Van Cortlandt House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Good article Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox NRHP The Van Cortlandt House, also known as the Van Cortlandt Mansion, is the oldest known surviving house in the Bronx in New York City. It is located in the southwestern portion of Van Cortlandt Park. The house is operated as a historic house museum known as the Van Cortlandt House Museum. Built by Frederick Van Cortlandt and completed in 1749, the house is a Template:Frac-story Georgian building with a rubblestone facade and Georgian-style interiors. It served as a residence of one branch of the Van Cortlandt family for 140 years before it reopened as a museum in 1897.

The house is built on an estate that Jacobus Van Cortlandt acquired in the 1690s. Frederick began constructing the building in 1748, although he did not live to see its completion, and Frederick's son James inherited the house. During the American Revolutionary War, both British and American troops variously occupied the house; the structure was passed down to various members of the Van Cortlandt family through the 19th century. The city government acquired the house in 1888 as part of the construction of Van Cortlandt Park and initially used the building as a police barracks. The Society of Colonial Dames of the State of New York leased the house in 1896 and opened it to the public on May 28, 1897. Various modifications were made to the grounds over the subsequent decades, and a caretaker's house was built in the 1910s. The house underwent renovations in the 1960s and 1980s.

The original house is L-shaped, with wings to the south and east; the caretaker's house to the north is attached to the rest of the structure. The mansion has a largely plain facade, except for brick keystones that depict Van Cortlandt family members' faces. The interiors include a kitchen in the basement; two parlors, an entry hall, and a dining room on the first floor; and bedrooms on the second and third floors. The museum has historically presented various performances and events at the house, and it operates tours and educational programs. Critics have praised both the museum's exhibits and the house's architecture. The house's facade and interior are New York City designated landmarks, and the building is a National Historic Landmark.

Site

The Van Cortlandt House is located at the southwestern corner of Van Cortlandt Park,<ref name="park-map">Template:Cite map</ref> near the Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx in New York City.<ref name="aia5">Template:Cite aia5</ref> It is surrounded by the park's Parade Ground to the north, the Memorial Grove to the west, a swimming pool and the Van Cortlandt Stadium to the south, and a burial ground and Van Cortlandt Lake to the east.<ref name="park-map" /> The nearest street is Broadway to the west; the New York City Subway's Van Cortlandt Park–242nd Street station is located on Broadway just outside the park.<ref name="park-map" /><ref name="nyt-1987-07-31">Template:Cite news</ref>

The Van Cortlandt House's site was a salt marsh along Tibbetts Brook until the 1690s, when the nearby Van Cortlandt Lake was formed along the brook's course.<ref name="The New York Times 2005 o707">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> When the house was built in 1748, it stood on the eastern slope of a set of hills along the eastern bank of the Hudson River.<ref name="The New York Times 1901 w733">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The house and surrounding landscape are preserved as part of Van Cortlandt Park, although the fields around the mansion date from the Parade Ground's construction in the late 19th century.<ref name="BW pp. 303–304">Template:Harvnb</ref> The grounds overlooked the Spuyten Duyvil valley to the south, the Palisades to the west, and Tibbetts Brook to the east;<ref name="nyt-1893-03-31">Template:Cite news</ref> the view to the south was interrupted by hills in Fordham, Bronx, and in Manhattan.<ref name="Bolton p. 451">Template:Harvnb</ref>

Originally, there was a driveway from the side entrance to the front entrance. The driveway was paved with stones, so the house's occupants could hear visitors on the driveway before they arrived.<ref name="Ferris p. xviii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The house's approach is flanked by gateposts that were once topped by wooden bird sculptures;<ref name="Ferris p. xviii" /><ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /> these sculptures were later moved into the house.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum Entrance Stair Halls">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> There were horse chestnuts on either side of the gateposts.<ref name="Ferris p. xviii" /> The grounds surrounding the house were landscaped in what the historian Mary Lanman Ferris called "the Dutch manner of gardening".<ref name="Ferris pp. xvii–xviii">Template:Harvnb</ref> These included manmade terraces, large box trees, and water features such as fountains.<ref name="Ferris pp. xvii–xviii" /> The mansion was also surrounded by large old-growth trees.<ref name="Ferris pp. xvii–xviii" /><ref name="The New York Times 1911 h532">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the early 1900s, a Dutch garden was built just south of the mansion, with a canal on three sides, a fountain in the center, and four square sections around it.<ref name="p571430112" /><ref name="The New York Times 1902 d131">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The garden has since been replaced with trees and a herb garden.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum : NYC Parks g994" />

History

Template:For

File:Van Cortlandt mansion, Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx, New York. LOC gsc.5a16015.jpg
View of the house from the southwest

Prior to European settlement, the Lenape Native Americans occupied the site of the Van Cortlandt Mansion,<ref>Template:Cite report</ref><ref name="BWR p. 1">Template:Harvnb</ref> and there was a nearby Native American village known as Keskeskick.<ref name="JMA p. 4">Template:Harvnb</ref> Adriaen van der Donck, a Dutch settler, was the first European to occupy the Van Cortlandt House's site,<ref name="BWR p. 1" /><ref name="Administrators Office p. 4">Template:Harvnb</ref> having bought the land from the Dutch West India Company in 1646.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 2">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 36">Template:Harvnb</ref> Van der Donck died in 1655.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 2" /><ref name="VCM p. vii">Template:Harvnb</ref> Following the takeover of New Netherland by the British in 1664,<ref name="Ferris p. IX">Template:Harvnb</ref> the claim to the estate was awarded to van der Donck's brother-in-law, Elias Doughty, who proceeded to sell off the portions of the property.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 2" /><ref name="VCM p. vii" /><ref name="Ferris p. IX" /> Doughty sold a Template:Convert tract, including the site of the Van Cortlandt House, to Frederick Philipse, Thomas Delavall, and Thomas Lewis.<ref name="Ferris p. IX" /> Philipse bought out Delavall's and Lewis's land shares, making the land part of the expansive Philipsburg Manor.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 2" /><ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 38">Template:Harvnb</ref> When Philipse's wife died, he remarried the daughter of Dutch brewer Oloff Stevense Van Cortlandt, herself a widow.<ref name="Ferris p. x">Template:Harvnb</ref> Philipse's daughter Eva later married Jacobus Van Cortlandt, who was Olof's son and Philipse's second wife's brother.<ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 38" /><ref name="Ferris p. x" /><ref name="BWR p. 2">Template:Harvnb</ref>

Jacobus Van Cortlandt acquired parcels from Philipse through 1699<ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 38"/><ref name="Jenkins p. 293">Template:Harvnb</ref> and dammed Tibbetts Brook to create Van Cortlandt Lake.<ref name="BWR p. 2" /> He and his wife largely lived in Manhattan but used the estate as a plantation in the early 18th century.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name="BW p. 293">Template:Harvnb</ref> The property's proximity to Tibbetts Brook, which drained into the Harlem River and Spuyten Duyvil Creek to the south, made it easy for Van Cortlandt to ship grain and timber products by water.<ref name="BW p. 293" /> In 1732, Van Cortlandt acquired an additional parcel from the Tippett family.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The estate was passed in 1739 to Jacobus's son Frederick Van Cortlandt.<ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 41">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Bolton p. 449">Template:Harvnb</ref> When Frederick inherited the land, the site was considered part of lower Yonkers in Westchester County.<ref name="Bolton p. 449" /> Horses, oxen, cattle, hogs, sheep, and hens roamed across the farm, while crops such as flax and fruits were grown there.<ref name="p512134730">Template:Cite news</ref> Several slaves also worked on the plantation.<ref name="p512134730" /><ref name="BW p. 294">Template:Harvnb</ref>

Residential use

The Van Cortlandt House is the oldest known surviving house in what is now the Bronx,<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum : NYC Parks g994">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="nyt-2000-02-13">Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Efn as well as one of three surviving 18th-century buildings in the borough.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Along with the Bartow–Pell Mansion, it is one of two remaining manor houses in the Bronx.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

1740s to 1770s

Frederick began developing the Van Cortlandt House on the property in 1748.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 41" /><ref name="Jenkins pp. 294–295">Template:Harvnb</ref> According to the Van Cortlandt House Museum, Frederick likely did not build the house himself, despite being credited as the builder.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum j336">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Frederick's family used the Tippett house while their new structure was being built.<ref name="JMA p. 62">Template:Harvnb</ref> The mansion was built in a vale that the historian Robert Bolton described as "about one mile north from Kings bridge",<ref name="Bolton p. 448">Template:Harvnb</ref>Template:Efn next to what is now Broadway.<ref name="p20807162672">Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name="BWR p. 1" /> One descendant wrote that the mansion was probably built on the site of, or close to, Van der Donck's farmhouse;<ref name="VCM p. viii">Template:Harvnb</ref> the foundation of Van der Donck's old house remained intact in front of the Van Cortlandt House.<ref name="n135785363">Template:Cite news</ref> East of the mansion was a mill dam across Tibbetts Brook, a small mill, and the Van Cortlandts' previous residence. To the northeast of the mansion were woodlands.<ref name="JMA p. 62"/><ref name="Bolton p. 455">Template:Harvnb</ref> In Frederick's will, signed on October 2, 1749, he indicated that the house was almost complete.<ref name="BW p. 291">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Bolton p. 451" />

Frederick died before the house was finished, and he bequeathed the estate to his son, Jacobus (James) Van Cortlandt.<ref name="BWR p. 2" /><ref name="Bolton p. 449" /><ref name="Parks Storch 1986a pp. 32, 42">Template:Harvnb</ref> His bequest also included either 11 or 12 slaves who worked on the plantation.<ref name="BW p. 296">Template:Harvnb</ref> Vault Hill, the Van Cortlandt family burial ground to the north of the mansion,<ref name="n135779612">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":20" /> was created in 1749,<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /> and Frederick was interred there.<ref name=":19">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":20">Template:Cite news</ref> After its completion, the Van Cortlandt House was often called the manor house, although this was a misnomer, as the "manor" name applied to the Van Cortlandt Manor in Croton-on-Hudson, New York.<ref name="Jenkins p. 295">Template:Harvnb</ref> The mansion was also called "Lower Cortlandt's" to reduce confusion with Frederick Van Cortlandt's farm, "Upper Cortlandt's", west of Broadway.<ref name="Jenkins p. 296">Template:Harvnb</ref>

File:Front view of Van Cortland House.jpg
View of the house in the winter

The family used the grist mill and saw mill next to the lake.<ref name="Ricciardi p. 22">Template:Harvnb</ref> Within the house, the family salted the pork and beef; cured the ham and bacon; and stored the various fruits that grew on the premises.<ref name="p512134730" /> The Van Cortlandts did not primarily live in that house, instead staying in Manhattan most of the time.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 41" /> Two early historians wrote that James Van Cortlandt frequently intervened on behalf of neighbors who had been robbed.<ref name="Bolton p. 449" /><ref name="Jenkins p. 295" /> The family often invited civilian and military officials to the mansion, serving lobsters from the Long Island Sound and hams from the estate's grounds.<ref name="nyt-1903-01-183">Template:Cite news</ref> Slaves performed many of the tasks around the house, including laundry, cleaning, and cooking.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum j336" />

Revolutionary War

The Van Cortlandt family land served as a neutral ground during the American Revolutionary War<ref name="n135879377">Template:Cite news</ref> and was used by both the Loyalists and the Patriots.<ref name="p512134730" /><ref name="Dunham 1931">Template:Cite news</ref> On May 30, 1775, the New York Provincial Congress placed James Van Cortlandt on a committee to create a report on whether it was feasible to build a fort near his family's house.<ref name="Parks Storch 1986a p. 42">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Although James was described as not having been "a very active loyalist", he was not fully committed to the Patriots' cause either,<ref name="Jenkins p. 295" /> and the Van Cortlandts wished to stay neutral.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name="JMA p. 62"/> Augustus Van Cortlandt hid city records under Vault Hill to protect them during the war, turning them over to the new American government afterward.<ref name=":20" /><ref name="Jackson p. 1361" /><ref name="Jenkins p. 302">Template:Harvnb</ref> Some members of the Van Cortlandt family continued to reside at the mansion during most of the war.<ref name="Ferris pp. xxii–xxiii">Template:Harvnb</ref>

The grounds were used by Patriot militia leaders Comte de Rochambeau, Marquis de Lafayette, and George Washington.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Jackson p. 1361">Template:Harvnb</ref> The house itself was Washington's headquarters after his troops were defeated in the 1776 Battle of Long Island,<ref name=":17">Template:Cite book</ref> and Washington stayed at the house prior to the Battle of White Plains.<ref name="JMA p. 62"/> After Washington's troops were defeated in the Battle of White Plains, British General William Howe made the house his headquarters on November 13, 1776,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="The New York Times 1926 m588">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> placing it behind British-held ground.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name=":17" /> Hessian troops had pillaged the mansion before Howe's arrival, and various documents were as such scattered.<ref name="The New York Times 1926 m588" /> Royal Navy admiral Robert Digby occasionally invited the future British King William IV to the mansion during the war,<ref name="NPS p. 5">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Lamb Harrison 1896 p.">Template:Cite book</ref> and Digby gifted Augustus Van Cortlandt a pair of wooden bird sculptures that had been taken from a Spanish privateer.<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /><ref name="Bolton pp. 452–453">Template:Harvnb</ref> American troops unsuccessfully tried to retake the house in 1777.<ref name="Ferris p. xxiii">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="VCM p. xvi">Template:Harvnb</ref> A British captain surnamed Rowe was severely wounded in a battle nearby in 1780, and he died in the house just after his fiancée arrived,<ref name="p574322374">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135723435">Template:Cite news</ref> giving rise to rumors that Rowe's ghost haunted the house.<ref name="The New York Times 1901 w733" />

James Van Cortlandt moved away during the war because of his poor health, and he died in 1781.<ref name="Bolton p. 449" /> Because James had no children, his younger brother, New York City Clerk Augustus Van Cortlandt, took over the property.<ref name="Jenkins p. 296" /><ref name="Bolton pp. 449–450">Template:Harvnb</ref> Washington returned to the house in 1781 to strategize with Rochambeau while their troops waited outside on what is now the Parade Ground and Vault Hill.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name="Jenkins p. 302" /> Although Washington had wanted to scout British forts in Upper Manhattan,<ref name="nyt-1995-07-16">Template:Cite news</ref> his troops instead headed south to Virginia, defeating the British in the siege of Yorktown.<ref name="nyt-1893-03-31" /><ref name="n135879377" /> Washington lit campfires outside the house to deceive the British into thinking that his troops were still on the grounds.<ref name=":20" /><ref name="NPS p. 5" /><ref name="n135703350">Template:Cite news</ref> Washington used the house one final time in 1783 after the Treaty of Paris. The British had just withdrawn their troops from Manhattan, and Washington and George Clinton were getting ready to enter the island, stopping over at the house before doing so.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 5" /><ref name="Jackson p. 1361" />

Late 18th and 19th centuries

File:Cupboard Inside Van Cortlandt House Museum.jpg
A cupboard inside the mansion

Augustus Van Cortlandt's family moved to the house after the Revolution ended.<ref name="BWR p. 2" /> The 1790 United States census shows that Augustus Van Cortlandt kept 17 slaves on the property. Augustus, his wife, another woman, and 10 slaves were recorded as living on the estate in 1800. The census of 1810 showed that Augustus's household consisted of six free people and 15 slaves; at the time, the farm may have still been operated as a plantation.<ref name="BW p. 298">Template:Harvnb</ref> Augustus Van Cortlandt continued to own the house until he died in 1823;<ref name="Jenkins p. 296" /><ref name="n135723435" /> he had no male children to which he could pass down the house.<ref name="Jenkins p. 296" /><ref name="nyt-1912-05-19">Template:Cite news</ref> As such, his son-in-law Henry White (who had married Augustus's daughter Anna) received his life estate,<ref name="n135723435" /> and Henry's son Augustus White was allowed to have the house if he changed his surname to Van Cortlandt.<ref name="BWR p. 2" /><ref name="nyt-1912-05-19" /><ref name="Scharf 1886 p. 758-IA17">Template:Cite book</ref>

Augustus White Van Cortlandt moved the mill on the estate to the shore of Van Cortlandt Lake in 1823.<ref name="p574322374" /> The estate's slaves were freed in 1827, when slavery in New York became illegal.<ref name="BW p. 298" /><ref name="n135887842">Template:Cite news</ref> The younger Augustus owned the house until his death on April 1, 1839, upon which he bequeathed the house to his brother Henry White Van Cortlandt, who had no children and survived only until October 1839.<ref name="Scharf 1886 p. 758-IA17" /> Neither Augustus White nor Henry White had male heirs, so the house was to pass to their sister's son Augustus Bibby Van Cortlandt upon Henry's death.<ref name="Scharf 1886 p. 758-IA17" /><ref name="Weeks 1898 p. 583">Template:Cite book</ref> Augustus Bibby owned the house for four and a half decades;<ref name="Weeks 1898 p. 583" />Template:Efn he renovated the mansion and farmed much of the estate. The fireplaces were trimmed back to make way for stoves.<ref name="BWR p. 3">Template:Harvnb</ref> An account from the late 1840s described the house as having a front garden with box trees, which had been planted upon a set of fountains.<ref name="Bolton pp. 451–452">Template:Harvnb</ref> The old mill and the Van Cortlandts' original house still existed on the estate, and the house's interior was decorated with various portraits.<ref name="Bolton pp. 452–453" />

New York City annexed the southern part of Westchester County in 1874, and the Van Cortlandt estate became part of the Bronx.<ref name="BWR p. 3" /> The Van Cortlandts were looking to sell their land by the 1870s because of the area's increasing urbanization.<ref name="Administrators Office p. 3">Template:Harvnb</ref> In June 1884, New York governor Grover Cleveland signed the New Parks Act into law, authorizing the creation of a system of parks in the Bronx, including what would become Van Cortlandt Park.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The act gave the city the right to acquire Template:Convert from Augustus Bibby via eminent domain.<ref name="Weeks 1898 p. 583" /> Legal disputes over the act carried on for years.<ref name="Parks Storch 1986a pp. 57–58">Template:Harvnb</ref> The Van Cortlandt family did not fully vacate the house until 1888,<ref name="CrotonPlantMosholu-Oct19983">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the mill next to Van Cortlandt Lake was in use until 1889.<ref name="p574322374" /> Records indicate that the family held events in the house as late as 1890, when Augustus Bibby Van Cortlandt married Ethyle Wilson there.<ref name="Ricciardi p. 25">Template:Harvnb</ref> The New York Herald Tribune described the house and surrounding property as having "for generations symbolized the vast wealth in real estate amassed by Oloff and Jacobus Van Cortlandt".<ref name="p1268036798">Template:Cite news</ref>

Use as museum

File:Historic American Buildings Survey, Arnold Moses, Photographer, March 29, 1937, VIEW FROM SOUTHWEST. - Frederick Van Cortlandt Mansion, Broadway and Two-hundred-forty-second Street HABS NY,3-BRONX,5-2.tif
View from the southwest

A portion of the Van Cortlandt estate was sold to the government of New York City on December 12, 1888, and converted into Van Cortlandt Park;<ref name="Administrators Office p. 3" /> other properties on the estate were not sold until 1919.<ref name="The New York Times 1919 l544">Template:Unbulleted list citebundle</ref> The majority of the grain fields were converted into a sprawling lawn dubbed the "Parade Ground", while the Van Cortlandt House was preserved.<ref name="CrotonPlantMosholu-Oct19983" /><ref name="Jackson p. 1362">Template:Harvnb</ref> Parts of the mansion were repaired and repainted in 1889.<ref name="Ricciardi p. 27">Template:Harvnb</ref> For several years thereafter, the family of the house's caretaker were the only residents, and military officers used the house once a year during field day activities in the park.<ref name="p574150174">Template:Cite news</ref> Until 1896, the mansion also served as a barracks for the New York State Police, which had been assigned to guard the bison that roamed Van Cortlandt Park.<ref name="n135879377" /><ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> The New York City Police Department and the New York National Guard used the house as well, and the bison themselves stayed there until they were moved to the Bronx Zoo.<ref name="BWR p. 3" />

Creation and early years

One of New York City's park commissioners proposed in March 1893 that the mansion be converted into a museum for Revolutionary War artifacts.<ref name="nyt-1893-03-30">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="p573857713">Template:Cite news</ref> The park commissioners provided $187 for interior painting and papering in December, and they provided $250 for renovation work the next month.<ref name="Minutes1894">Template:Cite report</ref> The city's Park Board voted in 1894 to add an inscription honoring Washington to the mansion.<ref name="nyt-1894-05-24">Template:Cite news</ref> In early 1896, the Society of Colonial Dames of the State of New York applied to the park commissioners for permission to repair the mansion and operate it as a historic house museum.<ref name="p574150174" /> The New York State Legislature had given the society control of the mansion by that May.<ref name="n135725823">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135753540">Template:Cite news</ref> The Park Board agreed in December 1896 to lease the mansion to the society;<ref name="n135754245">Template:Cite news</ref> the initial lease lasted for 25 years.<ref name="p574322374" /><ref name="nyt-1897-05-28">Template:Cite news</ref> The society then began renovating the house.<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="p175444233">Template:Cite news</ref> The project, which cost between $4,000 and $5,000,<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /> involved restoring the house to its original condition.<ref name="p175444233" />

The Colonial Dames took over the mansion on May 27, 1897, and opened the house to the public on that date.<ref name="nyt-1897-05-28" /><ref name="p574304647">Template:Cite news</ref> At the time, the Van Cortlandt Mansion was one of a few old residences preserved on public grounds in New York City, along with Gracie Mansion.<ref name="p554710308">Template:Cite news</ref> It was also one of the first historic house museums in the city; it was followed by other residences such as the Morris–Jumel Mansion, King Manor, and Dyckman House.<ref name="The New York Times 1913 p107">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Van Cortlandt Mansion was one of the few mid-18th-century buildings in New York City that still retained its original carpentry.<ref name="p124685370">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The museum was open to the public every day of the week and was free most of the time.<ref name="p574322374" /><ref name="n135756514">Template:Cite news</ref> On Saturdays, it charged each guest 25 cents to raise money for the house's maintenance.<ref name="The New York Times 1901 w733" />

A colonial garden around the house was approved in May 1897<ref name="Minutes1898">Template:Cite report</ref> and announced to the public that July.<ref name="n135756514" /> New York City park superintendent Samuel Parsons Jr. began constructing the colonial garden that August at a cost of $50,000,<ref name="nyt-1897-08-22">Template:Cite news</ref> and the New York City Board of Estimate allocated $15,000 that October for the garden.<ref name="n135763089">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135763873">Template:Cite news</ref> The Colonial Dames dedicated a tablet outside the mansion, which described the house's history, in late 1900.<ref name="p570942585">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135764042">Template:Cite news</ref> At the time, the museum had recorded more than 50,000 visitors over the previous four years.<ref name="n135764042" /> The next year, the old mill used by the Van Cortlandt family was destroyed by lightning.<ref name="VCM p. viii" /><ref name="Ricciardi p. 22" /> A statue of National Guard major-general Josiah Porter was dedicated behind the house in 1902,<ref name="p571288443">Template:Cite news</ref> and the colonial garden adjacent to the mansion was completed in 1903.<ref name="p571430112">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="The New York Times 1903 v774">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A window from the old Rhinelander Sugar House was brought to the Bronx in 1903 and installed next to the mansion.<ref name="The New York Times 1903 d966">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="n135786079" /> By 1908, the mansion was easily accessible from the rest of the city via the New York City Subway's Van Cortlandt Park–242nd Street station.<ref name="p572164808">Template:Cite news</ref>

1910s to 1970s

File:Formal dining room inside Van Cortlandt House Museum.jpg
The mansion's formal dining room

The Colonial Dames began raising money in the early 1910s for an expansion of the museum's collection.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Dames also announced plans to build an annex to the house, but Park Board landscape architect Charles Downing Lay vetoed these plans in April 1912.<ref name="p574908859">Template:Cite news</ref> The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation (NYC Parks) received bids for the annex's construction in 1913 but initially rejected all of them.<ref name="Minutes1913">Template:Cite report</ref> After a subsequent contract was approved, annex, consisting of a caretaker's apartment adjacent to the main house, was finished in 1916 or 1917, just before World War I.<ref name="BWR p. 3" /><ref name="nyt-1981-12-25">Template:Cite news</ref> The Department of Parks awarded a contract for repairs to the house at the end of 1914.<ref name="Minutes1914">Template:Cite report</ref> The architect Norman Isham was hired to renovate the mansion, which included restoring the fireplaces, adding paneling, moving the radiators, and installing interior shutters.<ref name="BWR p. 3" /> By the late 1910s, the museum was charging admission fees on Thursdays; although the museum no longer charged a fee on Sundays, it had shorter operating hours on that day.<ref name="n135784919">Template:Cite news</ref>

By the early 1930s, the Van Cortlandt House saw 50,000 to 60,000 visitors each year, including many foreign-born visitors.<ref name="The New York Times 1930 k113">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A walnut tree was planted in front of the mansion in 1938, replacing an older tree underneath which Washington had once stood.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="p1243017933">Template:Cite news</ref> The guns outside the Van Cortlandt House were scrapped in 1942 after then–parks commissioner Robert Moses found that the weaponry was "of neither historic nor esthetic value".<ref name="The New York Times 1942 c836">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The New York Herald Tribune reported in the mid-1940s that the Van Cortlandt House had 100,000 annual visitors.<ref name="p1268036798" /> NYC Parks announced plans in 1953 to install an iron fence around the mansion at a cost of $26,424; the fence had been relocated from the median of Delancey Street in Manhattan.<ref name="Press1953">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="The New York Times 1953 n786">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> During the late 1950s, a group led by New York State Assembly member Mildred F. Taylor found that the building was still in good condition.<ref name="The New York Times 1957 f188">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

After various members of the Colonial Dames provided donations "to make the mansion a more authoritative eighteenth-century home",<ref name="p1324133634">Template:Cite news</ref> the Colonial Dames closed the Van Cortlandt House in December 1960 for what was supposed to be a four-month renovation.<ref name="The New York Times 1960 c280">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="n135873338">Template:Cite news</ref> The house's reopening was delayed by two months to June 1961.<ref name="p1325167572">Template:Cite news</ref> This renovation involved restoring the walls and the original floors,<ref name="n135879377" /> as well as upgrades to the caretaker's apartment and mechanical systems.<ref name="BWR p. 3" /> The house was still open seven days a week in the 1960s, charging admission four days a week,<ref name="n135865334">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135873391">Template:Cite news</ref> but was only open on weekends by the 1970s.<ref name="nyt-1977-05-06">Template:Cite news</ref> It had several caretakers during this time. A poet, Hagop Yacoubian, began caring for the house in 1959, shortly after coming to the U.S. from Armenia.<ref name="n135865970">Template:Cite news</ref> Robert and Ann Porter, who were hired as the museum's caretakers in 1973 following a chance meeting with one of the museum's directors, sometimes hosted private parties in the house when the museum was closed.<ref name="nyt-1981-12-25" /> By the mid-1970s, the Bronx County Historical Society was also involved in the house's maintenance,<ref name="p122683172">Template:Cite news</ref> although the Colonial Dames still operated the house and provided decorations and furniture.<ref name="n135879993">Template:Cite news</ref>

1980s to present

The grounds of the house were landscaped during 1980,<ref name="nyt-1980-05-04">Template:Cite news</ref> and the house itself was closed in 1986 for a renovation.<ref name="n135879993" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The work included a new 150-seat auditorium under the house; an expansion of the cellar for taller guests; new bathrooms; and mechanical, structural, and fire-safety upgrades.<ref name="n135880580">Template:Cite news</ref> In addition, the parlors were repainted in their original colors.<ref name="BWR p. 3" /> The renovation, which cost $571,900,<ref name="n135879993" /><ref name="n135880580" /> reopened in December 1988 to celebrate Van Cortlandt Park's 100th anniversary.<ref name="n135881160">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135881357">Template:Cite news</ref> The Van Cortlandt Mansion was one of the founding members of the Historic House Trust, established in 1989.<ref name="Historic House Trust of New York City 1989 j392">Template:Cite press release</ref><ref name="nyt-1989-06-20">Template:Cite news</ref> At the time, the house's roof needed to be replaced.<ref name="nyt-1989-06-20" /> By the early 1990s, the house was open five days a week and charged admission fees at all times.<ref name="p108729650">Template:Cite news</ref> Students from Brooklyn College conducted excavations around the house's site between 1990 and 1992.<ref name=n135424629>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="BW p. 305" /> After a set of tennis courts were proposed east of the mansion in the 1990s, preservationists raised concerns that the tennis courts would ruin views from the house and destroy historical artifacts,<ref name="p278590874">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="nyt-1994-09-11">Template:Cite news</ref> though the courts were approved anyway.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

By the mid-1990s, some rooms had peeling paint or water damage, and there were concerns that the furniture had bug infestations. The museum's director Laura Carpenter Correa wanted to renovate the house for $1 million, and the house's roof was to be repaired with $250,000 from the New York City Council and the Bronx borough president's office. However, there was no funding for further repairs, and the museum had only a $100,000 annual operating budget.<ref name="nyt-1995-07-16" /> Carpenter also doubled as the house's caretaker and continued to direct the museum through the early 21st century. The Van Cortlandt House had outdated mechanical systems, and, although Carpenter was allowed to live in the house rent-free, the city admonished her for trying to add a satellite dish.<ref name="Nir 2012 m105">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Colonial Dames was still operating the Van Cortlandt House Museum in the early 21st century.<ref name="NYCL-2605">Template:Cite report</ref>

Brooklyn College students undertook further archeological excavations at the site in 2003,<ref name="n135887842" /> and the house was open six days a week during the 2000s.<ref name="p279808243">Template:Cite news</ref> The house's dining room was restored in 2015; the work involved a restoration of the paneling, wallpaper, and fireplace tiles.<ref name="Kahn 2015 k307">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The mansion was closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City,<ref name="The Riverdale Press 2020 d477">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and it reopened next year for self-guided tours.<ref name="News 12 - The Bronx 2021 n236" /> The house's communications systems were refurbished in 2022,<ref name="New York City Department of Parks & Recreation c758">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the fence around the house was to be rebuilt in the mid-2020s.<ref name="New York City Department of Parks & Recreation r880">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Architecture

The house, designed by an unknown architect,<ref name=NYCL-0127>Template:Cite report</ref> is built in the Georgian style and is Template:Frac stories tall.<ref name="NPS p. 2">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="nyt-1967-12-24" /> It was reportedly based on Philipse Manor in Westchester County.<ref name="n135879377" /><ref name="NYCL p. 3">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="VCM p. ix">Template:Harvnb</ref> The house has an L-shaped plan, with wings extending along the south and east sides.<ref name="BW p. 305">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="NPS p. 2" /> The southern wing was probably completed first, followed by the eastern wing.<ref name="BW p. 305" /> A lean-to was added to the house in the 19th century,<ref name="Ferris p. xi">Template:Harvnb</ref> while a caretaker's apartment (adjacent to the main house) dates to before World War I.<ref name="BW p. 305" /><ref name="nyt-1981-12-25" />

Exterior

The house is built of dressed fieldstone.<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> Late-19th-century sources describe the house as having a rubblestone facade.<ref name="nyt-1897-08-22" /><ref name="Ferris p. x" /> One corner of the house contains a cornerstone bearing the year 1748.<ref name="Ferris p. x" /><ref name="n135703350" /> The first story is raised above the ground, so there are several entrances with wooden porches, each of which contains a small stoop with railings. The original doors were replaced with Dutch-style doors at some point in the house's history.<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> The exterior of the house largely lacks elaborate decorations.<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> Despite the paucity of ornate ornamentation, one descendant, Catharine Van Cortlandt Mathews, wrote that the design "suggests to a large degree the substantial comfort of the era which it represents".<ref name="VCM p. ix" /> Next to the original L-shaped structure is the caretaker's apartment, which also has a rubblestone facade and brick window frames.<ref name="nyt-1981-12-25" /> The caretaker's apartment occupies the northern portion of the grounds, creating a C-shaped structure.<ref name="BWR p. 3" />

The window openings are surrounded by brick frames<ref name="Ferris p. x" /><ref name="nyt-1897-08-22" /> and contain sash windows with twelve panes over twelve.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> The original windows were transparent but, by the end of the 19th century, had gained the appearance of ground glass.<ref name="VCM p. ix" /><ref name="Ferris p. xii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The windowsills were incorporated into the outer walls, and the sills on the second story are of a slightly different design from those on the first story.<ref name="Ferris p. xi" /> There are keystones above the windows, which contain carvings of grotesque masks.<ref name="Jenkins p. 296" /><ref name="NPS p. 2" /><ref name="VCM p. ix" /> The grotesques bear various facial expressions, and each mask has a distinct design, representing a different Cortlandt.<ref name="Ferris p. xi" /> Local historian William Arthur Tieck said that the bricks were laid so the highest-quality brick faced outward, while ordinary brick faced inward.<ref name="nyt-1980-05-04" /> According to the National Park Service, the Van Cortlandt House was the only structure in the area that used grotesque masks as decoration,<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> although Mathews cited the decorations as having been common in the Netherlands.<ref name="VCM p. ix" />

File:Historic American Buildings Survey, Arnold Moses, Photographer, March 29, 1937, KITCHEN. - Frederick Van Cortlandt Mansion, Broadway and Two-hundred-forty-second Street, Bronx, HABS NY,3-BRONX,5-8.tif
Interior of the kitchen

At the top of the facade is a cornice that supports a protruding soffit. The underside of the soffit has modillions set at wide intervals. The main house is capped by a mansard roof with a slate surface; there are no railings or decks above the roof. Seven dormer windows protrude from the roof: three facing east, one facing west, and three facing south. Each dormer contains a six-over-six sash window, and there is a triangular pediment above each window.<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> The house contained multiple brick chimney stacks, similar to manors in the Hudson Valley. At the time of the house's construction, not many houses used multiple stacks, but this arrangement allowed heat to be provided to the majority of rooms.<ref name="BWR p. 3" />

Interior

In general, the interior has a Georgian-style design and layout, and the rooms had fireplaces on their north walls and windows on at least one of the other three walls.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> Elaborately carved woodwork is used throughout the house, and there are several fireplaces with Dutch tiles.<ref name="NPS p. 2" />

Unlike other urban mansions, but typical of rural estates, the formal entertaining rooms (such as the dining room and parlors) were placed on the first floor. The rear of the house had a service wing, where servants could move about without guests noticing.<ref name="BWR pp. 3–4">Template:Harvnb</ref> As built, the first story's southern wing had an entrance hall flanked by two parlors,<ref name="n135879377" /><ref name="BW p. 304">Template:Harvnb</ref> while the eastern wing had a side hall and dining room on that story.<ref name="n135879377" /><ref name="Ferris p. xi" /> The second floor is generally designed in a simpler style than the first floor<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> but is also arranged in an L-shaped plan.<ref name="n135879377" /> The caretaker's apartment has seven rooms,<ref name="nyt-1981-12-25" /> including a kitchen and two bathrooms.<ref name="nyt-1999-05-23">Template:Cite news</ref>

Basement

The kitchen is within the raised basement.<ref name="BW p. 305" /> The walls of the basement are Template:Convert thick, a defensive measure,<ref name="Ferris p. xvii">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="p509490536" /> and are made of plaster on stone.<ref name="NYCL p. 4">Template:Harvnb</ref> There are two small windows near the top of the western wall, which may have been intended as defensive loopholes.<ref name="Ferris p. xvii" /><ref name="VCM p. xii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The basement's ceiling has low wooden beams,<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> which measure Template:Convert<ref name="Ferris p. xvii" /><ref name="nyt-1903-01-18">Template:Cite news</ref> and were hand-crafted out of cypress and cedar.<ref name="p509490536" /> Water for the kitchen was originally sourced from Vault Hill.<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /> There is a Dutch brick oven embedded in the kitchen's wall.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /><ref name="p509490536" /> On one wall is a wide, short fireplace with a hearth and an arched opening.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> A dresser and a porcelain closet occupied the kitchen.<ref name="VCM p. xii" /> There is also a newer basement with a classroom<ref name="BW p. 305" /> and an auditorium.<ref name="n135880580" /> The museum's restrooms are also in the basement.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

First story

The front hall is accessed from the main entrance on the south end of the building. Doorways with eared frames lead to parlors on the west and east walls.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> The front hall's floor is made of yellow pine boards covered by a canvas-painted cloth.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum Entrance Stair Halls" /> The western wall of the front hall contains a U-shaped stairway,<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> which ascends to the second and third stories.<ref name="n135764042" /><ref name="Ferris p. xii" /> The inner portion of the stairway has a railing with turned balusters, a round newel at the bottom, and square newels on each landing. The stairway's outer wall has paneled wainscoting.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> At the stairway's first landing, there is a niche containing a large window.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /><ref name="Ferris pp. xii–xiii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The stairway's high ceiling was intended as a symbol of wealth when the house was built.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum Entrance Stair Halls" /> Behind the front hall is the rear hall, which has a simple stairway and leads both to the dining room and to a servants' entrance.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /><ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum Entrance Stair Halls" /> The rear hall was added shortly after Frederick Van Cortlandt died, when the house was being finished, and provided a private entrance for Frederick's widow Frances.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum Entrance Stair Halls" />

To the left (west) of the front hall is the western parlor, which served as Washington's quarters in 1783. On the northern wall is a fireplace surrounded by blue-and-white tiles,<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> which depict scenes from the Bible.<ref name="VCM p. x">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name="Ferris pp. xiv–xv">Template:Harvnb</ref> Pilasters separate the fireplace from an arched cupboard on either side; each cupboard has two paneled doors and a set of shelves for storing porcelain. The rest of the north wall is painted blue and is paneled, while the three other walls are made of white plaster with a baseboard, a dado rail, and a molding at the ceiling. The south wall has three windows.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> There was a group of seats next to the window on the south wall.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /><ref name="Ferris p. xv">Template:Harvnb</ref>

To the right (east) of the front hall is the eastern parlor, which was intended as a formal room.<ref name="Ferris p. x" /><ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> It was likely used for tea and card games.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> Each wall is covered in paneling with a cornice at the top.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> This room has a fireplace, which was probably added after the house was finished.<ref name="NPS p. 2" /><ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> The fireplace has a marble hearth with a wood molding, as well as a carved marble mantel with eared moldings, a shelf, and a carved frieze underneath.<ref name="NYCL p. 3" /> Above the fireplace is an overmantel with a frieze, eared moldings, and a broken pediment with an urn;<ref name="NYCL pp. 3–4">Template:Harvnb</ref> the overmantel depicts Adam and Eve, a serpent, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.<ref name="VCM p. x" /><ref name="Ferris p. xiii">Template:Harvnb</ref>

File:Historic American Buildings Survey, Arnold Moses, Photographer, March 29, 1937, DINING ROOM FIRE PLACE. - Frederick Van Cortlandt Mansion, Broadway and Two-hundred-forty-second HABS NY,3-BRONX,5-7.tif
Dining room fireplace

The dining room is in the eastern wing, separated from the eastern parlor by the rear hall,<ref name="Ferris p. xiii" /> and is designed in a late-18th-century style. It was likely not originally used for meals, as Americans generally did not have dedicated dining rooms prior to the American Revolution.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> The dining room had a fireplace with a mantel from Template:Circa,<ref name="NPS p. 2" /> which had ornamentation such as pilasters, sunbursts, and motifs of one-quarter of a fan.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> There was a small closet built into the side of the fireplace mantel, which was used to keep items warm during winters. One corner of the room also featured a large white cupboard which was used to store porcelain.<ref name="VCM p. xi">Template:Harvnb</ref> The walls are made of light plaster above dark buff wainscoting, and a chimney occupies the north wall. Atop the wall was a ceiling molding, which likely dated from the 19th century.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> An 18th-century ceiling molding and fireplace mantel were restored in a subsequent renovation.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum e440">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Upper stories

On the second floor, there is a hallway in the center of the southern wing, which connects with the house's main stairway. At the south end of the hallway is a sash window with inward-facing shutters and a seating area.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" />

Next to the hallway are two rooms, one each to the west and east.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /><ref name="VCM pp. xii–xiii">Template:Harvnb</ref> These bedrooms both contain white walls; doorways with molded frames; fireplaces with paneling and white tiles; windows with internal shutters; cornices above the windows. The western room was known as the Washington bedroom<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> and had furniture used by Washington.<ref name="VCM p. xiii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The north wall of the Washington bedroom has a fireplace flanked by closets, similar to the cupboards on the first-floor western parlor.<ref name="NYCL p. 4" /> Behind the eastern bedroom was a spinning room.<ref name="VCM pp. xiii–xiv">Template:Harvnb</ref> A third bedroom to the northeast has a fireplace with allegorical Dutch tiles.<ref name="Ferris p. xvi">Template:Harvnb</ref> One of the bedrooms was named the Monroe room because one of the family's maids had married a man surnamed Monroe.<ref name="n135779612" />

A narrow U-shaped stairway in the second-floor hall continues up to the third floor.<ref name="VCM p. xiv">Template:Harvnb</ref> On the third floor were two smaller rooms for servants, one of which was in an incomplete condition.<ref name="BW p. 304" /> The attic has been adapted into an exhibit on the lives of the slaves who worked on the Van Cortlandt plantation.<ref name="News 12 - The Bronx 2021 n236">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Operations

The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation owns the Van Cortlandt House.<ref name="Historic House Trust of New York City 2022 t650" /><ref name="Fortier 2016 p. 39" /> The National Society of Colonial Dames in the State of New York, a branch of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America,<ref name="NYCL-2605" /> continues to operate the mansion as a museum Template:As of.<ref name="Historic House Trust of New York City 2022 t650">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Fortier 2016 p. 39">Template:Cite book</ref>

Collections

File:Van Cortlandt mansion, Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx, New York. LOC gsc.5a16021.jpg
One of the bedrooms

When the house opened as a museum, the western parlor was set aside specifically as a museum, while the other rooms displayed memorabilia from Colonial Dames and their friends.<ref name="p574322374" /> In the house's early years, one room contained artifacts from the colonial and Revolutionary War eras.<ref name="p509490536" /> Old-fashioned cookware was exhibited in the kitchen.<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /><ref name="VCM p. xii" /> The western parlor had a pair of Benjamin Franklin's andirons and some maps dating as far back as 1642.<ref name="VCM pp. x–xi">Template:Harvnb</ref> In the eastern parlor were furniture such as chairs, a writing desk, a candle stand, and four chalk artworks.<ref name="VCM p. x" /> The dining room displayed porcelain, platters, and a dinner table.<ref name="nyt-1897-04-04" /><ref name="VCM pp. xi–xii">Template:Harvnb</ref> The western bedroom on the second story featured furniture from Washington's time at the house, such as his bed, a mahogany footrest, a carved clock, and bed steps. The eastern bedroom had a chest, printing press, and cradle, while the spinning room featured several tools used for needlework.<ref name="VCM pp. xiii–xiv" /> Other objects displayed throughout the house included a set of wooden vultures that once belonged to a Spanish privateer,<ref name="Lamb Harrison 1896 p." /><ref name="nyt-1903-01-18" /> and two cannons outside the entrance.<ref name="The New York Times 1901 w733" /><ref name="n135786079">Template:Cite news</ref>

In the 20th century, several objects were added to the collection, such as handmade liquor bottles that had been excavated in 1902.<ref name="n135766248">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="nyt-1903-01-18" /> During the 1910s and 1920s, the house had several pieces of colonial and Dutch furniture,<ref name="Jenkins pp. 294–295" /><ref name="p1131196596">Template:Cite news</ref> and one parlor was cited as having a Chippendale mirror and a secretarial desk.<ref name="p512134730" /><ref name="n135785986">Template:Cite news</ref> The upstairs rooms retained their old four-poster beds with tapestries.<ref name="p512134730" /><ref name="p1131196596" /><ref name="n135785986" /> The house displayed objects of various sizes, in addition to china and furniture.<ref name="Dunham 1931" /> On the third floor,<ref name="n135865970" /> there was a nursery with children's objects such as a bed and tea dishes.<ref name="n135779612" /><ref name="n135785986" />

By the 1970s, the western parlor featured a snuff box from Peter Stuyvesant, pistols from Aaron Burr, and an Armenian rug. The eastern parlor had a cello, spinet, and piecrust table; the dining room had plates, set for a meal; and the kitchen had various utensils, as well as objects like a powder horn and a rifle.<ref name="n135865970" /> The house also had a Dutch storage chest in one parlor, several poster beds on the second floor, and a dollhouse on the third floor.<ref name="nyt-1987-07-31" /> The mansion retained much of its old furniture in the 21st century, such as cupboards, cradles, and built-in cabinets. The museum also displayed artifacts such as colored rugs, bedspreads, and utensils.<ref name="Sheraton 2001 d116">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the modern-day dining room, there is a set of drawers, six chairs, and a table.<ref name="Van Cortlandt House Museum e440" />

Events

After the museum opened, it began hosting monthly "antiquarian exhibits" in 1903.<ref name="p571335703">Template:Cite news</ref> The museum's other early exhibits included displays of antique pewter,<ref name="n135768489">Template:Cite news</ref> miniatures of Colonial portraits,<ref name="The New York Times 1913 j555">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and needlework portraits.<ref name="The New York Times 1913 h627">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The museum hosted exhibits of colonial documents, paintings, and books in the 1920s,<ref name="The New York Times 1924 e105">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and it showed glass, silverware, china, and pottery from the 17th and 18th centuries during the 1950s.<ref name="p1323090253">Template:Cite news</ref> The Colonial Dames has hosted live performances on the museum's behalf; for example, it staged a play at the Alvin Theatre in 1960 to raise money for the house.<ref name="p1325270976">Template:Cite news</ref> By the 1970s, the house presented St. Nicholas Day performances,<ref name="nyt-1979-11-30">Template:Cite news</ref> the Bronx Arts Ensemble's weekend concerts,<ref name="nyt-1979-07-17">Template:Cite news</ref> Bronx Bicentennial activities,<ref name="n135874127">Template:Cite news</ref> and demonstrations of Revolutionary-era military activities.<ref>See, for example:Template:Unbulleted list citebundle</ref> In the late 20th century, the house continued to present events such as concerts,<ref>See, for example:Template:Unbulleted list citebundle</ref> St. Nicholas Day carols,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> children's programs, and historical lectures.<ref name="n135879377" />

In the 21st century, the museum hosted events such as historical reenactments.<ref name="Chamberlain 2005 z028">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The museum gives tours throughout the year,<ref name="NYC-ARTS 2012 i536">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> including both self-guided tours and those led by docents.<ref name="Time Out New York 2010 z241">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The house also hosts special events.<ref name="NYC-ARTS 2012 i536" />

Impact

Critical reception and media

In 1889, one reporter described the building as "solid, substantial, massive", having been preserved "in splendid condition".<ref name="n135703350" /> After the house was converted into a museum, The New York Times wrote that the house was "one of the most interesting relics of the Colonial period",<ref name="n135756514" /> while the Brooklyn Daily Eagle said: "The house alone, on account of its shapely architecture and quaint furnishings, is worth a visit to [Van Cortlandt] park".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A writer for Town and Country said in 1901 that the house preserved "all the glory of that interesting era dear to those who love to read the history of New York before it was so cosmopolitan",<ref name="p20807162672" /> while another Times article in 1911 said that the house by itself was a reason to visit Van Cortlandt Park.<ref name="The New York Times 1911 h532" /> A writer for The Christian Science Monitor wrote in 1915 that "this house helps us to picture their days of generous means and dignified living".<ref name="p509490536">Template:Cite news</ref> Conversely, a writer for The American Architect said in 1919 that the house displayed too many objects that "are not relevant to the house or its history and are misleading in suggestion".<ref name="p124695378">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

One critic, writing in 1927, said the Van Cortlandt House, along with the Gracie Mansion and the Morris–Jumel Mansion, were among the few old houses in New York City that "retain some of their former dignity and beauty of surroundings".<ref name="p1009442406">Template:Cite news</ref> Another writer in 1964 described the house as having "interior paneling and furnishings of the first rank",<ref name="n123868487">Template:Cite news</ref> while a reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer said in 1984 that it was the Bronx's "most prestigious house".<ref name="p1820061932">Template:Cite news</ref> Bronx historian Lloyd Ultan characterized the house in 1995 as being "highly significant to the history of the nation" due to its use during the American Revolutionary War.<ref name="nyt-1995-07-16" /> Times critic Mimi Sheraton wrote in 2001 that the house's "almost rustic Georgian simplicity" contrasted with the grandeur of the Bartow–Pell Mansion.<ref name="Sheraton 2001 d116" />

The house has been shown in various media works. The Van Cortlandt House's historical importance had been recognized as early as 1914, when the New York City Art Commission took pictures of the mansion and other notable sites across the city; at the time, cameras were still relatively uncommon.<ref name="nyt-1914-05-10">Template:Cite news</ref> The Van Cortlandt House was also depicted in a mural painted in the Bronx County Courthouse in 1934.<ref name="The New York Times 1934 h689">Template:Unbulleted list citebundle</ref> In addition, a depiction of the house was displayed at the City Gallery at 2 Columbus Circle in 1981,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and the mansion stood in for an Irish house on an episode of the TV series Boardwalk Empire.<ref name="Colman 2013 r687">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Landmark designations

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) designated the Van Cortlandt House as a city landmark in March 1966,<ref name="The New York Times 1966 m056">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="n133729162">Template:Cite news</ref> and the Board of Estimate ratified the landmark designation that August.<ref name="n135865660">Template:Cite news</ref> This made the mansion one of the first residences in the Bronx to be designated as a city landmark.<ref name="n135865509">Template:Cite news</ref> The mansion was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1967<ref name="nyt-1967-12-24">Template:Cite news</ref> and became a National Historic Landmark in 1976.<ref name="NHL">National Park Service, National Historic Landmark Survey, New York Template:Webarchive, retrieved June 3, 2007.</ref> The LPC designated the interiors of the Van Cortlandt Mansion as a city landmark in July 1975;<ref name="nyt-1975-07-23">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="n135874652">Template:Cite news</ref> the designation covered several Georgian-style rooms.<ref name="n135874652" /><ref name="NYCL p. 1">Template:Harvnb</ref>

See also

References

Notes

Template:Notelist

Citations

Template:Reflist

Sources

Template:New York City Historic Sites Template:National Register of Historic Places listings in the Bronx Template:Authority control Template:Subject bar