The Street That Built a City: McEntee's Chestnut Street, Kingston, and the Rise of New York, by Lowell Thing
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The Street That Built a City: McEntee's Chestnut Street, Kingston, and the Rise of New York, by Lowell Thing

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The city is New York, and the street that built it or much of it is on a quiet hilltop overlooking the Hudson River a hundred miles north of New York s harbor. Chestnut Street s first resident was an engineer who helped build the Delaware and Hudson Canal, which brought millions of tons of coal from Pennsylvania to the port at Rondout to be hauled down the Hudson River on barges pulled by steamboats belonging to another Chestnut Street resident to fuel a rapidly growing New York City. Seven owners of brickyards lived on the street, and their hundreds of millions of bricks rose skyward in New York while bluestone slabs shipped from nearby Wilbur paved the city s sidewalks. The owner of the steamboat company that pushed or pulled the coal, bricks, cement and bluestone built the grandest house on the street and one of the largest mansions in the Hudson Valley, which was built almost exactly where once stood the studio of his friend, a famous painter whose close circle included one of the greatest American architects of his time and the greatest actor of his time, as well as Frederic Church, Worthington Whittredge, Sanford Gifford and other legendary artists of the Hudson River School. But The Street That Built a City is more than just a tale of city-building and rich and famous people. It is also the tale of the Irish and German immigrants and others who worked on the boats and the docks and in the brickyards, who taught school, tended shops, and doctored the sick, and whose children played in abandoned mansions and Indian caves. It is a carefully researched community history but of a community barely four blocks long. The houses they built, their occupations, the transportation they used, how they lived and played down through the generations, is all documented in detail. When Chestnut Street s first resident, James McEntee, moved to the Kingston area in 1828 to begin working as an engineer on the Delaware and Hudson Canal, the village of Rondout consisted of 5 families and a sleepy river landing. By the time McEntee died in 1887, Rondout had become a densely settled community of buildings dwellings, grocery stores (46 in all), boat repair sheds, dock buildings, bars, churches and had joined with the Village of Kingston to become the City of Kingston. Today the street that built a city is part of the Chestnut Street Historic District in Kingston, New York. Much of the former Rondout Village that Chestnut Street looked out upon from its hilltop is gone today 427 Rondout buildings were torn down between 1966 and 1970 during the misguided Urban Renewal program and even Chestnut Street s greatest mansion is also gone, but others remain, and the street s 19th-century architectural splendor is largely intact. ¤
The Street That Built a City: McEntee's Chestnut Street, Kingston, and the Rise of New York, by Lowell Thing- Amazon Sales Rank: #304183 in Books
- Published on: 2015-10-19
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 11.00" h x 8.75" w x 1.00" l, 2.48 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 342 pages
About the Author Lowell Thing was a technical writer at IBM for twenty-seven years and has lived on Chestnut Street for forty-three years. He is a former president of the Friends of Historic Kingston and spearheaded the drive for state and national recognition of the Chestnut Street Historic District in Kingston. He curated the Friends of Historic Kingston s 2015 exhibit on Jervis McEntee and wrote the title essay for its catalog, Jervis McEntee: Kingston s Artist of the Hudson River School. He also contributed an essay to the book Kingston: The IBM Years, which accompanied the Friends of Historic Kingston s special exhibit in 2014.

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Most helpful customer reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. There’s a chapter about mid-way through the book that describes ... By MM Rouse There’s a chapter about mid-way through the book that describes how neighborhood children used to sneak into the abandoned Coykendall mansion during the 1940s. According to one of the children the author interviewed, the large mysterious house was “a marvelous maze of places to play in.” And you know what? That’s exactly how I felt about this book. It's treasure box, filled with things to explore.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. A valuable addition to the history of the Hudson Valley By Francis R Kowsky A most impressive job, both for the thoroughness of the research and the very informative illustrations, as well as the excellent presentation. The book is a significant contribution to both local history and to the understanding of Jervis McEntee, an important Hudson River School painter who lately is regaining his rightful place in the history of American art.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. An enjoyable walk of a book By AFlockwood Take a leisurely walk along West Chestnut Street in Kingston, New York, under the guidance of Mr. Lowell Thing, who has lived on the street and studied its houses and the people who built and lived in them for more than 40 years.Lowell Thing is a grassroots historian who writes with a smooth flow and evident affection for his subject. He offers the reader a mix of history and fascinating side-stories condensed from his many years of interviews and research. The book is filled with maps and historic photos -- the reproductions of Jervis McEntee’s Hudson River School paintings are well worth the price of the book.Although Mr. Thing tells his story chronologically, and provides copious amounts of information about the larger houses and the more famous residents of the street, the careful reader may discover that the true center of the book is in one of the smaller wood frame homes on West Chestnut Street, where Mr. Thing and his wife lived for more than 40 years and raised their family. Even more precisely, the inspiration for Mr. Thing’s book, what made him ponder his street and its history and kept him working on it for all those years, was actually a coffee cup left on a kitchen table in that frame house by long-departed owners.Although I live far from the Hudson Valley these days, I know Kingston and West Chestnut Street well. Also, to paraphrase the fellow in The Godfather, I believe I was in the olive oil business with Mr. Thing over 40 years ago, when we were both young, and our lives stretched out ahead of us.Highly recommended.
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