• Truth in Advertising: A Novel

    by: John Kenney • view
  • Flight Behavior: A Novel

    by: Barbara Kingsolver • view
  • Rabbit, Run

    by: John Updike • view
  • The Happiness Project

    by: Gretchen Rubin • view
  • Mamas Bank Account

    by: Kathryn Forbes • view
  • If It's A Choice, My Zygote Chose Balls

    by: Jeremy Hooper • view
  • The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook

    by: Deb Perelman • view
  • Baked Elements: Our 10 Favorite Ingredients

    by: Matt Lewis • view
  • Home Vegetable Gardening

    by: F.P. Rockwell • view
  • Classic Zester

    Microplane • view
  • Hand Blender

    Cuisinart • view
  • Blade for 5-Quart KitchenAid Mixers

    New Metro Design • view
  • Cut Kit Tray

    Hydrofarm • view
  • Seedling Heat Mat

    Hydrofarm • view
  • Grow Light System

    Hydrofarm • view
  • The History of US: A Novel

    by: Leah Stewart • view
  • The Hungry Ear: Poems of Food and Drink

    by: Kevin Young • view
  • A Prayer for Owen Meany

    by: John Irving • view
  • Edible Selby

    by: Todd Selby • view
  • Slaughterhouse: The Shocking Story of Greed, Neglect and Inhumane Treament..

    by: Gail A. Eisnitz • view
  • Twain's Feast: Searching for America's Lost Foods in the Footsteps of

    by: Andrew Beahrs • view
  • Meatless: More Than 200 of the Very Best Vegetarian Recipes

    by: Martha Stewart Living • view
  • Pure Vanilla: Irresistible Recipes and Essential Techniques

    by: Shauna Sever • view
  • American Beauty: Renovating and Decorating a Beloved Retreat

    by: Thom Filicia • view
  • Cookie Cutter Set

    Wilton • view
  • 60-Ounce Utensil Crock

    BIA Cordon Bleu • view
  • Jumbo Spoon Rest

    BIA Cordon Bleu • view
  • Stainless Watering Can

    Blomus • view
  • Copper Watering Can

    Master Craft • view
  • Stainless Steel Pinwheel

    Blomus • view

(please wait a moment for slideshow to load.)

[galleria gid="mansion"]

THE BEEKMAN MANSION was built over the course of two years, from 1802 to 1804, for the family of William Beekman. The home, which can be described as a combination Georgian/Federal structure, was based on the designs of Asher Benjamin and William Spreatts of Connecticut, and was constructed by master builders Wakeman and Parsons.

William Beekman was a “boy soldier” in the Revolutionary War, and as an adult became a successful and respected businessman with a general store situated across the road from where he would eventually build his Mansion. He married Joanna Lowe, and had eight children – only two of whom made it past the age of twenty. Beekman was appointed the first judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Schoharie County in 1795 and held the position until 1833. He also served as State Senator from 1799-1802. William Beekman died in 1845 at the age of 78 –  outliving all his children – and was buried on the property in the Beekman Family Crypt.

While many consider The Beekman Mansion’s wrap-around back porch to be its most distinguishing feature, the porch was in fact added during recent renovations. The porch’s design was modeled after another historical house designed by The Beekman Mansion’s original architects. The Beekman Mansion’s original signature architectural accent is its large front palladian window, and its fourteen foot wide center hallways.

Local lore claims that there was once a tunnel running from The Beekman Mansion to the crypt which was used to hide slaves fleeing northward. While no evidence of a tunnel exists today, The Beekman Mansion is well documented as having been a stop on the Underground Railroad. Other oral histories of The Beekman Mansion recount a savage Indian attack which killed a young girl as she fled up the attic stairway. While no records of such an attack have been found, The Beekman Mansion’s proximity to Cherry Valley – where a brutal Seneca Indian attack in 1778 killed nearly all of the town’s inhabitants – would’ve made the threat of Indian ambushes very plausible.