Mount Vernon NYWB RR Stations

A couple weeks ago I revisited a couple of the abandoned stations of the New York, Westchester and Boston Railroad, a defunct line (actually two branches) that crossed southeast Westchester County to a terminal on the present-day site of the Westchester Mall in White Plains, and at another terminus in Port Chester.

A fair amount of the right-of-way can be examined today, and a number of station buildings survive as well. The short-lived line is well-documented and you can take an online tour here and here.

I thought I would post what appear to rare modern day images of Mount Vernon’s East 3rd Street station interior. A board covering a front window was loose enough for me to stick a camera in and take some shots, sight-unseen. The building seems to be owned by a stone supply company that uses the right-of-way below the building as material storage and transfer yard.

East wall of the station.

Not too far away is the abandoned and well-sealed Kingsbridge Road station. I haven’t seen any post-closure interior images of this structure.

Entrance to southbound platform.

Entrance to northbound platform.

Burnt out house nearby with smokestack and power lines, just because I like this picture.

More on Mount Vernon in another post soon.

Posted in Westchester County | 11 Comments

Halcyon Hall / Bennett School For Girls, Millbrook, NY

Preservation Magazine recently published an online article about the fate of Halcyon Hall in Millbrook, NY, which has an October 1 date with the wrecking ball.

The eclectic assemblage of Shingle, Tudor revival and Queen Anne architecture was built as a resort hotel c. 1891-1893. In 1907 it became the home of the Bennett School For Girls, which was later known as Bennett Junior College. The school closed in 1977 and Halcyon Hall has since been a favorite site for ruin photographers on the grand tour of abandoned buildings in the Northeast USA.

Throughout the last three decades the site has been proposed for renovation or threatened by demolition and neglect. Halcyon Hall popped up in the news again this summer when a dormer window collapsed, and subsequently when the village ordered the site to be fenced off. (Access to the buildings remains remarkably easy but the property is regularly patrolled by police, who will enter the buildings to look for people whose cars might be parked outside.) The building has been officially condemned for some time now by the village but the lack of municipal funds and lack of initiative by the owner means that demolition may not yet happen so soon. An “accident” or the effects of time may act first, but for a building that has seemingly escaped fate for longer than it should have, the end seems nearer now than it ever has before.

Before I leave you with some very recent images below, here is a link to an archive with many great historic images of Halcyon Hall, and the original Hudson Valley Ruins entries for Halcyon/Bennett by myself (c. 2005) and Tom Rinaldi (c. 1998-1999).

Posted in Demolition Alert, Dutchess County | 85 Comments

The End of E-6

As the rest of the east coast seemingly plans for the end of the world, I’m planning for the end of commercial E-6 film processing, from which which color slide film is developed. I dropped off a few rolls of film at PDK Labs in Harrison yesterday and was told by Frederick there that they will stop processing E-6 by the end of the year. They are the last lab in Westchester to process the film in-house. I’m told one or two labs in New York City will still develop slide film, among perhaps a handful of sites across the country. (Most places that process film, including pharmacies and department stores, will still process C-41, or color print film.)

I hope that I don’t have to soon permanently retire my film cameras, especially my medium format camera. The images that came out of that camera are so sharp and full of detail and color and don’t require any photoshopping. Even in terrible light, the resulting images are still quite usable, thanks perhaps to the great lens quality. I don’t use that camera as often as I did while shooting photos for the Hudson Valley Ruins book, but I bring it on most every road trip and to document local sites new to me, for the archival record.

Even with the 35mm camera, color slide film seems to pack in such deeper color than negative film. Great results can be obtained from negative film of course, but so many variations of a final image can be made, depending on how negative is printed. You’ve got to hope the printer’s machine is working properly, or you can scan the negatives yourself and fidget around with the results. With color slides, what you see is the final image and can pretty much only be printed as is. Which is fine, as if the image is exposed properly, it shouldn’t require any tweaking.

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Above: Just a few of my binders holding pages of 6×7 color slides.

Below: Here’s a few pages I copied with my digicam point and shoot, for reference.


Bethlehem Steel, Bethlehem PA. March 2008.


Barboursville ruins, Barboursville, VA. March 2008.

James Scott Mansion; Motown Office and Studio; Packard factory, Detroit, November 2010. DFunk kept watch while I played the part of ruin-tourist and took photos with all my cameras, ha.

Posted in Photography | 2 Comments

In Hudson Valley Magazine

Hudson Valley Magazine just published a five-page article about Hudson Valley Ruins (September 2011, pp. 52-56). The article is entitled “In Ruins” and features my photographs of Wyndclyffe, the Middlehope Drive-In Theater, St. John the Divine’s Fresh Air Home, Northgate, and the Hutton Company Brick Works. The online version of the article can be found here: http://www.hvmag.com/Hudson-Valley-Magazine/September-2011/Historic-Hudson-Valley-Castles-Mansions-Ruins-Estates-and-Sites-2011/.

Here’s a few of the “outtakes.”


Above: Middlehope Drive-In Theater, Middlehope, NY.

Above: Wyndclyffe, Rhinebeck, NY.

Above: Northgate, Cold Spring, NY.

Coincidentally there was a little publicity earlier this month. The online newspaper The Daily ran a profile of me : http://www.thedailyhastings.com/neighbors/tarrytown-man-documents-hudson-valley-ruins.

Enjoy the reading!

Posted in Publications and Reviews | Leave a comment

Midwest / Baseball Trip

The past few summers my friends Marc and Paul and I have established a little tradition of visiting a few baseball stadiums. It’s a great way too to travel and see places I might not otherwise visit, and we usually make time to take in some of the sights and sites.

This year we went to Chicago, Milwaukee and Minneapolis, and we saw four games at four stadiums. I have now attended games at 21 stadiums of 17 franchises (I have been to both old and new stadiums of the Yankees, Mets, Toronto Blue Jays and Cleveland Indians). I’ve got 13 more major league parks to visit.

We arrived in Chicago on Saturday July 2 in time to attend the Jayhawks concert at the Taste of Chicago festival. My other friend Paul gave us a tour of Grant Park (including the fountain from “Married With Children”) after the show. After dinner in the Damen neighborhood (where we went to an 80s-themed coffee shop with a DeLorean from Back to the Future), we returned to downtown Chicago and walked around Millennium Park. Lamely, the park closed at 11pm and we had only a few minutes there.

Above: The Cloud Gate.

Above: Chicago buildings by night.

Above: Wrigley Field Chicago: “There’s magic in the ivy and the old scoreboard.” July 3, 2011. Chicago Cubs 3, Chicago White Sox 1.

Above: “When you’re born in Chicago you’re blessed and you’re healed / The first time you walk into Wrigley Field. ” Eddie Vedder, “Someday We’ll Go All the Way.”

Wrigley is great for its atmosphere, not just the ivy and the old scoreboard and the closeness of the upper deck grandstand, but its urban atmosphere contributes much to the enjoyment of a day out. There are endless souvenir shops to peruse before the game, each selling different shirts and hats and other cool stuff. After the game, there are numerous places to hang out for drink or food. By contract, Minneapolis’ Target Field, also in an urban setting, had none of the t-shirt vendors or souvenir shops, and the area immediately around that stadium (primarily parking lots and highway) was dead.

Above: Before the late afternoon game in Milwaukee on July 4, Jim Duff, President of Soldiers Home Foundation, gave me a tour of the grounds of the Milwaukee National Soldiers Home Historic District. The fantastic old main veterans home building is currently disused. The group is raising money to preserve the historic buildings, which are still owned by the Veterans Affairs agency.

Above: July 4 at the Milwaukee Soldiers Home.

Above: The soldiers cemetery.

Above: Miller Park in Milwaukee, July 4, 2011. Certainly one of baseball’s most unique-looking stadiums. The Arizona Diamondbacks defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 8-6.

Above: Teamwork – the statue dedicated to Jeffrey Wischer, William De Grave and Jerome Starr, three ironworkers who died during a construction accident at Miller Park.

Above: Target Field, Minneapolis, July 5, 2011. Frank Lloyd Wright’s vision of a ballpark? The Hometown Twins escaped with a 3-2 win over the Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays.

Above: Last call for concessions. Edward Hopper would have been more interested in this scene than in the game behind me.

Above: The deflated Metrodome, Minneapolis. On the morning of July 6, we walked over to the Metrodome to pick up the train to the Mall of America. Fortunately, we saw an electronic billboard advertising a tour that day at 11am! It didn’t occur to me that tours would even go on while the roof was being fixed, but they were. And it was the best stadium tour ever. It cost only 4 bucks (any reason the Yankees and Cubs charge 20 bucks, besides “because they can?”), and before we even went in we got a Metrodome pin, pencil and a piece of the old roof!

Think the Yankees would ever give away a piece of the old stadium? Not a chance. People in the Midwest, heck almost anywhere outside of the northeast USA, are so consistently friendly and approachable. Even if you’re wearing the other team’s jersey, you’re not likely to get hassled. There’s such a different atmosphere out there.

We got to see the press box, a couple of luxury boxes, the Vikings’ locker room, and most all of the concourse. If not for the roof work, we would have gone down to the field level.

Above: After the Metrodome and the Mall of America, we visited Mill Ruins Park and walked across the Mississippi River, “the mighty Miss, the old miss, the old man,” on the Stone Arch bridge.

Above: Mill City Museum, Minneapolis. The museum was closed due to state government shutdown, but I had already visited here in December 2008. A great example of industrial preservation.

Above: Pillsbury Mill, Minneapolis. Long planned for conversion to apartments, the project has collapsed and the site is considered endangered.

Above: The Milwaukee Road railroad station in Minneapolis. An ice rink was built in the train shed. I skated there in 2008.

Above: Gnomish landscapers in a Minneapolis park. Minneapolis is among my favorite cities to visit. Besides baseball and the Metrodome, there’s music at the famous rock and roll clubs like First Avenue, and NHL hockey in St. Paul. Downtown does have some dead spots and we found some of the pubs to close early on a weeknight, but all in all there is no shortage of interesting local sites and activities to partake in. For food I recommend Pizza Luce – they have tons of great vegetarian options. The guys obliged me as we had dinner there both nights.

Above: New Comiskey Park, Chicago, July 7, 2011. The home White Sox got trounced 6-2 by the Minnesota Twins. Opened in 1991, the stadium has been decried by critics for having predated the “retro park” movement, deemed to have officially begun with the opening of Camden Yards in Baltimore in 1992. However, I find that many of the stadiums classified as “retro” as so far modern that any classic touches are overwhelmed by modernity. The White Sox’ stadium actually isn’t all that different from the so-called retro ballparks, and in my mind actually fits in with them. The scoreboard is nice and easy on the eyes, unlike the Yankees’ giant screen TV, although the upper deck roof was an addition to make the stadium a little more historic-feeling than it had been when built.

After buying our upper deck ticket at the window (this stadium wasn’t part of our original itinerary), we found out that the White Sox have one of the worst stadium policies in baseball, whereby only ticket holders for any level are allowed on that level. Meaning that a fan with an upper deck ticket cannot walk the field level concourse, as is allowed at most if not all other ballparks. Boo Chicago White Sox.

Above: New Comiskey at night. Not quite old Comiskey. I still cannot believe that the White Sox, Tigers and Yankees demolished their old stadiums and built new parks. That’s just criminal.

Above: Chicago skyline.

BONUS 1: Aerial photos from the flight.

Above: Site of the old Kensico aerators in Westchester County, NY. The aerators were recently covered with fill from a nearby construction project.

People ask me if I ever get into trouble taking photos of abandoned buildings. I don’t. No one cares about abandoned buildings. I only get into trouble when I take photos in public, of obvious structures visible from public places. Example: In 2006 I went over there to take some photos of the disused aerators before they got covered. I was on a public street, on a sidewalk no less, with no warning signage and upon almost making it back to my car, I was surrounded by 15 DEP police officers, including a guy I went to high school with, in five cars. Only after a local officer showed up and asked me to name some names was I let go. I wonder if I would have merited such a response if say I broke into someone’s home or assaulted someone. Probably not. But lug around a camera and suspicions are heightened.

Above: Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow, NY, the Tappan Zee Bridge, and the Hudson River.

Above: The Palisades Mall and the Tilcon rock quarry, West Nyack, NY. Which one will have a longer lasting impact on the environment?

BONUS 2: “The Birthplace.”

A couple nights ago I listened to Richard Thompson’s “From Galway to Graceland.” I don’t know if there was some cosmic underpinning to my song selection, but I later found out it was the anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death. Here’s a photo of his birthplace in Tupelo, MS, which I visited in April 2009. At 3 bucks (I think), the tour was about 42 bucks cheaper than visiting Graceland (30 dollars tour + 15 dollars parking.) I skipped Graceland.

Posted in Baseball, USA Travel | 4 Comments

State Hospital, Powerhouse, and the Hudson

One recent beautiful, made-to-order summer day I took a walk around the campus of the Hudson River State Hospital in Poughkeepsie.

My first stop there was the Snow Rehabilitation Center, a work of 1970s concrete awesomeness, well-suited to photography with the fisheye lens:

Next door is the towering Cheney hospital building, from the roof of which were afforded fine views of the property and of the Hudson River:

I saved a visit to the main building for last, hoping to get late afternoon sunlight on its west facade. It was brilliant:

I loved the unkempt lawns, which accentuated the well-aged brick and stone. I like to think that Olmsted, Vaux and Withers (architects of the grounds and buildings) would appreciate it too:

After a few hours here, I got lunch consisting of a veggie dog and a chocolate chip cookie at Soul Dog Cafe in Poughkeepsie. Another stop in the area this day was the abandoned Hoe Bowl in Hyde Park. What’s not to love about a building with a giant bowling pin attached to the front:

Next up was the Universal Atlas Cement Company in Greenport, near Hudson. I took a few exterior photographs:

I then drove down to Germantown where there are some nice spots to rest along the Hudson River. At the boat launch, I sat on a log in the water while the small waves lapped over my feet; blue dragonflies buzzed around me an inch above the water and nearby a chocolate-and-white dog happily ran into the river to fetch sticks thrown by his person. Later on I received this appropriate passage from Washington Irving’s journals, which Maeve coincidentally read over the weekend:

“Sultry note of insects…gamboling on the water chasing each other…Summer note of insects an universal hum & buzz & chirp reduced to a monotonous lulling note”

As the sun dropped closer to the Catskill mountains, I headed up the hill to the Van Tassel farm, which has what might be my favorite westward-looking view on the Hudson. A rolling lawn dropping down to select views of the river and the prominently-framed Portland cement factories of Greene County, backdropped by the panorama of the Catskill high peaks. How awesome again:

Above: Infrared view

Above: At left are the silos of the abandoned Alsen’s American Portland Cement Works at Smith’s Landing. The transfer silos at Silver Point seem to be at arm’s length in the foreground. The cement factories once produced their own monotonous lull, easily heard across the narrow Hudson. Activity at these sites has almost completely ceased in 2011.

Above: Dusk at another farm in Germantown.

Follow these links for full sets of photos:

Universal Atlas Cement Company


Hudson River State Hospital

Posted in Columbia County, Dutchess County, Greene County | 2 Comments

Ice Caves, Cragsmoor, NY

With temperatures rising above 90 in the Hudson Valley and above 100 in New York City, we decided to cool off by going to the Ice Caves at Sam’s Point Preserve in Cragsmoor, NY. Rock fractures and boulder piles trap cold air in crevices and tunnels, resulting in natural refrigeration. Even today there were small patches of ice in one of the caves. The trail is easy for the able-bodied hiker, but be forewarned that scrambling, climbing and short jumping is involved. Climbing ladders, scrambling down narrow, winding staircases, and ducking under low-ceiling rock overhangs makes one feel like a character in a video game, or perhaps like being on the set of an Indiana Jones movie. The place is a lot of fun, and very cool!

Old entrance sign (photographed in 2010), now turned around and no longer visible.


Stair post base, made to look like a snake, photographed in 2010. Seems to have been destroyed in the last year.

Beginning of the descent into the caves.

View from above the last ice cave.

Looks like the surface of the moon.

Also visible from the lookout above the last ice cave is the Walkill campus of the Watchtower Bible group. Some things I never knew existed until spotted from afar on a hike.

BONUS:

I spotted this amazing edifice on Route 209 in Napanoch as we headed to dinner afterwards. The massive castle-like building is the Eastern New York Correctional Facility (ca. 1900).

Posted in Nature Sites, Ulster County | 1 Comment

Trinity Church, Albany

All Over Albany reported on the recent collapse and subsequent demolition of Trinity Church in Albany. James Renwick, Jr., architect of the Smithsonian “castle” in Washington DC, and St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City, designed the church which was built in 1848. I’m sorry I didn’t know of it and therefore never took any photographs of it.

Here is the link to the article:
http://alloveralbany.com/archive/2011/07/13/whats-left-of-trinity-church

Posted in Albany County, Demolition Alert | Leave a comment

Northgate Cleanup

A few days ago I participated in a cleanup at Northgate, the Cornish estate in Cold Spring. Thom Johnson organized the effort, aided by the Friends of Hudson Highlands State Park and with the approval of the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Thom also rounded up several other Irvington High School alumni for the effort.

The aim of this project is to remove overgrowth and new trees immediately near the Northgate mansion. At present, one could be within twenty feet of the ruins and not see the overgrown stone walls and chimneys. Removal of vines and overgrowth could also reveal potential structural deterioration in the stonework of the ruins.

Our first day out was successful, as we cleared away brush and vines from the southeast corner of the house, around to the west side along the stone patio. We left the cuttings, to return another day with a wood chipper to break down what we removed. A tremendous amount of work remains to be done, but this outing represents the first significant landscaping effort at the property in over 60 years.

Throughout the day we had snacked on delicious red berries as we hacked away at the plants around them. I also had the pleasure of driving my car up the estate drive for the first time ever. It might also be the last time I drive my own car up there, as I popped a tire hitting a stone on the way out =P

Porte cochere as seen from the north, “before” photo.

Porte cochere as seen from the north, “after” photo.

Dark areas on the patio show where vegetation and dirt was removed.

Tile pattern on the patio.

Detail of the stones in the mansion wall, nicely illuminated.

Thom gave a lecture and showed historic photographs of the estate to our volunteers and to some hikers who happened by. Two interested dogs listened in as well.

The group photo. There is a better image floating around, taken with someone else’s camera.

Our enemy.

Mmm, red berries.

Posted in Putnam County | Leave a comment

Strang-Melbourne House, Yorktown

The Journal News reported today that the Strang-Melbourne House in Yorktown will be demolished by the end of this month. The Melbourne Farmhouse Bicentennial Committee has been trying to convince the Yorktown Central School District to not demolish the seemingly well-intact farmhouse that dates to 1812. The school district is not receptive to such discussions, having vacated the house in 2004. Police this week blocked members of farmhouse committee and a representative from the Preservation League of New York State from visiting the house.

Link to the Journal News article: http://www.LoHud.com/article/20110716/NEWS02/107160325/Melbourne-Farmhouse-preservationists-blocked-by-Yorktown-cops.

Posted in Demolition Alert, Westchester County | Leave a comment