniel Burt in 1764; it is the oldest house in the village and a rare clapboard-and-shingle house in the region, recalling the New England origins of the Burt family. It is currently maintained and operated as a historic house museum by the Historical Society of the Town of Warwick, which has owned it since 1916. Much of the interior is original.[3]
- Baird's Tavern The stone tavern at the center of town was built in 1766. Reportedly George Washington once stopped in for a "drink of grog";[3] John Trumbull also passed through.[1] The wooden floor retains boot marks from the militia mustered here during the Revolution.[4] It is currently used as a law office.
- Old School Baptist Meeting House: The 18 congregants who came from Connecticut in 1765 intended to stay only temporarily before moving on to Northeastern Pennsylvania, but the Revolution soon made that impossible. So this church built in 1819 became their home. The Historical Society acquired and renovated it in the 1950s to save it from demolition; it was also used as a location for a scene in the 1997 film In & Out.[3]
- 1810 House. Another of the society's properties, this white cottage across Main Street from Village Hall was at one point the local YMCA. It serves as the main museum for the society, with exhibits devoted to not only the village but famous residents such as Henry William Herbert, whose "Frank Forester" pen name lent its name to Forester Avenue.[3]
- Dulce Domum: Designed by Clinton Wheeler Wisner for his cousin in 1884, its steep gable and decorative woodwork suggest a late attempt to apply the Picturesque aesthetic. The Oakland Avenue home remains a private residence.[1]
- John J. Beattie House: This Ernest George Washington Dietrich design on Maple Avenue combines a shingled look with some unusual Romanesque features.[1]
- The Warwickshire: Wisner's most significant work in Warwick dates to the 1890s and is located at the corner of Oakland and Linden. It uses randomly coursed fieldstone and half-timber framing.[1]
Preservation
The buildings of the district were very well preserved at the time the district was established. The village has recognized it in its zoning code with architectural restrictions that, for example, forbid intrusive features such as signs lit from the inside on stores within the district. This caused some local controversy in 1990 when the local Independent Order of Odd Fellows chapter wanted to renovate its lodge with vinyl siding, forbidden by the zoning. A bitter confrontation led to a compromise solution where the IOOF was allowed to use vinyl on the rear and sides of the building as long as they painted the front.[5]
The historic district also became the center of another protracted local political dispute in 2000. After the Grand Union supermarket chain closed its downtown Warwick location, within the district, following its third and final bankruptcy, the CVS drugstore chain expressed interest in moving into the abandoned space. Some local residents were willing to let that happen since without it there would be no major retailer in the downtown area, while others feared it would detract from the district's historic character and lead locally owned shops along Main to close.[6] After two years of debate that included a protest rally at the site,[7] and a proposal to condemn the site,[8] CVS opened its store in 2003.[9]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Larson, Neil (June 1984). "National Register of Historic Places nomination form, Warwick Village Historic District". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
- ↑ Fitzgerald, F. Scott (1925). The Great Gatsby. New York, NY: Collier Books. p. 62. ISBN 0-02-019881-7.
When we were on a house party together up in Warwick, she left a borrowed car out in the rain with the top down and then lied about it.
- 1 2 3 4 "Museum Buildings Brochure" (PDF). Historical Society of the Town of Warwick. 2004. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
- ↑ Hull, Richard (2004-08-04). "John Hathorn, Warwick's Forgotten Patriot" (pdf). Warwick Valley Dispatch. p. 5. Retrieved 2008-06-05.
The room today is exactly as it was 225 years ago and its atmosphere is heavy with the very spirits of our forefathers. The heel marks of the militiamen's boots may still be seen in the wooden floor boards.
- ↑ Mackson, Oliver (2000-05-05). "In a vinyl world, Warwick's made of the real stuff". Times-Herald Record. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
Warwick's downtown is a historic district. That means no signs lit from the inside. It also means people have to make compromises. When the Odd Fellows fraternal lodge wanted to renovate its building in 1990, the village's Architectural and Historic Review Board ruled that vinyl couldn't be used. In some places, that would have been the end of it. In a snooty little village in New England, for instance, you use the word "vinyl," they invite you to be guest of honor at a tar-and-feathers party. But a village trustee named Mark Kurtz proposed a compromise. There was an hour's worth of discussions at a Village Board meeting. The Odd Fellows were allowed to put vinyl siding on the back and sides of the building. The front would have to be painted.
- ↑ Richardson, Dave (2001-11-12). "Warwick worries: Is CVS best for business?". Times-Herald Record. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
- ↑ Richardson, Dave (2001-06-22). "Anti-CVS rally is set for Warwick". Times-Herald Record. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
- ↑ "Who's master of the domain?". Times-Herald Record. Ottaway Community Newspapers. 2003-03-23. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
- ↑ "CVS open for business with little fanfare". Times-Herald Record. Ottaway Community Newspapers. 2003-07-26. Retrieved 2008-06-07.