Showing posts with label Dutch Colonial Farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dutch Colonial Farm. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Building on the Farm: A Legacy of Architecture at the Mabee Farm

Drawing of buildings at Mabee Farm by Keith Prior. From Grems-Doolittle Library Collections. 


The Mabee Farm Historic Site in Rotterdam Junction is where visitors can find the oldest house still standing in the Mohawk Valley. The Jan Mabee House (also known as the Stone House) dates from around 1706 and remained in the Mabee family for almost three centuries. In 1993, George Franchere, last direct descendant of Jan Mabee, made a gift of the Mabee Farm property to the Schenectady County Historical Society. The three historic buildings on the farm -- the Stone House, Brick House, and Inn -- are examples of early Dutch American architecture and are unique in that there has been minimal change, remodeling, or reconfiguration of the structures. The Mabees also left behind a treasure trove of architectural artifacts, remnants, tools and documents which give us glimpses into the lives of Jan Mabee and his descendants. The surviving houses provide insight into early building techniques and skills and illuminate life along the Mohawk River over the course of three centuries. Study of the farm's architecture and artifacts continue to provide us with insights into the journey of the family and life on the early American farm.

Floor plan showing first floor of the Stone House (also known as the Mabee House).  The drawing was made in the 1930s as part of the Historic American Buildings Survey. The original blueprint drawings are collected in the Mabee Family Papers. This digital image can be found at the Library of Congress website (www.loc.gov). 

Many of the buildings on the farm date from the eighteenth century, including the Stone House (built ca. 1706; stone addition ca. 1755), the Brick House (built ca. 1750), and the Inn (built ca. 1790). Additionally, a Dutch barn built around 1760 was acquired by the Society in 1997, dissembled and moved from Johnstown, New York, restored, and re-erected on site. The sheer age of the Stone House is significant in the history of the settlement of the Mohawk Valley by Europeans, and it is truly the centerpiece of the farm. The Brick House is especially noteworthy as one of the earliest unaltered colonial buildings in the area; it has been referred to as "essentially a time capsule from the later half of the eighteenth century" for the lack of alteration over the years.

The architecture of the farm is heavily influenced by Dutch architecture, and the buildings are typical of the Dutch-influenced homes and agricultural buildings in the Hudson Valley and the Mohawk Valley. The exhibit explores the interior and exterior features of the farm's buildings that are typically Dutch, and what they can tell us about the lives of the people who lived there.


The Dutch Barn being reconstructed at the Mabee Farm. Photograph from Grems-Doolittle Library Photograph Collection. 

The exhibit also includes information about using techniques such as dendrochronology, reading architectural clues, and examining artifacts in finding information about the history of the buildings on the farm, how they have been altered over the years, how the uses of the buildings have changed over time, how the land on the farm has changed over time, and how principles of historic preservation and restoration have been used to preserve the buildings and to restore the look of the buildings as they were in earlier days.


The Stone House and Brick House. Undated print from a glass plate negative. Photograph from Grems-Doolittle Library Photograph Collection.  

Learn more about the architecture of the Mabee Farm by visiting the exhibit, Building on the Farm: A Legacy of Architecture at the Mabee Farm, at the George Franchere Education Center at the Mabee Farm Historic Site, 1080 Main Street (Route 5s), Rotterdam Junction, NY 12150. The exhibit opens on Saturday, May 4 at 10:00 a.m. and continues through July. Admission is free for members of the Schenectady County Historical Society and $5.00 for non-members. Call 518-887-5073 for more information about the exhibit.

We hope you will join us for the exhibit's opening on May 4, when artist Len Tantillo celebrates the public unveiling of Legacy, his new painting of the Mabee Farm finished this year. Trained as an architect, Tantillo uses modeling and historical research to make history come alive in his paintings. Legacy helps capture and reflect the spirit of the Mabee family and of life on the early American farm. Don't miss this special moment at 1:00 p.m. on May 4.

Shortly after the unveiling of Legacy, John Stevens, author and premier expert on Dutch architecture in early America, will give a comprehensive record of buildings constructed by the Dutch. The features of Dutch-American buildings will be compared with Old World prototypes. Stevens will also discuss the decline of Dutch characteristics in second half of the 18th century, as well as the persistence of Dutch timber-framing technology into the middle of the 19th century. Copies of Mr. Stevens' book, Dutch Vernacular Architecture in North America 1640-1830, will be available for purchase. His talk will be featured at 2:00 p.m.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Researching your Home


The Mabee Farm, Rotterdam

Everyone’s home has a history, are you interested in learning more about yours? Have you been remodeling or cleaning out and found something belonging to a past resident that made you curious? Did someone famous live in your house, was someone murdered in your house? Do you want to decorate the walls of your house or business with images from the past? We can help you answer these queries!
 Here at the Schenectady Historical Society we have resources which can help you learn about your house, whether it is located in the Stockade or Mont Pleasant. We have many files and photographs about streets in the city of Schenectady, if you want to see what your house looked like in the past, and how your street has changed with time. We have some files dedicated to specific houses, and who knows, one of those houses could be your home!
The Ingersoll Home, Niskayuna
 We also have city directories if you are interested in knowing more about past residents of your house. Were the past residents doctors, butchers, GE workers? Did a family live in your house, did they take in boarders?  If your house has an historic marker we have some original application forms, which may provide you with more information about the origins of your house. We also have scrapbooks on several of Schenectady’s oldest streets, assembled by Jonathan Pearson, a nineteenth century historian. Pearson collected maps, mortgage information and lots of other information and assembled it house by house, street by street. These scrapbooks, known as the street books, can provide a vast amount of information about a property.
The possibilities are vast, so drop by the library and learn more about your house and its past!




Friday, November 12, 2010

Mabee Family Papers

Biographical Note:
In 1705, Jan Pieterse Mabee acquired the land where the Mabee Farm Historic Site stands today. Originally settled by Daniel Janse Van Antwerpen, the site served as a fur trading post for American Indian traders. For 287 years, the Mabee farm was passed down through the generations, and today is the oldest house standing in the Mohawk Valley.

George E. Franchere
In 1993, the last family owner, George E. Franchere, gave the Mabee farm to the Schenectady County Historical Society, along with furnishings, heirlooms, and family papers.  Today the Schenectady County Historical Society continues to develop the farm site as a museum and educational center for the community.

Description of Collection:
This collection consists of almost 600 items including deeds, wills, letters, inventories, legal documents, bills of sale for slaves, and receipts.  The Mabee Family Papers provide a wealth of information that the Historical Society utilizes in developing interpretive programs for the farm.

1. Accounts (ACCTS)
Various bills, 1756-1895

2. Architectural Drawings (ARCH)
Historical American Buildings Survey, 1936

3. Church (CH)
Various church related items, including the purchase of a church stall or seat

4. Civil War (CW)
Documents relating to the Civil War

5. Deeds (DEEDS)
More than 50 documents relating to land transfers

6. Dutch (DUTCH)
Variety of documents, letters, etc. written in Dutch

7. Genealogy (GN)
Variety of Mabee family genealogy items

8. Insurance (INS)
Items relating to insurance on the farm

9. Inventories (INV)
Inventories made for estates of Jacob Mabee, 1824; Eve Mabee, 1863 & Simon Mabee, 1880.

10. Legacies (LEG)
Acknowledgments of receipt of legacies

11. Legal Matters (LM)
Acknowledgments of receipt of legacies

12. Letters (LETTERS)
Promissory notes, mortgages, court actions, documents relating to patents, summonses and bonds

13. Maps (MAPS)
Hand drawn and printed maps

14. Military (MIL)
Appointments, commissions, plus a number of items relating to deficiencies at company inspections, ca. 1806

15. Miscellaneous (MISC)
Variety of papers and documents

16. Periodical Clippings (PER)
Clippings from magazines and newspapers

17. Poems (POEMS)
Four undated, hand-written poems, authors unknown

18. Receipts (RECEIPTS)
Variety of receipts--many are for "payment on account" so do not give information on what was purchased

19. Slaves (SLAVES)
Bills of sale for slaves owned by the Mabee family

20. Student Exercises (STUDENT EX)
Practices exercises is calligraphy and arithmetic

21. Wills (WILLS)
18th and 19th century wills