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Our
Mission and History![Students learning about historic preservation at the Jean [Jacob] Hasbrouck house](images/StudentsOutside-web.JPG)
Our
Missionion
Historic
Huguenot Street is a center of history and culture whose
mission is to collect, preserve and share with the public
an inspiring story of an American community as it evolved
from the 17th century to the present day.
A
short history of Historic Huguenot Street
In
1894, descendants of the twelve original New Paltz Patentees
established the Huguenot Patriotic, Historical, and Monumental
Society. Five years later, they purchased the Jean
Hasbrouck House to hold their ancestral relics and displays
of colonial life. Artifacts and papers were collected
over the years, but it was not until the 1950s that the
Society began a sizeable expansion. Kenneth Hasbrouck,
the director at that time, met with family descendants
to create their own affiliated family associations and
establish HHS as a major genealogical and historical repository.
He also worked with these family associations to assist
in the purchase of, and continued maintenance of, their
ancestral homes. The Freer House, the first such purchase,
was acquired in 1955.
By 1974, nine family Associations had been formed, seven
houses with their outbuilidings had been acquired, and
the 1717 church had been reconstructed near its original
site. In 1964, Huguenot Street was designated as a National
Historic Landmark District by the National Park Service.
In keeping with the Society's mission, and to preserve
architectural and landscape features of the Huguenot settlement,
the Society also acquired several cemeteries, a hiking
trail, a wildlife refuge, a bird sanctuary, and historic
buildings adjacent to the Historic District to serve support
functions. Family support was tremendous, and through
purchase and donation, the Society's holdings grew to
38 structures and more than 7,000 collections objects.
Yet the National Historic Landmark District was not well
known, and the Society, though its collections were of
international significance, had been an inward-looking
organization with little comunity involvement or professional
management, and few outside sources of revenue or support.
The Society's Board hired Dr. Bryant Tolles, director
of the Museum Studies department at the University of
Delaware, to conduct an institutional assessment. Following
his report in 1997, the Society began to make the transition
from a 'members only' institution managed by enthusiasts
to a professionally run organization, working to gain
the support and recognition due its collections by increasing
its visibility, diversifying and broadening its audience,
and garnering additional sources of revenue for its operation.
In 2005, the Society adopted the operating name of Historic
Huguenot Street as a way to convey the importance of our
sites as living, evolving story of an American community.
Today,
Historic Huguenot Street includes forty-nine properties
(museum houses, outbuildings and staff housing), eleven
Family Associations, and over two thousand members. From
groups of local schoolchildren to travelers from around
the world, we are busy throughout the tour season with
visitors who want to see our chapter of American History
for themselves. Our hardworking staff is always seeking
to improve and increase our contribution to the community:
by restoring and maintaining the houses and outbuildings;
by preserving our collections objects; by making our archival
materials more accessible; by educating the public through
outreach programs; or by making contact and maintaining
relationships with the groups, individuals, and corporations
who generously give to ensure that the Society's contributions
will endure in the present and grow for the future.
HHS
is a member in good standing of the following organizations:

Proud Member of the Museum
Association of New York
Professional
excellence through partnership

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