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The Moorings: A Confederate General & the Cottages

by theamericannews
September 18, 2024
in Greenland
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The Moorings: A Confederate General & the Cottages
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A painting of the 26th Georgia Brigade in action at Gettysburg.

Joseph enlisted at the outbreak of the Civil War in the McIntosh Brigade, which later became the 26th Georgia Brigade under Stonewall Jackson’s corps. The regiment saw action in nearly all Virginia battles, starting with the Battle of Gaine’s Mill in June 1862 and continuing through the second Battle of Manassas, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, the Wilderness, and Spotsylvania. The regiment saw limited action at Gettysburg as artillery support. In 1864, the brigade approached Fort Stevens on the outskirts of Washington, DC, before retiring. Hilton served in Virginia during the entire war, receiving several promotions. At the time of the Confederate surrender, Hilton held the position of adjutant general.

A portrait of Joseph Hilton

Georgia Lumber Business

After the Civil War, Joseph and his brother Thomas Hilton Jr. joined their father’s sawmill and lumber business in Darien, Thomas Hilton & Sons. After his father’s retirement, Joseph Hilton acquired numerous lumber mills in Georgia. In 1889, Hilton merged with the mills owned by Norman W. Dodge, which included 40 mills on Saint Simon’s Island. The company became known as the Hilton & Dodge Lumber Company.

Hilton-dodge lumber mill in 1910

In 1900, Dodge retired from the business. Interestingly, Dodge later purchased Hilton’s summer home in Upper Nyack in 1902 known as River Hook. Dodge likely built the beautiful (and still standing) fieldstone carriage house at River Hook.

Views of the Dodge Lumber Company

Hilton continued to expand his business, acquiring mills in Savannah and Brunswick, Georgia, among other locations. The company incorporated in 1901 and diversified into real estate and naval stores, adding a fleet of barges in 1913.

The Hilton Family

In 1873, Joseph Hilton married Ida Naylor (1851-1934) from a prominent Savannah family. They had seven children, four of whom survived infancy: a son and three daughters. The youngest, Thomas Hilton (1885-1958), became a member of the Hilton-Dodge Lumber Company. His mother intended the Moorings to go to Thomas upon his father’s death, but he preferred the South and a Southern bride. The two oldest daughters married while living at the Moorings. As they figure into the narrative of the two cottages, we will discuss them later. In 1918, the youngest daughter, Lucina “Lucy” G. Hilton (1892-1967), married Jonathan Templeton Strong, a lieutenant in the U.S. Army at the time.

Active in Nyack’s social life, the Hiltons hosted meetings of the Nyack Married Club at their home and joined the Nyack Country Club. Ida Naylor Hilton, later remembered as a charming, cultured, and gifted woman, became famous for founding the Nyack Garden Club, chartered in 1915. As President of the club, Ida Hilton held numerous club meetings at the Moorings and spent much time in the gardens around the property.

Joseph died in 1920 in Nyack. Ida lived at the Moorings for four more years. Later she died in Iceland in 1934. Both have final resting place at the family plot in the Bonaventure Cemetery in Savannah Georgia.

Hilton family plot in the famous Bonaventure Cemetery in Savannah, Georgia

River Hook In Upper Nyack – The Hiltons’ First Summer Home

In 1884, Hilton acquired the former summer home of Judge Edward Owen after his death. Owen purchased the farm in 1871 from Theodore Grünenthal, a long-time grape farmer on the property. Owen purchased the farm, today known as River Hook, in 1871.

River Hook in 1925 once owned by both Joseph Hilton and William Dodge

The Moorings

A hand-drawn map of the Moorings estate during the Hilton years. Courtesy of the Historical Society of the Nyacks.

In 1902, Hilton acquired the southern half of Williamson Manor from Minetta Hart Townsend, the sixth generation of the Williamson family to live on the farm. The Hiltons expanded the old manor house by adding a large English Tudor-style wing. Hilton added a formidable brick wall along North Broadway that still stands. A large iron gate guards the main entrance.

Moorings in 1915. Hilton built the brick walls and added the Tudor-style wing on the left along with other Tudor details. Courtesy of the Nyack Library.

Close to where Upper Nyack Brook enters the Hudson at Crumbie’s Glen, a beach formed. Deep water made a mooring possible. According to legend, the house became known as the Moorings when one of Hilton’s daughters used the wharf as a mooring for a cabin cruiser. Supposedly, she used to cross the Hudson for weekends away from her hide-bound eastern college.

A post card of the falls at Crumbie’s Glen

To add confusion, another house in Nyack named The Moorings existed around the same time that the Williamson Manor became known as the Moorings. W.W. Crosby leased a home owned by J. Charlton known as the Moorings. Crosby moored several this yachts near the house, located at the foot of Depew Avenue, hence the name Moorings.

The South Cottage

A view of the south Cottage with the Hudson River in the background. Tudor-style architecture was popular in Nyack (as well as in the New York area) at the time.

Hilton built what became known as the South Cottage as a summer cottage for his daughter Ida sometime before she married John Barton Seymour in 1911. One of Nyack’s most beautiful homes, the Tudor-style South Cottage overlooks the waterfalls of Crumbie’s Glen to the south and abuts a small spring-fed stream on the north that runs from the front of the Moorings to the river. The actual river mooring was located here at one time. A retaining wall holds the cottage above the river. A large porch offers stunning views of the Hudson River, Sleepy Hollow, and the Rockefeller estates along with fresh river breezes.

A view of the Hudson River from the porch of the South Cottage. Note the small beach. The old dock from which the Moorings earned is name was just to the left of the beach.

The lot became separated from the main house in 1962. An opening was made in the brick wall for a driveway with a circular loop in front of the cottage. The cottage has been expanded somewhat over time. The living room was once a greenhouse. Several families occupied the cottage after Bernard. Since 1985, the house has been owned by the Katzenstein family. Florence Katzenstein is the founder of the Historical Society of the Nyacks. Her gardens, including the Japanese garden, are well known to the Nyack Garden Club. A gate from the garden leads down to the cove.

The North Cottage

Hilton built the Tudor-style North Cottage for his daughter Ruth shortly after she married Edmond B. Walker of New York City in 1904. Ruth liked the design as well as the architect, Hugh Tallant. When her husband died in 1924, she married Tallant around the time Anne Vanderbilt purchased the Moorings. Tallant, a Harvard graduate, WWI veteran, and amateur tennis champion, designed with his partner, Henry Herts, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Brooklyn Hospital, and many Manhattan theaters. He practiced in Brooklyn, Atlanta, and London. Tallant and Ruth lived in New York City after the wedding.

An image of the North Cottage from the 1930s

The cottage sits atop a steep ledge created by quarrying in the early 1800s, affording fabulous river views. The cottage overlooks a spring-fed pond in part of the old quarry. After 1962, a long driveway from a cut in the brick wall leads to the house. In recent times, the Altman family lived in the home, and until her death in 2022, their daughter, artist Liza Altman, resided there. The Altmans planted over 50 Japanese maples, flower beds, and shrubs. The original leaded-glass windows have been preserved, with storm windows added on the inside to winterize the home.

Liza Altman painting likely of the porch of North Cottage.

The Gardener’s Cottage

The Gardener’s Cottage sat atop a retaining wall near the river. Little is recorded about the cottage. Two photographs from the 1935 book, “Life at the Clarkstown Country Club” (available from HSN), depict a Tudor-style building, indicating it was probably built by Hilton.

Photo of the Gardener’s Cottage from 1930. It is perched on a ledge overlooking the Hudson River.

New Owners

Mrs. Ida Hilton sold the estate in 1924 to Anne Vanderbilt as a home for her daughter Barbara Rutherford Hatch. The next episode of Barons of Broadway tells the story of Vanderbilt and her gift of the estate to Pierre Bernard, founder of the Clarkstown Country Club.

Barons of Broadway Series

#1 The Magnificent Saga Of Larchdell

#2 Revisiting Underclyffe–A Lost, Gilded Age Mansion

#3 The Adriance Era At Underclyffe Manor

#4 The Flying Dutchman Lands at Underclyffe Manor

#5 The Saga of Rivercliff”s Storied Residents

#6 The Winding Saga of River Hook

#7 Unveiling Water Crest

#8 The Legacy of Belle Crest: From Clockmakers to Tennis Champions

#9 Greenland In Upper Nyack

#10 The Wonders of Widewater

#11 The Dynamite Baron- Wilson P. Foss Legacy at Under Elms

#12 Atlas Acres – The Botanist in Under Elms’ Garage

#13 The Baroness of Shadowcliff

#14 The Peace Room at Shadowcliff – The Story of the Fellowship of Reconciliation

#15 The Troubled Legacy of Williamson Manor

Mike Hays lived in the Nyacks for 38-years. He worked for McGraw-Hill Education in New York City for many years. Hays serves as President of the Historical Society of the Nyacks, and Vice-President of the Edward Hopper House Museum & Study Center. Married to Bernie Richey, he enjoys cycling and winters in Florida. You can follow him on Instagram as UpperNyackMike.

Editor’s note: This article is sponsored by Sun River Health. Sun River Health is a network of 43 Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) providing primary, dental, pediatric, OB-GYN, and behavioral health care to over 245,000 patients annually.

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Publish date : 2024-09-17 22:00:00

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