What is old is new again – so much that this house, rumored to be the oldest in the bronze, is newly available for sale.
Even if it is not, the old house of the Hadley farm-a five-bed, 2.5 bathroom located near Fieldston-is certainly one of the oldest dwellings in the district. It ranked this week for $ 1.49 million, according to Streeasy.
“Really tells New York’s story in a home. And it’s not like driving along a tree -lined street to get there. It’S’S’S’S’S SMAK DAB BETWEEN YOUR BRONX STREET BROOKING,” Nick Dembowski, a History in Van Court Near Van Court nearby
The sad settlement includes 2,660 square meters and includes a sun
A historical stone fireplace and thick two -legged walls add to its extra old world charm.
No one has managed to date, surely, the original structure of the stone of the house. Unconfirmed claims on the existence of the house in 1747 would also preach the residence of Van Cortland, which bears the confirmed title of the oldest residence in Borough. That year would even preach the United States.
Not even Dembowski, who widely profiled property for Kingsbridge’s historic society, can say it goes far from home.
A tenant farmer named Isaac Green was the first registered occult of the house, except for five implemented people. There is little information on his settlement before the American Revolution. William and Elizabeth Hadley bought its home and property in 1786.
Hadley farm house saw its right part of the action during the war, when clashes between rebels and British troops were common. The house served as a British mail when, in 1778, a bold French office led rebel troops to a night raid.
Colonel Armand, according to data quoted by Dembowski, pulled over the bodies in the dark – their eyesight son was significantly drunk – and “one kind hit them about a little and humiliated them.”
The rebels, according to an account, give the troops in the Hadley farm house “a very healthy drub”.
Armand proudly documented his exploits on a letter to George Washington.
The house took its current form in 1915, according to the Landmark designation report, with an expansion and renewal by renowned architect Dwight James Baum. Baum fully arranged the house, but maintained some of its oldest details, including wood beams created by halved tree trunks – intact bark.
Property data show that the property last changed their hands in 1999. Current owners ranked property in 2024 for a higher $ 2.25 million but found no holders.
The current Broker of the list, James Endress of Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s International Realty, said the property is “essentially in the state of wealth”.
“Introduced at a disadvantage, anyone who is traveling from home can see,” Endress said.
The outside of the house is marked, so it will require special care and expense in its restaurant, but the detached garage is not. A new owner can bring it down and share the 20th lottery, Endress said. Selling it to an investor can provide the inevitable costs of renovating the new owner.
The list encourages buyers to “bring your architect and your imagination”.
“My sincere hope is that anyone who ends up buying this house has the means to really store it because it needs a fair amount of storage work,” Dembowski said.
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Image Source : nypost.com