Monday, April 20, 2015

Walter Stratton Stone House, 1828, Meeker Hollow, Roxbury


Catskills Folk Connection offers tours of Manhattan Country School’s historic house.

On Saturday May 30 and Sunday June 7 as part of Headwaters History Days, Ginny Scheer, folklorist for Catskills Folk Connection, will offer tours of the Walter Stratton House at 3217 New Kingston Mountain Road, Roxbury, NY, just up hill from the Manhattan Country School Farm.  Tours of the exterior and interior of the house will be offered from 1 p.m. – 4 p.m. each day.

One of five historic stone houses in Roxbury, the Stratton house is not unique, but does represent an early and substantial construction by a local business man.  Walter Stratton was the son of a prosperous miller who owned a number of mills on streams closer to the East Branch of the Delaware River.  

Eighty years later John Corbin purchased this vernacular house and its tiny lot, made renovations, and raised his family there.  For decades it was the summer home of his daughter, Lena Corbin, a teacher in Amsterdam, then was sold to the Manhattan Country School by members of a more recent generation of her family.

Ginny Scheer will offer period documents and analysis of the structure and site to interpret how families have lived in this house over the years.  Included in the tour will be a 19th century loom donated by a Meeker Hollow neighbor, a 1920s cook stove and refrigerator, early wall and floor finishes, a wooden spiral staircase, extensive stonework around the house lot and in the cellar, which features the huge stone foundation of a former fireplace.   

Listen to Catskills Folk Tuesday, May 19, from 7 to 8 pm on WIOX Community Radio, 91.3 FM or streaming at www.wioxradio.org when the topic will be the Walter Stratton Stone House.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Winner of Catskills Vernacular Architecture Challenge #5!

Ben Fenton of Fleischmanns is the winner of Catskills Vernacular Architecture Challenge #5.  He correctly located the terrific "carpenter Gothic" house in the village of Stamford, New York, called "Stamford Gables B&B."  It is on Main Street, or Route 23, on the right as you drive into the village from South Gilboa, after the connected buildings with the gymnasium and dental offices that were formerly the grocery store.

Stamford Gables B&B in the village of Stamford, NY


The steepness of the gables for which the house is named shows Gothic Revival influence as does the "gingerbread" on the eaves.  In the earlier Gothic Revival the carved or sawn tracery would have looked medieval where on Stamford Gables it is fanciful flowers (see below).  An imported style, prescribed by supposed experts, has morphed into a new version that may be unique or characteristic of this part of the Catskills or may relate to something the builder saw in another village he or she visited.

Look below for the next Catskills Vernacular Architecture Challenge.

Catskills Vernacular Architecture Challenge #6


Here's the challenge.  Where is this wonderful late 19th century residence?  Can you identify it?  This is just one example of the quality of ordinary (aka vernacular) architecture in the Catskills Region. Our focus does not need to be on the mansions of the rich and famous to find interesting architecture, but rather on the houses built by members of the community.

This house has a number of characteristics of a popular Victorian-era house style called "Queen Anne":  wrap around porch, multi-color trim, stained glass, a "terra cotta" frieze over the porch steps, a corner or bay window, and a multi-faceted roof form (as opposed to some of our earlier challenges that were shaped like a Monopoly hotel).  But this house may carry the name of a style variant because it lacks some Queen Anne elements, especially rounded features (a turret, the shape of the porch) and it lacks shingle siding mixed with its clapboard siding. So the safest style is "Victorian."  Extra points if you determine the proper variant and give your reasons! Remember that for now all challenges were built as residences, most are in villages, and are likely to be on or near the highways I travel most often: Route 28, Route 23, Route 30, and Route 10.  


Notice the elegant leaf motif in the "terra cotta" frieze above the porch steps. Terra cotta is in quotes because I'm not sure that is the actual material on this house, though real terra cotta is often found on Queen Anne houses.


If you correctly identify this house by calling me at 607-326-4206 or e-mailing vscheer@juno.com and describing its location, you will win a prize!  I'll dedicate a song to you on my radio program, Catskills Folk, alternate Tuesdays at 7 pm on WIOX 91.3 FM or on-line at wioxradio.org.