Hoornbeek Store Complex
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Store (left) and William Doll House, 2007
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Location | Napanoch, NY |
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Nearest city | Kingston |
Coordinates | 41°44′29″N 74°22′26″W / 41.74139°N 74.37389°WCoordinates: 41°44′29″N 74°22′26″W / 41.74139°N 74.37389°W |
Area | 1 acre (0.40 ha) |
Built | 1810; 1833; 1841 |
Architectural style | Federal, Greek Revival |
NRHP Reference # | 84003229 |
Added to NRHP | 1984 |
The Hoornbeek Store Complex is a Registered Historic Place in the hamlet of Napanoch, New York, United States. It consists of several buildings located on a one-acre (0.4 ha) parcel on Main Street between Clinton and Church streets. They reflect Napanoch's transition from its original settlement into the Delaware and Hudson Canal era, and the move from Federal style to Greek Revival as the dominant style in American architecture.
There are three main buildings in the complex, erected over a 30-year period. The oldest is the William Doll House, built around 1810 in the Federal style house by a local physician and his family. It boasts five bays and an unusual eight-panel door. The interior features some of the original fabrics, as well as later renovations, such as the staircase, that reflect Greek Revival fashions. It remains in use today as a private home.
In 1833 the Hoornbeek Store was constructed to the south by Richard and George Southwick. They had been buying land in the area to take advantage of business from through traffic on the canal, which had opened five years earlier to carry coal from Northeastern Pennsylvania to Kingston, where it could be loaded on boats traveling down the Hudson River for New York City. Its Greek Revival features include the front porch with five heavy pillars, massive cornice and tall frieze. Four years after it was opened, it was connected to the Doll House via a small addition when Doll bought out the Southwicks during foreclosure proceedings. Later owners in the 20th century added the second-story porches. Today it is vacant.