Esopus Meadows Walk and Wade
Experience the Sites of the Hudson River Valley
Coronavirus/Covid-19 Update:
The Greenway/NHA office is closed to the public. Greenway staff are working remotely and are available via email.
For Greenway or NHA related questions (not including the Empire State Trail):
Scott Keller, Executive Director: scott.keller@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
Shannon Day, Grants and Finance Coordinator: shannon.day@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
Beth Campochairo, Trails and Community Outreach Director: beth.campochiaro@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
Dan Jeanson, Project Director: daniel.jeanson@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
Cody Arana, Event Coordinator: cody.arana@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
For immediate help concerning the Empire State Trail:
Andy Beers, EST Director: andy.beers@hudsongreenway.ny.gov
The mid-Hudson and Capital District regions in NYS are now in Phase IV reopening and some sites are reopening with limited hours and tours. Please call the individual sites directly to inquire about the events listed on our event calendars and to inquire about hours.
Hudson Valley Heritage Sites During Covid-19
Your favorite Hudson Valley cultural organizations are here for you during the Covid-19 crisis. Three Designated Heritage Sites of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area are featured in the video above. These sites are Opus 40, the Roosevelt and Vanderbilt National Historic Sites, and the Frances Lehman Loeb Arts Center at Vassar College.
Itineraries
Featured Events
Spring Pollinator Walk at Olana
Celebrate Earth Day by exploring Olana’s artist-designed landscape through the perspective of pollinators. Read More
PRESENTATION Toward Yorktown: The French & American Armies in Westchester County in the summer of 1781
PRESENTATION Toward Yorktown: The French & American Armies in Westchester County in the summer of 1781 Read More
Take a Walk on the Wild(flower) Side at Clermont
Join us in celebrating Earth Day weekend by exploring and enjoying the landscape, while observing and identifying the native spring wildflowers of Clermont. Read More

About the Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area
The Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area was designated by Congress in 1996 and is one of the now fifty-five federally-recognized National Heritage Areas throughout the United States. Through a partnership with the National Park Service, Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area collaborates with residents, government agencies, non-profit groups and private partners to interpret, preserve and celebrate the nationally-significant cultural and natural resources of the Hudson River Valley. In this way, we encourage public stewardship for these resources as well as economic activity at the local and regional level. The Heritage Area is managed by the Hudson River Valley Greenway.
In March 2019, the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area (NHA) was officially renamed the Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area, in honor of the late Congressman who wrote the legislation creating the NHA in 1996. Rep. Hinchey served in the NYS Assembly before he was elected to Congress. In the Assembly, he wrote and sponsored the legislation that created the Hudson River Valley Greenway in 1991. It is not an exaggeration to say that the Greenway and National Heritage Area would not exist in the region without the dedication and love that Congressman Hinchey had for the Hudson Valley and its residents. He was a champion of the environment, who supported the Clean Air Act and was an original co-sponsor of the Small Business Clean Energy Financing Act. We are honored that our Heritage Area now bears his name.