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  1. Photograph: Courtesy Historic House Trust of NYC
    Photograph: Courtesy Historic House Trust of NYC

    Edgar Allan Poe Cottage

  2. Photograph: Robert Levine
    Photograph: Robert Levine

    The Old Stone House

  3. Photograph: Sarah Mulligan
    Photograph: Sarah Mulligan

    Van Cortlandt House Museum

  4. Photograph: Courtesy of the Alice Austen House
    Photograph: Courtesy of the Alice Austen House

    Alice Austen House

  5. Photograph: Daniel Avila
    Photograph: Daniel Avila

    Valentine-Varian House

  6. Photograph: Courtesy Dyckman Farmhouse Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy Dyckman Farmhouse Museum

    Dyckman Farmhouse Museum

  7. Historic Richmond Town

  8. Photograph: Courtesy Historic House Trust of NYC
    Photograph: Courtesy Historic House Trust of NYC

    Little Red Lighthouse

Historic houses in NYC: eight things you didn’t know

Think New York’s historic houses are boring? Think again—here are eight things you didn’t know about these dwellings.

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We know what you’re thinking: Historic houses aren’t that cool. But Time Out has gathered stories about Edgar Allan Poe, Alice Austen and more that prove NYC’s historical attractions are, in fact, much more interesting than you’d ever imagined.

RECOMMENDED: Museums in New York

  • Attractions
  • Monuments and memorials
  • The Bronx

The Bronx dwelling where Poe spent his final years is the birthplace of the author’s freakiest works—“The Bells,” “Annabel Lee” and “The Cask of Amontillado,” among others. And there are even creepier elements: Mysterious artifacts were found in the wall of a room where Poe’s young wife, Virginia, slept, and visitors can view the bed frame that she died on.

  • Attractions
  • Historic buildings and sites
  • Civic Center

John Turturro narrates the audio tour at this Park Slope site, where parts of the Battle of Long Island—the largest of the Revolution—took place. The park itself was the location for the original clubhouse of the Brooklyn Dodgers.

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  • Attractions
  • Historic buildings and sites
  • The Bronx

George Washington famously slept at this manse on at least two occasions during the Revolutionary War, as well as once on his way back into Manhattan to reclaim the city from the British. It was also the first historic house in NYC to open as a museum, in 1896.

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  • Museums
  • Special interest
  • Inwood

When you visit the oldest farmhouse in Manhattan, ask to see the still-visible board used for nine men’s morris, a strategic game dating back to the Roman Empire. It’s carved into the giant rock outcropping on which the home was built, and while theories have been floated over the years as to the etching’s provenance, so far it’s a mystery.

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Historic Richmond Town
  • Attractions
  • Historic buildings and sites
  • Staten Island

The preserved village plays host to costumed blacksmiths, shoemakers and tinsmiths as well as the Voorlezer’s House, the oldest wooden elementary schoolhouse still standing in America.

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