Please call the individual sites directly to inquire about the events listed on our event calendars and to inquire about hours.
The Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area does not own or operate any of the sites listed below. They are owned and managed by the organizations listed in the site descriptions. Please call ahead for special accommodation needs or with any questions about their sites.
Heritage Sites
Heritage Sites
Shaker Museum | Mount Lebanon
Discover the story of the American Shakers at their largest and leading community from 1787 to 1947, Mount Lebanon, as we work to restore it.
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
Walk the very hills that Washington Irving, famous author of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, once did and pause at his final resting place to pay your respects!Other notable stops include William Rockefeller's imposing mausoleum, Henry Villard's exquisite sculpture and the stained glass windows in the Helmsley mausoleum, and many more.
St. Paul's Church National Historic Site
The 18th-century church and graveyard the make up St. Paul's Church include a museum on local events that helped shape the nation.
Staatsburgh State Historic Site
Staatsburgh marries the prestige of one of New York's oldest families with the new money of the Gilded Age.
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture
Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture is a working farm and education center devoted to teaching, demonstrating and promoting sustainable, community-based food production.
Stony Point Battlefield State Historic Site
The Stony Point Battlefield preserves the site of the last major battle of the north-eastern colonies during the American Revolution.
Storm King Art Center
Over 100 monumental 20th-century sculptures are scattered through Storm King Art Center's landscape to explore the relationship between art and nature.
Teatown Lake Reservation
Teatown Lake Reservation is a 1,000-acre nature preserve and environmental education center in the scenic Hudson Highlands region of the Hudson Valley.
Ten Broeck Mansion
The elegant Ten Broeck Mansion was built in 1798 for General Abraham Ten Broeck and later became the residence of philanthropist Thomas Worth Olcott
Thomas Cole National Historic Site
The home and studio of Thomas Cole, founder of the Hudson River School of landscape painting features personal affects and unique vistas