Page 20 - Experiential Magazine - Vol 5
P. 20
DESTINATION SPOTLIGHT
Sleepy Hollow, NY:
The Home of
Ichabod Crane
Early maps show that a num- are the few farmhouses that dotted the area,
ber of tenant farmers rented but many of the old farm roads remain.
land from Frederick Philipse
in the area, and the fields and A SETTING LITTLE CHANGED
forests remain much as they
were during the late 1600s As you walk along the river, you may be
overcome by an unexplained drowsiness, if
As 19th-Century author Washington Irving the stories of Washington Irving are true.
tells us in his books, the early Dutch settlers It’s the result of a spell cast by a Native
who settled the Hudson River Valley had American wizard to subdue an enemy tribe,
particularly vivid imaginations, especially and it explains why the valley here is called
if you have a taste for the macabre. Irving Sleepy Hollow.
passed through the Hudson River Valley in
his youth and fell in love with its charms. Of course, Sleepy Hollow’s most famous
Years later while living in London, he legend is the story of Ichabod Crane, who
wrote his famous Legend of Sleepy Hollow, disappeared on his way home from a party
borrowing, it is said, from stories he heard late at night after encountering the Head-
while visiting a friend on an estate near less Horseman on a dark wooded trail. A
Kinderhook in the Hudson Valley. setting much like the one described by
Washington Irving can be found on Gorey
AN EXTRAORDINARY DOMAIN Brook Road, one of the oldest roads in the
area and just a few hundred yards from
The first white settlers came to the area in where Irving imagined Ichabod Crane
the 1600s, after the voyage of Henry Hud- made his fateful encounter. The setting
son up the river. Although the Dutch West probably has changed little in hundreds of
India Company offered generous incentives years.
to attract settlers from Holland, including
near-feudal powers for people with suffi- SAVING GRACE
cient resources, few people took the bait,
and settlement remained sparse throughout All of this magical land would have fallen
most of that century. The lack of competi- into the hands of suburban developers if
tion made it possible for a penniless Dutch not for the Rockefeller family, which began
carpenter, who eventually changed his buying land here in the 1890s. Over the
name to Frederick Philipse, to amass an years they created a vast preserve of man-
extraordinary domain covering almost half icured meadows and forests, crisscrossed
of present-day Westchester County. with an impressive network of bridle paths.
John D. Rockefeller built a great mansion
In the late 17th Century, he established a he called Kykuit, which you can visit today,
grist mill at the mouth of the Pocantico and his brother William constructed an
River, where river sloops could find har- impressive mansion called Rockwood Hall,
bor and transport animal pelts, grain, and which stood on sweeping grounds facing
other agricultural products down to New Hudson Rover. All that remains of this
Amsterdam, which later became New York mansion are the foundations and beautiful
City. Early maps show that a number of grounds, now open to the public. There is
tenant farmers rented land from Philipse in not a prettier park along the Hudson River
the area, and the fields and forests remain in southern Westchester, its entrance at the
much as they were during that time. Gone western end of Route 117, only a short drive
from the main entrance to Rockefeller State
Park.
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