Category >> Montgomery Place

New site director at Montgomery Place

Posted: Jun 09 2008

Posted by HVBlogger in Montgomery Place

Peonyborder.jpgNothing's happening at Montogomery Place since it's closed, right? Well, first off, it's not closed, it's open. The site's lush grounds, 434 acres of waterfront serenity in Annandale-on-Hudson, are blooming and welcoming visitors every Saturday and Sunday from 10-5 through October.

As HHV buffs know, the mansion at Montgomery Place is off-limits while it continues to undergo renovations in preparation for a significant reinterpretation, but that doesn't mean you can't take a stroll through the (blooming) peonies like those here.

And getting ready for the relaunch, HHV has brought aboard a new Montgomery Place site director, Ray Armater, who previously was site director at Philisburg Manor and Locust Grove. Welcome, Ray!

Ray joins Landscape Director Sarah Price, who has devoted the past several years to an ambitious project of meticulously restoring the Montgomery Place gardens. Her staff and volunteers have planted, divided, weeded, and mulched to bring the borders back to their glory from their 1920s and 1930s heyday. (More garden bloggin' to come...)

And what about the reinterpretation? Launching in 2010, "American Arcadia: People, Landscape, and Nature at Montgomery Place" will refocus the site to explore man's relationship to nature, landscape, and the environment. The project will use the experiences of people who lived and worked on this model country estate during its 200-year history to illustrate important turning points in American attitudes towards nature and landscape.

HHV connections in new Cokie Roberts book

Posted: May 21 2008

Posted by HVBlogger in Washington IrvingMontgomery PlaceMediaHistoric Hudson Valley

LadiesofLiberty.jpgLadies of Liberty: The Women who Shaped our Nation is the latest book by noted political correspondent and author Cokie Roberts. It's a companion volume to Founding Mothers, in which the author pays homage to the women whose patriotism and sacrifice helped create a new nation.

Much to HVBLogger's delight, the newly published book features Louise Livingston (1782-1860) on the front and back cover. Louise was the cosmopolitan and well-traveled widow of Edward Livingston. She and her daughter Coralie Livingston Barton used Montgomery Place, Historic Hudson Valley's Dutchess County jewel, as a summer home and remade its architecture and landscape over a forty-year period. They transformed the site into a handsome, self-sufficient estate.

(Cokie also writes about Rebecca Gratz, who has links with Washington Irving. He gets a couple of mentions, too.)

In 2007, Cokie Roberts worked with Kate Johnson, curator of Historic Hudson Valley, and Catalina Hannan, librarian of Historic Hudson Valley, on the project that would become Ladies of Liberty. The author offers warm thanks to both of them in her Acknowledgements. Bravo to Kate and Cat!

If you want to learn more about the book click here.

Don't know of Cokie Roberts? Oh, come on. Yes you do! Among other career highlights, she is a political commentator for ABC News and a senior news analyst for National Public Radio. From 1996 to 2002, she and Sam Donaldson co-anchored the weekly ABC interview program, This Week.

 

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