Dyckman House Slideshow

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Dyckman Farmhouse and Museum, West 204th Street and Broadway, Inwood, NYC.
Dyckman Farmhouse and Museum, West 204th Street and Broadway, Inwood, NYC.

When sisters Mary Alice Dyckman Dean and Fannie Fredericka Dyckman Welch donated their aging family farmhouse to the City of New York they preserved a connection to New York’s early Dutch history that survives to this very day.

When presented to the City in 1915, the farmhouse was already more than a century old. At the time the sagging old homestead sat on a portion of the once massive Dyckman farmlands which were rapidly being divided up into city blocks.

It took some foresight, but the gift ensured the preservation of the only remaining farmhouse on the Island of Manhattan; this as the springs and meadows of the Inwood valley were being razed to prepare for the downtown crowds lured north by the ever expanding subway system.

The house itself, built by William  Dyckman in 1784, was the third in a succession of Dyckman homes. The Dyckmans had been in the area since 1666, when Jan Dyckman, and a small band of Dutch neighbors, re-settled northern Manhattan after previous settlers had been killed or driven off by Native Americans.

Arnule Bandel sketch of Dyckman House, circa 1835, from collection of the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum.
Arnule Bandel sketch of Dyckman House, circa 1835, from collection of the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum.

The current house was actually built out of necessity. The previous home was burned by the British after the Dyckmans made known their support of the American cause.
In fact, William Dyckman finished construction on his farmhouse one year after the British evacuated the City. William  would die inside his comfortable new home in 1787.

By the turn of the century, the farmhouse had fallen into the hands of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Judge who had purchased the home at auction. Seeing the historic value of the house, Judge offered to donate the home to the city, provided they picked up the tab to move it to another location. The real estate the farmhouse sat on was simply too valuable to give away.

Dyckman House gift, NYHS.
Dyckman House gift announcement, NYHS.

And while the city wasn’t willing to foot the bill, the descendents of Jan Dyckman were quick to come to the rescue. They bought their former family home back from Judge in 1915 and made a gift of both home and property to the city “upon condition that the said land and dwelling be used in perpetuity as a public park and as a public museum, and called “The Dyckman House Park.‘”

The house and museum opened to the public in 1916.

Today the farmhouse is a member of the Historic House Trust of New York City, thus ensuring its survival and enjoyment for future generations.
For Dyckman House Museum visiting hours and other information click here.

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3 COMMENTS

  1. Love the slide-show! William Dyckman was my grandfather 8 times removed. I found out about the Dyckman house a couple years ago while researching my family history. Hope to make a trip to New York to visit the home in person within a couple of years. I am grateful for all that played a part in preserving such a precious part of history.

  2. I am research my family ancestry. My great-great-great grandmother Catherine Dyckman married William Wallace Russell. I believe her mother was Eliza. Looking for any assistance in confirming this fact. Her father was an officer in the War of 1812.

    Thank you

    Mark

  3. I grew up in inwood and one of the most enchanting components of this marvelous sector of land that time forgot is the dyckman house. The nostalgic sense of history and rediscovery offers an unforgettable and memorable time well spent in the life of any one who is looking to get away from all the noise and turmoil of the inner city. I plan on going back to my inwood visit the forest and the house on the perch (Dyckman house).

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