A walk around Dobbs Ferry – Estherwood Mansion

This was unexpected! I turned a corner, walked a little down the street and came across this magnificent edifice.

It’s the Estherwood Mansion:

“…a late 19th-century mansion located on the campus of The Masters School in Dobbs Ferry, New York, United States. It was the home of industrial tycoon James Jennings McComb, who supported Masters financially in its early years when his daughters attended. The house’s octagonal library was the first section built. It had been attached to McComb’s previous home, but he had felt it deserved a house more in keeping with its style and so had architect Albert Buchman design Estherwood built around it.

The interior features lavish decoration and detail, with generous use of marble and gold leaf. As the only significant châteauesque building in Westchester County,it was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1979 as Estherwood and Carriage House.

Ohio native James Jennings McComb’s wealth came from his invention of the ties that secured cotton as it emerged from balers. In the 1860s he came to Dobbs Ferry, where he sent his three daughters to the Misses’ Masters School, named for its founding sisters in 1877. He bought the current property and eventually moved his family to the small Park Cottage (still standing) near the school’s Clinton Avenue location to shorten his daughters’ walk to school.

The octagonal library was first built as an addition to Park Cottage, to complement an octagonal library desk McComb had bought in Europe. He was soon dissatisfied with how poorly the new room integrated with the rest of the house, and hired the New York firm of Buchman & Deisler to design a new house connected to the library that would better match it.

McComb and his family lived in Estherwood from its completion in 1895 to his death in 1901. He had continued to acquire nearby property and rent it to the school, and in 1910 the school bought it all, including Estherwood and the carriage house, from his heirs. It has made few changes to the building, primarily adding an elevator in 1949. Estherwood was used as a dormitory for many years; today its upper floors serve as faculty apartments and the main floor is used for special events and school functions.” (Wikipedia)




Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

A walk around Dobbs Ferry – South Presbyterian Church

“In 1820 Dobbs Ferry consisted of a small number of farmhouses on one of two main roads; The Albany Post Road (now Broadway) and Ashford Avenue, the original Indian path leading east from the Hudson River. The most conspicuous landmark was the mansion of Peter Van Brugh Livingston at the Southern end of town. There were no churches in Dobbs Ferry, so for several years a small group of inhabitants met in the barn belonging to Mr. Livingston, led by a travelling preacher who was either Presbyterian or Methodist. In 1823, this little congregation wishing to register its permanence incorporated as the South Presbyterian Church in Greenburgh to distinguish itself from the North Presbyterian Church in Halls Corners.

In August 1823, six members of this group bought one acre triangular piece of land next to the free burial ground on the corner of Storm Street and Ashford Road. They paid Martin Lefurgy and “Rebeccah his Wife” thirty five dollars for it. With that commitment, the first house of worship was erected in Dobbs Ferry. Building of the little church was done mostly by personal labor. Made from timbers hewn out of trees cut in the swampland by the Saw Mill River, with a roof and walls covered with hand-split shingles and painted white in the manner of New England churches, the church became known as the Little White Church. Although the building no longer stands, the Little White Cemetery is there, still owned by the church. The Lutheran Church now occupies that property beside the cemetery.

For two years, the church was Presbyterian in name only, but in 1825 the church was received by the Presbytery of New York, and was officially organized in April of that year. In 1831 a disagreement shook the church when Van Brugh Livingston who militantly opposed liquor, convinced some of the congregation to pass a resolution that anyone wishing to join the church must sign a pledge of total abstinence from distilled spirits. A difference of opinion developed over this issue, which was censured by the Presbytery, and eventually led to Livingston’s resignation as elder.

For nearly 40 years, the little white church served the needs of the congregation, which now had about 140 members. As Dobbs Ferry began to grow, a plan for a new building closer to the center of the village was proposed in 1864. James Wilde, Jr., a member of the congregation, negotiated the purchase of the land and acquired the adjoining piece of property to the west for his own use. Plans for the church were drawn up by Julius Munckowitz, who later became Supervising Architect of the New York City Department of Public Parks. Building of this new church on the hill became a matter of tremendous local importance. The granite was cut at the quarry said to be on Ashford Avenue, belonging to congregation member George Schmidt. Calder and Banta of Irvington did the carpentry and James Gaisford, the masonry. Workmen from Dobbs Ferry and all the surrounding villages were called to the job. Church members helped by contributing either money or their labor to the effort. The new church had all the modern conveniences of the day, including gaslights. The cornerstone for the new building was laid on June 8, 1868, in the presence of a large crowd including Rev. Thornton M. Niven, the new pastor. On the last Sunday of 1869 the new building, our present building, was dedicated and the congregation left the old white church never to return. Construction on the Manse to the east of the church, was started in 1869. When it was finished the following year, Rev. Niven and his wife moved in. During the 1870’s James Wilde, Jr. built himself a retirement home on the corner of Broadway and Oak street next to the church. Upon it’s completion, he decided not to occupy it, but instead turned it over to the Misses Masters who had come to Dobbs Ferry to open a school. In 1916 the church acquired Wilde House, which now houses Days of Wonder Day Care.

In 1916 when John M. Trout was minister, electric fixtures replaced the gaslights, and new stained glass memorial windows were put in place. The windows were designed and made by J. Gordon Guthrie, a member of the church who for several years worked for Louis Comfort Tiffany. Mr. Gutherie used Emma Losee, Jean Judson and Ethel Wilde, members of the congregation as models for the rose window.

In 1928, the original hand-pumped organ started wheezing. A committee headed by Sarah Masters and the organist, Frederick Carter, established a fund raising goal of $10,000 for a new organ. In the first month, they raised $16,000. With this money, the balcony was rebuilt and our beloved organ was installed in 1928. Originally built in 1898 and formerly installed in Central Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, it is the organ, which today contributes to the vitality of our worship services here at South Church. Click here for more information concerning the South Church pipe organ. The church bell we ring is dated 1876, made by a major bell founder in this country, Meneely & Kimberly of Troy, New York.

Construction of the church building has been an on-going project. Stained glass windows were added in the nave and vestibule, as memorials to members of the congregation in 1964. They were designed by J.M. Baransky in Yonkers.

From the very beginning when a small group of people decided to begin this church, they never sidestepped controversy, hard work or social justice. From Van Brugh Livingston’s stance on no liquor (though medicinal use was accepted), to money to help Civil War reconstruction in the South and for “freedmen”, up to the present on the streets of New York with the homeless poor, to Nicaragua and Malawi, to our commitment to sexual justice, our historical roots continue to guide us.” (Jacque Jennett on the South Church website)

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

A walk around Dobbs Ferry – A former movie theater

The Embassy Theatre was opened November 20, 1928. In the 1940’s the Trans-Lux Embassy Theatre was operated as an art cinema. It was later renamed Pickwick Theatre and closed in October 1982.

It’s now the home of Stolen Moments Entertainment.

According to its About page: “Al Scatt founded the company in 1955. More than 50 years later, his sons Paul and Peter uphold the tradition of high-energy performances and musical expertise. From our wide range of emcees and DJs to the integrity of The Stolen Moments Band and Band of Gold, each event is treated with respect and receives personalized service.”

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

A walk around Dobbs Ferry – Zion Episcopal Church

“Built in 1833 atop the knob of a hill that over­looks the vil­lage of Dobbs Ferry, Zion Epis­co­pal Church was once known as the “Mother of Churches” in the lower Hud­son Val­ley. It was in­stru­men­tal in the found­ing of Christ Epis­co­pal Church in Tar­ry­town, Grace Epis­co­pal Church in Hast­ings-on-Hud­son and the Church of St. Barn­abas in Irv­ing­ton. Now Gov­er­nor An­drew Cuomo has rec­om­mended it among 18 his­toric prop­er­ties to join the Reg­is­ter of His­toric Places.

It is the old­est sur­viv­ing Gothic Re­vival style house of wor­ship in Westch­ester. Its older (1783) Rec­tory is be­lieved to be the old­est sur­viv­ing build­ing in Dobbs Ferry. Its fea­tures in­clude but­tresses, qua­tre­foils and Gothic arches. Its ex­te­rior is made from the Grey­stone so fa­mil­iar along the Hud­son River front.

“We are over the moon,” says Les­ley Yu Wal­ter, a mem­ber of the church’s cur­rent vestry af­ter learn­ing of their se­lec­tion.

Along with its ar­chi­tec­ture, the church has a his­tory filled with fa­mil­iar names. Both James and Alexan­der Hamil­ton Jr. once sat on its vestry, as did Wash­ing­ton Irv­ing, who was also a vestry­man at Christ Church Tar­ry­town. The Rev­erend William McVickar, who even­tu­ally built St. Barn­abas in Irv­ing­ton, was its Rec­tor and de­signed the church’s first ex­ten­sion. McVickar and Irv­ing were good friends who of­ten dined to­gether.

The land on which the church was built orig­i­nally be­longed to the Liv­ingston fam­ily, whose prop­er­ties and manses run well up the Hud­son Val­ley. Pe­ter Van Brugh Liv­ingston, who had been a parish­ioner at the South Pres­by­ter­ian Church (then on Ash­ford Av­enue), fell out with the Pres­by­te­ri­ans over the is­sue of tem­per­ance (he be­ing ab­stemious) and do­nated the prop­erty to the Epis­co­palians.

Zion has long since em­braced pro­gres­sive val­ues. It was one of the first Epis­co­pal churches in the coun­try to or­dain women.” (Hudson Independent, September 14, 2020. Dobbs Ferry’s Zion Episcopal Church Nominated for State and National Registers of Historic Places)



“The parish hall was probably built in 1875 and may have served as a horse barn. In 1885, the parish hall was faced with stone and dedicated in honor of The Reverend George Reese who had served as rector from 1865 until his death in 1885.

The ground floor of the parish hall has served as the location of the Hillside Thrift Shop for over fifty years.” (Zion Episcopal Church website).


“The rectory was purchased in 1865 as a home for the rector and his family. Owned by a Hudson River ship captain, John Smith, it was built in 1783 and is one of the oldest homes in the Village of Dobbs Ferry.

In 1870, the rectory was enlarged by adding two rooms on each floor and a third story. In 1876, a new stucco exterior was added to the building and the mansard roof was installed.

Currently church offices, a classroom, and a parlor with small kitchen occupy the first floor with living space for the clergy upstairs and for the sextons on the ground floor.” (Zion Episcopal Church website)

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

A walk around Dobbs Ferry – Garden outside Sushi Mikes

This garden is outside a popular Japanese restaurant: Sushi Mikes. I’ve heard its very good, but have never eaten there. I think what caught my eye was the eclectic mix of objects in the garden: the car; the empty gumball machine; whatever that thing is with the US flag design that’s behind the car. There were other objects including a grouping of small dog statues, but I couldn’t fit them all in.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II