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Marshall House (Schuylerville, New York)

Marshall House
Marshall House (Schuylerville, New York) is located in New York
Marshall House (Schuylerville, New York)
Marshall House (Schuylerville, New York) is located in the US
Marshall House (Schuylerville, New York)
Nearest city Schuylerville, New York
Coordinates 43°6′40″N 73°34′50″W / 43.11111°N 73.58056°W / 43.11111; -73.58056Coordinates: 43°6′40″N 73°34′50″W / 43.11111°N 73.58056°W / 43.11111; -73.58056
Area

(2002) 3.6 acres (1.5 ha)

(2010) 7.6 acres (3.1 ha)
Built 1770
Architectural style Colonial, Italianate
NRHP Reference # 02000878
Added to NRHP August 22, 2002

(2002) 3.6 acres (1.5 ha)

The Marshall House is a house in Schuylerville, New York listed on the National Register of Historic Places for both its place in American history and its architectural significance.

The Marshall House is listed on the National Register of Historical Places for both its place in American history and its architectural significance. Constructed in 1770–1773 as a gambrel-roofed, heavy timbered farmhouse and remodeled in 1867–1868 in the Italianate Style, the Marshall House retains substantial integrity of design and materials. Despite its modifications the building remains understandable as a rare, extant example of pre-Revolutionary residential architecture. It is one of but two extant “witness” buildings associated with the pivotal Revolutionary Battles of Saratoga that took place in 1777.

Pressed into service as a British field hospital, the building became the refuge of the Baroness Frederika Riedesel whose well known diary chronicles the tribulations, deaths and heroism of other noncombatants, wounded officers and men who sheltered with her through a six-day artillery bombardment and siege.

The pre-Revolutionary history of the property referred to as the Marshall House is incomplete. The building was erected “on lot number one of the tenth allotment in the general division of the Kayderosseras patent, bounded on the south by the north line of the Saratoga patent, containing about forty acres”. The property now comprises 7.6 acres (31,000 m2). The area, originally called Saratoga, was inhabited by Dutch and English settlers beginning in 1684 who came to advantage themselves of the plentiful water power afforded by the Hudson River, the Fish Creek and the Batten Kill joining here as well as by rich soils.

There are indications that the subject house and its surrounding farm served as a collection point for timber and local produce for shipping down river to Albany to be sold there by the three man partnership that built it. It is known that the property soon came into the hands of Peter Lansing, an Albany merchant, whose family were prominent land owners, and merchants in the upper Hudson Valley. Local nineteenth accounts state that the Lansings and others fled south upon the approach of the British army and its Indian allies in the summer of 1777.

The Marshall House attained its fame for the rôle it played in the events leading to the British surrender following the Battles of Saratoga fought during September–October, 1777. Traveling with the British army was the Baroness Frederika Riedesel, the young wife of Major General Friedrich Adolf Riedesel, commander of the German mercenary troops who formed part of the British army led by Lieutenant General John Burgoyne. During the afternoon of October 10 American batteries emplaced on the east side of the Hudson River opened fire on Riedesel’s defenses some fifty rods south of the Marshall House. The baron, seeing the house, urged his wife and their three young children to seek safety in its stone cellar. Baroness Riedesell was soon joined by other women in like circumstances as well as by wounded military personnel.


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