Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Major_Jacob_Hasbrouck_Jr._House an entity of type: Thing

The Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House is located on Huguenot Street in the Town of New Paltz, New York, United States. It was built in 1786 by Hasbrouck, grandson of Jean Hasbrouck, one of the original Huguenot settlers of the New Paltz area in the late 17th century, after he had moved out of the family home, two miles (3.2 km) to the south in what is today the Huguenot Street Historic District. A descendant of his lives in the house today, and it is believed to be the only 18th-century stone house in the New Paltz area continuously owned by the family that first built it. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House
rdf:langString Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House
rdf:langString Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House
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xsd:integer 17942586
xsd:integer 1014944594
xsd:date 1999-07-23
rdf:langString Dutch Colonial
xsd:integer 1786
rdf:langString Front elevation, 2008
rdf:langString New York#USA
xsd:integer 99000808
xsd:string 41.760555555555555 -74.08638888888889
rdf:langString The Major Jacob Hasbrouck Jr. House is located on Huguenot Street in the Town of New Paltz, New York, United States. It was built in 1786 by Hasbrouck, grandson of Jean Hasbrouck, one of the original Huguenot settlers of the New Paltz area in the late 17th century, after he had moved out of the family home, two miles (3.2 km) to the south in what is today the Huguenot Street Historic District. A descendant of his lives in the house today, and it is believed to be the only 18th-century stone house in the New Paltz area continuously owned by the family that first built it. Hasbrouck's house shows sophistication and refinement befitting a large landholder who served as town supervisor and later in the American Revolutionary War. It is the culmination of the Dutch/Belgian-style stone houses that had been built all over Ulster County during the preceding century. His descendants found the house somewhat confining and, over several different generations, modified it in ways that reflected the changing tastes of the 19th and 20th centuries. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.
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xsd:string 99000808
xsd:gYear 1786
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