Old House Journal

COOPERSTOW­N RESOURCES

STUDENTS OF HISTORY, ART, AND ARCHITECTU­RE WILL BE IMMERSED.

- By Patricia Poore

During his restoratio­n of a ca. 1820 New York farmhouse (see previous story), antiques dealer Tim Northup sought inspiratio­n at museums and historic houses—including the Farmers’ Museum and Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstow­n, not far from his place in Oneonta. Today the town with a population of about 1,770—home to the Baseball Hall of Fame—also boasts SUNY Oneonta’s Cooperstow­n Graduate Program, which trains museum profession­als.

The Farmers’ Museum is a living history site. Its 19th-century Historic Village comprises 24 buildings moved here from around the state and restored: the Greek Revival Dimmick House dates to 1839, the More House to ca. 1818, parts of the Bump Tavern go back to 1795. The Lippitt Farmstead interprets an operating farm of the mid-19th century, and includes the 1800 farmhouse, two barns, and many outbuildin­gs. Museum collection­s also extend to textiles, wallpapers, and agricultur­al artifacts.

Those looking for immersion might take workshops, which run from three hours to three days and include courses in blacksmith­ing, woodcarvin­g, rug braiding, tinsmithin­g, and folk painting—plus raising hens and beekeeping. (Except for special programs, the museum is closed from Oct. 30 until Mar. 31.) Find more at farmersmus­eum.org

The Fenimore Art Museum began as the New York State Historical Associatio­n in 1899; one mandate was to archive manuscript­s, paintings, and objects associated with state history. The Museum today occupies Fenimore House, a 1930s neo-Georgian mansion built on the site of novelist James Fenimore Cooper’s early farmhouse. (Cooper’s family moved here in the 1790s; the novelist wrote The Last of the Mohicans and the other books, referred to as the Leathersto­cking Tales, between 1823 and 1841.) A separate library and an 18,000-square-foot wing have been added, the latter accommodat­ing one of the country’s most important collection­s of American Indian art. The Fenimore has superb collection­s of folk art, photograph­y, and paintings of the Hudson River School and 19th-century genre paintings. More at fenimorear­tmuseum.org

 ??  ?? The 1790s Lippitt Farmstead at the Farmers’ Museum has a farmhouse and a collection of outbuildin­gs.
The 1790s Lippitt Farmstead at the Farmers’ Museum has a farmhouse and a collection of outbuildin­gs.
 ??  ?? LEFT Craft demonstrat­ions go on in this historic shop at the Farmers’ Museum. RIGHT In a lavish bedroom of the early 1800s at the Farmers’ Museum’s Bump Tavern, wall stenciling was copied from the original.
LEFT Craft demonstrat­ions go on in this historic shop at the Farmers’ Museum. RIGHT In a lavish bedroom of the early 1800s at the Farmers’ Museum’s Bump Tavern, wall stenciling was copied from the original.
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