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Created by NYC Parks Updated On: October 11, 2013
Step into NYC's history at these preserved houses, which tell the stories of centuries of New Yorkers and the changes they saw. Use this list to visit the city's past in all five boroughs.
NYC Parks: Mayor Fiorello La Guardia lived here in the summer of 1936, when an unusually bad heat wave drove him out of City Hall. He directed the city’s business from the basement until the weather cooled off.
NYC Parks: It might not be your vision of Wayne Manor, but the Edgar Allan Poe Cottage is Batman’s real birthplace. His creators thought up the caped crusader while sitting on a bench outside the cottage.
History Museum · Prospect Park · 11 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: The Lefferts family gave this house to the city in 1917, when they realized that similar family farms in Brooklyn were rapidly disappearing.
History Museum · Central Slope · 16 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: During the Battle of Brooklyn, 260 Maryland troops held off more than 2,000 British soldiers so that the rest of the Continental Army could retreat over the Gowanus. Less than a dozen survived.
NYC Parks: In 1801, Alexander Hamilton called a meeting of fellow Federalists here, in order to raise money to publish the newspaper now known as the New York Post.
Fort Washington Park Greenway (George Washington Bridge), New York, NY
Lighthouse · Hudson Heights · 47 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: The lighthouse was set to be demolished in 1951 until a nationwide campaign saved it, powered by thousands of children who loved the book The Little Red Lighthouse.
History Museum · Washington Heights · 17 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: Aaron Burr, best known for killing Alexander Hamilton in a duel, lived here during his brief marriage to Eliza Jumel, who ended it when she realized he was losing her money in land speculations.
7350 Little Neck Pkwy (btwn 73rd Rd & 74th Ave), Floral Park, NY
Museum · 48 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: In the late 1920’s the farm was sold to a local hospital that used it to provide occupational therapy for patients and to grow food for the hospital's meals.
NYC Parks: Alice Austen was not your typical Victorian woman. She traveled through NYC taking street photos, was Staten Island’s first female car owner, and lived with another woman for more then fifty years.
History Museum · Richmond Town · 23 tips and reviews
NYC Parks: The buildings and actors here portray the area through several eras, beginning with a 1690s Dutch house that shows what life was like for the region’s earliest settlers, and going through the 1860s.
Historic and Protected Site · Prince's Bay · 1 tip
NYC Parks: Get a look at how the city’s rich were living in the 19th century. James Seguine, the house’s first owner, made his fortune in oyster harvesting and helped create the Staten Island Railroad Company.
NYC Parks: In 1776 British Admiral Howe called a peace conference here in an effort to end the revolution. The talks failed when Howe couldn’t offer independence, and the war lasted seven more years.
NYC Parks: Lewis Latimer was the son of escaped slaves, and went on to become an important inventor and the only African-American member of Thomas Edison’s engineering division at the Edison Company.
NYC Parks: Rufus King, the house’s original inhabitant, was one of New York’s first senators, and used his political position to fight against the expansion of slavery.
NYC Parks: An exhibit on the first floor displays a trove of thousands of Revolutionary War artifacts found by a small group of amateur archaeologists in Northern Manhattan during the early 20th century.
NYC Parks: This house was built in the 1650s by Pieter Wyckoff, an immigrant who served for six years as an indentured servant to pay off his transport from Europe.
3266 Bainbridge Ave (East 208th Street), Bronx, NY
History Museum · Norwood · 1 tip
NYC Parks: During the American Revolution, the Valentine-Varian House was so close to a series of battles that at various points it wound up occupied by Hessian, British, and American troops.
NYC Parks: Gertrude Tredwell lived her whole life here until her death at the age of 93, and her work to keep it and its furnishings preserved are the reason it offers such a perfect look at 19th century NYC.