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Slabsides

Slabsides (John Burroughs Cabin)
Slabsides.jpg
Slabsides in 2005
Location West Park, NY
Nearest city Poughkeepsie
Coordinates 41°47′40″N 73°58′23″W / 41.79444°N 73.97306°W / 41.79444; -73.97306Coordinates: 41°47′40″N 73°58′23″W / 41.79444°N 73.97306°W / 41.79444; -73.97306
Area 170 acres (68 ha)
Built 1895
Architect John Burroughs
Architectural style Adirondack log cabin
NRHP Reference # 68000034
Significant dates
Added to NRHP November 24, 1968
Designated NHL November 24, 1968

Slabsides is the log cabin built by naturalist John Burroughs and his son on a nine-acre (3.6 ha) wooded and hilly tract in 1895 one mile (1.6 km) west of Riverby, his home in West Park, New York. From the time of its construction to the last year of his life, Burroughs received many visitors at the cabin, ranging from Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Ford to students from Vassar College, just across the Hudson River.

Slabsides is a one-story log cabin with an open floor plan with a partitioned bedroom. It is located in a relatively low stretch of the Marlboro Mountains, perched on the west side of a hill in the wooded John Burroughs Nature Sanctuary. There is no direct access by motor vehicle; to reach it, visitors must park on the gravel road up the hill and follow a gated logging road slightly downhill, then level, roughly 0.3 mile (500 m) to the cabin.

"Life has a different flavor here", Burroughs wrote of the cabin in his essay "Far and Near". "It is reduced to simpler terms; its complex equations all disappear." The name "Slabsides" came from the rough bark-covered lumber strips covering its outer walls. "I might have given it a prettier name, but not one more fit, of more in keeping with the mood that brought me thither". Much of the cabin remains as he and his son built it, including the red cedar posts holding up the porch.

After his death in 1921, the property was presented to the John Burroughs Association, which had just been formed to preserve his legacy. When nearby logging operations and proposed development threatened the property in the mid-1960s, the association purchased the properties with money raised from supporters. This has resulted in an expansion of the property into the 170 acre (68 ha) John Burroughs Sanctuary. The cabin was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1968, joining Riverby and Woodchuck Lodge as Burroughs-associated properties carrying that designation.


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