A Walk in Sleepy Hollow – Lunch at the Bridge View Tavern

After all of the walking documented in the previous few posts I was tired and hungry so I stopped at the Bridge View Tavern for something to eat.

While there is still a view of the bridge it’s gradually narrowing as more and more buildings (condos, co-ops, apartments – I don’t know what they are) rise up by the waterfront in Sleepy Hollow. Maybe eventually the view of the bridge from the tavern will disappear entirely.

My plan had been to walk for a while, get something to eat and then later attend a chamber music concert at the Sleepy Hollow High School. After a fairly lengthy walk, a large meal… and my fatal mistake…a pint of brown ale with lunch I lost the will to go to the concert and returned home.

For more information on the Bridge View Tavern see here:


Taken with a Fuji X-E1 and Fuji XF 35mm f1.4 R

A Walk in Sleepy Hollow – A Portion of the River Walk

Westchester County, in partnership with its 11 riverfront cities and villages, has made great strides toward creating a continuous trail along its 51.5-mile Hudson-River shoreline. Currently, more than 32 miles of RiverWalk provide recreation for pedestrians and bicyclists, reduce dependency on car trips, and increase visitor appeal — all while benefiting public health, fostering a sense of community, improving residential property values, and invigorating commercial areas. Several portions of the RiverWalk pass through parks created or enhanced by Scenic Hudson.

Above The Wishing Wall.

A 520-foot community-painted mural brought local residents together during a trying time, thanks largely to the efforts of two area women.
Sleepy Hollow’s Kersten Harries knew that a lengthy concrete wall, left after a GM factory closed shop decades ago, could be transformed into something beautiful. As early as 2019, she had been reaching out to owners of the site, Edge-on-Hudson, about turning the space into a temporary art installation. It wasn’t until the summer of 2020 when her dream became a reality, working with Sleepy Hollow community liaison Diane Loja, Edge-on-Hudson, and the Village Board of Trustees to form The Wishing Wall, a mural adjacent to the Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow Lighthouse, painted by both community members and area artists.
So how did Harries and Loja, project managers for The Wishing Wall, find enough artists to cover a concrete canvas roughly one-tenth of a mile long? “A Call for Artists was used to select a core team of designers [Erin Carney, Tim Grajek, Katie Reidy], who utilized the community’s ideas to create a cohesive design concept that was laid out along the entire wall, which also included locating spots where selected volunteer artists and groups could directly paint their submitted ideas,” explains Harries. “An additional eight artists and community art educators were part of the core team responsible for executing the painting of the mural, with the help of many volunteers who signed up.”

Considering that the wall is slated to come down in 2022, the original Riverwalk Community Mural planning committee has both “expanded and shifted focus to creating other community art opportunities elsewhere locally, with the hope to utilize the energy and enthusiasm generated by The Wishing Wall and help inspire new public art and creative placemaking projects in Sleepy Hollow’s downtown,” notes Harries. Additionally, a Wishing Wall photo contest is underway, with submissions due September 6, as well as an attendant online gallery of submissions and an upcoming exhibition in Sleepy Hollow storefronts.
“For the 260-plus community members directly involved in the project and the many more who watched it be created or have visited since, The Wishing Wall provided a much-needed, positive experience of hope during a particularly challenging year,” reflects Harries. “The mural allowed an opportunity to reconnect with others and witness what we’re able to accomplish when we work together.”” (From The Wishing Wall Colors the Sleepy Hollow Community by Paul Adler. In Westchester Magazine, August 16, 2021


View of the new Tappan Zee Bridge (That’s the old name. I can’t make myself refer to it by its new name: Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge. I have nothing against the late former governor. I just prefer the old name) from the Riverwalk.


A Cairn. These are somewhat controversial. See here for an explanation.

Taken with a Fuji X-E1 and Fuji XF 35mm f1.4 R

A Walk in Sleepy Hollow – Kingsland Point Park

My walk along the Hudson took me through Kingsland Point Park. Kingsland Point Park is an 18-acre park located on the eastern shore of the Hudson River at the mouth of the Pocantico River in the Village of Sleepy Hollow. With spectacular overlook areas and views of the historic Tarrytown Lighthouse, Kingsland Point Park was one of the first parks developed by the Westchester County Parks Commission.
The park, which was built in 1926, offers picnic areas, ballfields, fishing and playgrounds.



Taken with a Fuji X-E1 and Fuji XF 35mm f1.4 R

A Walk in Sleepy Hollow – Kathryn Wasserman Davis River Walk Center

Scenic Hudson spearheaded this collaborative project to transform the dilapidated bathhouse at Kingsland Point Park, built in 1926 and for decades a popular destination for community gatherings, into a center for river-based education and recreation on the county’s planned 51-mile River Walk. Named for philanthropist Kathryn W. Davis, the center hosts educational and arts programming that reaches over 2,000 children annually.

According to her New York Times Obituary:

“Kathryn Wasserman Davis, who contributed tens of millions of dollars to cleaning the Hudson River and promoting peace through an organization she founded when she was 100, died on Tuesday at her home in Hobe Sound, Fla. She was 106.
Her death was confirmed by her grandson Christopher Davis.
Mrs. Davis donated millions to Scenic Hudson, a group that works to clean the river and its environs, after taking up kayaking in her 90s near her home in Tarrytown, N.Y.

In 2007, when she turned 100, she founded Davis Projects for Peace, which awards $10,000 grants to humanitarian endeavors around the world initiated by college students.

About 600 proposals from students of the 90 schools associated with the Davis United World College Scholars Program have been financed so far. This year’s projects include an attempt to provide solar-powered lamps to an impoverished county in China.
For her efforts Mrs. Davis was awarded the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service.

Mrs. Davis was also a benefactor of higher education, giving to Ivy League universities like Harvard and Columbia and particularly to Wellesley College, her undergraduate alma mater, where she created the Davis Museum and Cultural Center.

Kathryn Stix Wasserman was born in Philadelphia on Feb. 25, 1907. She received a bachelor’s degree from Wellesley, in Massachusetts, a master’s in international relations from Columbia University and a doctorate from the University of Geneva in Switzerland.

A lifelong globetrotter and a Russophile since her first visit to the Caucasus Mountains in 1929, she met the insurance investment magnate Shelby Cullom Davis on a train to Geneva in 1930. They were married on Jan. 4, 1932. Mr. Davis died in 1994.

Mrs. Davis is survived by a daughter, Diana Davis Spencer; a son, Shelby; eight grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren.
She also owned a home in Northeast Harbor, Me., and supported environmental charities there like the Maine Coast Heritage Trust.”

Taken with a Fuji X-E1 and Fuji XF 35mm f1.4 R