Livingston Manor | |
CDP and hamlet | |
View north along Main Street
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Name origin: From Livingston family | |
Country | United States |
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State | New York |
Region | Catskills |
County | Sullivan |
Town | Rockland |
River | Willowemoc Creek |
Elevation | 1,401 ft (427 m) |
Coordinates | 41°43′46″N 74°49′38″W / 41.72944°N 74.82722°WCoordinates: 41°43′46″N 74°49′38″W / 41.72944°N 74.82722°W |
Area | 3.1 sq mi (8 km2) |
Population | 1,221 (2010) |
Timezone | Eastern (EST) (UTC-5) |
- summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-4) |
ZIP Code | 12758 |
Area code | 845 |
Exchange | 439 |
FIPS code | 36-42928 |
GNIS feature ID | 0955750 |
U.S. Census map of Livingston Manor
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Location of Livingston Manor in Sullivan County, New York
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Livingston Manor is a hamlet (and a census-designated place) in Sullivan County, New York, United States. The population was 1,221 at the 2010 census.
Livingston Manor is located in the south part of the Town of Rockland. New York State Route 17 runs by it.
In the late 19th century, this community renamed itself as Livingston Manor, after descendants of the prominent Livingston family who had a house there. But it was not part of the original manor, a huge estate granted by the English Crown about 60 miles (97 km) east in present-day Dutchess and Columbia counties. That extended on both sides of the Hudson River. In the early 18th century, the original manor was the site of work camps along the Hudson, where Palatine German refugees worked off their passage to New York paid by the Crown. They produced timber and supplies for the English navy. Later they were allowed to settle in the Schoharie and Mohawk valleys.
The Sullivan County community was part of the Hardenbergh patent in 1716, which included much of the Catskill Mountains.
In 1750 Robert Livingston (1708–1790) bought 95,000 acres (380 km2) in this area, shortly after becoming the third (and final) Lord of the Manor of Livingston Manor. He sold or leased most of the land by 1780. Robert's third son, John Robert Livingston (1775–1851), deeded 8,441 acres (34.16 km2) to his nephew, Dr. Edward R. Livingston, in 1822 around the area then called Purvis, New York. Edward Livingston died in 1864.
Purvis residents in 1882 chose the new name of Livingston Manor. Edward Livingston's residence, according to a sign in the village, was on a site now occupied by the village firehouse. Another town source says that it was on a site later developed as the Rockland, New York Town Hall. In the 1930s a Livingston descendant arrived in Livingston Manor claiming title to his ancestral land, which had previously been held by tenants under lease. He won his case in court. The people whose ancestors had been tenants had to purchase the property they had been living on for years.