Showing posts with label George Washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Washington. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Jumel Terrace Books



Located at 426 West 160th St. within a few steps of the Morris Jumel Mansion Museum and the Highbridge Park is Jumel Terrace Books and B&B run by Kurt Thometz. This is a hidden gem or "Nugget in the Rubbish" as Mr. Thometz refers to it on his website. The store is open "by appointment or serendipity" and is the only bookstore specializing in local Washington Heights, Harlem, Harlem Heights, Sugar Hill history, both African and American.

We encourage our visitors to support this establishment and to visit his shop and find out more about our local history in Upper Manhattan.

last modified 8/6/13


The Morris-Jumel Mansion Museum

File:Nyc, Morris-Jumel Mansion.JPG
Photo courtesy Sailko

One of the most curious gems hidden away in Washington Heights is the old Morris-Jumel Mansion. It is immediately across the street from the High Bridge Park at 161st St. If you are at the Park you must make a trip to see it (make sure it is open when you want to visit).  It will be well worth the trip.

This often overlooked Colonial site that is now operated as a Museum was once the home of Aaron Burr.  It is open to the public. Both the home and the garden have been restored to the way they were in  the colonial period and make you feel like you have travelled back in time over 200 years to the founding of the nation. In fact, it is the oldest home in Manhattan, having been built in 1765, almost 250 years ago.

It was at this site in the fall of 1776 that General George Washington used the house as his headquarters  for the Battle of Harlem Heights where Washington prevailed over the British. Eventually, however,  he retreated to White Plains over King's Bridge and Dyckman's bridges at the northern end of Manhattan.

It was also at this site after the end of the Revolutionary War, on July 10, 1790 that President George Washington dined with four of his cabinet members (Alexander Hamilton - Secretary of Treasury, John Adams - Vice President, Henry Knox - Secretary of War, and Thomas Jefferson - Secretary of State),  two of whom would go on to become presidents in their own right.


Morris Jumel Mansion c. 1900





last modified 8/14/13