99 Best Sights in Hudson Valley, New York

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We've compiled the best of the best in Hudson Valley - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Col. Jonathan Elmendorf House

The house, built between 1783 and 1790, contains the Hurley Heritage Society Museum. It includes a good collection of Revolutionary War materials, and has changing exhibits about local history. Walking- and driving-tour brochures are available in its front lobby.

52 Main St., Hurley, NY, 12443, USA
845-338–1661
Sight Details
Free
May–Oct., Fri. and Sat. 10–4, Sun. 1–4

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Columbia County Museum

The building that houses the museum and the offices of the Columbia County Historical Society was a Masonic temple and dates from 1916. You can trace your roots with the help of staff and extensive genealogical archives, peruse period postcards, and see fine examples of period furniture.

5 Albany Ave., Kinderhook, NY, 12106, USA
518-758–9265
Sight Details
Museum $7.50
Mar.–Nov., Mon., Thurs., and Fri. 10–4, weekends noon–4.
Closed Mon.-Fri.

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Constitution Marsh Audubon Center and Sanctuary

An extensive boardwalk leads you deep into the reeds and rushes of this lush, wildlife-filled tidal marshland. In winter the boardwalk is a prime lookout spot for bald eagles. Tromp through the 280-acre sanctuary's bluffs and woodlands, or visit the educational center, where a 500-gallon aquarium offers an up-close look at fish, crabs, and other resident wildlife. Note: parking is quite limited.

127 Warren Landing Rd., Garrison, NY, 10524, USA
845-265–2601
Sight Details
Donations welcome
Center Tues.–Sun. 9–5; call ahead for center hrs in winter

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Country Living Fair

You'll feel like you're walking through the pages of Country Living at this three-day fair held at the Dutchess County Fairgrounds every June. There are antiques, home decor, furniture, and artisan-made products for sale. You can also meet the magazine's editors at various seminars, as well as participate in craft and cooking demonstrations.

6550 Spring Brook Ave., Rhinebeck, NY, 12572, USA
Sight Details
$16 for day pass; $20 for weekend pass

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Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site

An unpretentious cottage, Val-Kill was first a retreat and later the full-time residence for Eleanor Roosevelt. A biographical film, First Lady of the World, is shown at the site. The property encompasses 180 acres of trails and gardens. It's also the location of Val-Kill Industries, Eleanor's attempt to prevent farm workers from relocating to the city for employment; reproductions of early American furniture, pewter, and weavings were produced here.

56 Valkill Park Rd., Hyde Park, NY, 12538, USA
845-229–9115
Sight Details
Tour $10
May.–Oct., daily 9–5; Nov.–Apr., Thurs.–Mon. Tours at 1 and 3

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Esopus Creek Festival of Mask and Puppet Theater

Every August you can watch giant puppets and imaginative spectacles unfold before the Esopus Creek in Tina Chorvas Waterfront Park. You'll be dazzled once the sun goes down and local puppeteers transform the park into an otherworldly extravaganza.

E. Bridge St., Saugerties, NY, 12477, USA
845-246–7873
Sight Details
$12

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Fort Montgomery State Historic Site

Scene of a 1777 Revolutionary War battle for the Hudson River, this fort (well, its foundation at least) is still visible on the 14½-acre site, which is on a cliff with stunning Hudson River views. The museum holds artifacts, weapons, a 15 minute film, and large-scale models reenacting the historic battle. To get to the site from New York City, take the Palisades Parkway north to Route 9W north and proceed just over ½ mile. The parking area is on the right.

690 Route 9W, NY, 10922, USA
Sight Details
Mid-Apr–Oct.
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center

Vassar was the first college in the United States to have an art gallery, and that gallery eventually grew into the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, housed in a 1993 Cesar Pelli building. The center's collections include more than 19,000 works, from Egyptian and Asian relics to 19th- and 20th-century paintings. Highlights are the Warburg Collection of Old Masters prints and several significant Hudson River School paintings donated by Matthew Vassar.

124 Raymond Ave., Poughkeepsie, NY, 12604, USA
845-437–5237
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. 10–5, Thurs. 10–9, Sun. 1–5
Closed Mon.

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Fred J. Johnston Museum

Stockade District

Antiques dealer Fred J. Johnston rescued this 1812 Federal mansion from the wrecking ball in the 1930s; the Friends of Historic Kingston inherited the house in 1993 through Johnston's will. His collection of 18th- and 19th-century Hudson Valley furniture and decorative arts is on display as well as a Friends of Historic Kingston gallery that features different local history exhibits which change every year.

63 Main St., Kingston, NY, 12401, USA
845-339–0720
Sight Details
$5
May–Oct., Fri. and Sat. 11–4 and by appointment.

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Friends of the Nyacks

Occasional walking tours of Oak Hill Cemetery and downtown Nyack are led by Friends of the Nyacks; call or check online for dates and times.

103 Gedney St., Nyack, NY, 10960, USA
845-358–4973

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Gardiner Cupcake Festival

This cupcake festival began in 2008 and attracts more cupcake enthusiasts every year with more than a dozen vendors, an amateur baking contest, helicopter rides, and even a 5K race for those who wish to burn some calories before binging on tasty Hudson Valley baked goods.

Goshen Historic Track

The oldest harness track in the United States is also a National Historic Landmark. You can watch daily training or take a self-guided walking tour of the premises, but these days races are run only in June and July.

44 Park Pl., Goshen, NY, 10924, USA
845-294–5333
Sight Details
Free
Daily; call for times

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Greig Farm

Pick your own asparagus, peas, berries, apples, and pumpkins at this local farm spread across 100 acres of rural farmland. The Hudson Valley Farmer's Market, where you can get local produce, baked goods, cheese, meats, and wine is held here every Saturday from 10 to 3, from early May to mid-October.

229 Pitcher Ln., Red Hook, NY, 12571, USA
845-758–1234

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Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame

Overlooking the track is this museum and hall of fame dedicated to harness racing. Exhibits include a three-dimensional racing simulator, prints, and paintings. Original track stables house some of the displays.

240 Main St., Goshen, NY, 10924, USA
845-294–6330
Sight Details
Free
Daily 10–5

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Hessel Museum of Art

This free museum is part of Bard's highly respected Center for Curatorial Studies. Located on the south end of the Bard campus, it's known for cutting-edge exhibits of contemporary art and includes more than 3,000 works by some of most prominent artists of the 20th and 21st centuries, including Donald Judd, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Cindy Sherman.

33 Garden Rd., Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, 12504, USA
845-758–7598
Sight Details
Thurs.–Sun. 11–6

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Hopper House Art Center

The childhood home of artist Edward Hopper now serves as an arts center and exhibition space. The famed painter owned the Federal-style house, which was built in 1858 by his grandfather, until his death in 1967. A group of Nyack citizens saved the structure from ruin in 1971. Jazz concerts are held in the backyard on Thursday evenings in July. Look for free street parking one block north.

82 N. Broadway, Nyack, NY, 10960, USA
845-358–0774
Sight Details
Wed.–Sun. 12–5
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Hudson River Maritime Museum

Rondout District

Models, artifacts, and photographs illustrate the region's maritime history. Changing exhibits show tugboats and antique fishing and sailing craft. You may board the Half Moon, a replica of Henry Hudson's ship, when it's in dock. Tours to the Rondout Lighthouse (also known as the Kingston Lighthouse) leave from the museum's dock.

50 Rondout Landing, Kingston, NY, 12401, USA
845-338–0071
Sight Details
$7
May–Oct., daily 11–5

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Hudson Valley Garlic Festival

Upward of 50,000 people make a pilgrimage to Saugerties the last weekend of September for a celebration of the "stinking rose," otherwise known as garlic. Although you find much of the usual fair fare here—crafts booths, fried-dough stands, live musical performances—one vast section of the festival is devoted to farmers, arts-and-crafts people, and food vendors all providing tributes to garlic.

Cantine Field, Saugerties, NY, 12477, USA
845-246–3090
Sight Details
$10

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Huguenot Street

A National Historic Landmark, the street includes seven colonial stone houses from as early as 1705, some of the oldest in the United States. The 10-acre area includes a Visitors' Center, a reconstructed 1717 Huguenot church, exhibit and program spaces, archeological sites, and a burial ground that dates to the very first settlers of the region. Guided walking tours begin at the Visitors' Center office in the 1705 DuBois Fort, between Broadhead Avenue and North Front Street.

64 Huguenot St., New Paltz, NY, 12561, USA
845-255–1889
Sight Details
Tours $15
Tours May–Oct., Sun–Thurs. 10–8, Fri. and Sat. 10–9
Closed Wed.

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Hurley Reformed Church

This church was built in 1853 to replace the 1801 stone church a few doors up the street. The parsonage is next door in the 1790 Crispell House. On the second Saturday of July, the church organizes a Stone House Day celebration, when neighbors open their centuries-old stone houses to the public.

17 Main St., Hurley, NY, 12443, USA
845-331–4121

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Hyde Park Railroad Station

Franklin D. Roosevelt frequently used this 1914 train station, which was designed by the same architects who designed New York's Grand Central Terminal. Today, it houses an extensive collection of railroad paraphernalia and has running displays of model trains all manned by knowledgeable enthusiasts.

34 River Rd., Hyde Park, NY, 12538, USA
845-229–2338
Sight Details
Free
Mon. 5-9; mid-June.–mid. Sept., weekends 12–5

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Innisfree Garden

A unique contribution to garden design in America, Innisfree is based on Chinese-garden design and draws inspiration from ages-old Chinese paintings. The term cup garden is used to describe the concept; it refers to the way spaces frame, or "cup," features, such as striking rock formations or small pools. Cliffs, low hills, waterfalls, streams, and picnic spots surround the 40-acre lake at the center of the garden. A path takes you through Innisfree.

362 Tyrrel Rd., Millbrook, NY, 12545, USA
845-677–8000
Sight Details
$8
May–late Oct., Wed.–Fri. 10–4, weekends 11–5
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Katonah Museum of Art

The museum's changing exhibitions span a wide range of cultures, mediums, historical periods, and social issues. It's not uncommon to see a show about banjos or puzzles followed by a more traditional art exhibit—a review of Latin American works or a retrospective of Richard Diebenkorn's prints, for example. Guided tours start at 2:30 Tuesday through Sunday.

134 Jay St., Katonah, NY, 10536, USA
914-232–9555
Sight Details
$10
Tues.–Sat. 10–5, Sun. noon–5
Closed Mon.

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Keegan Ales

Midtown

This working microbrewery offers free tours and tastings. (Stout fans should try Mother's Milk.) It also holds quarterly rock concerts, either in the brewery itself or in the parking lot, and functions as a gallery and performance space.

20 St. James St., Kingston, NY, 12401, USA
845-331–2739
Sight Details
Tours and tastings free
Mon. 4–9; Tues.–Thurs. 4–10; Fri. and Sat. 11:30–midnight; Sat. 1–10
Closed Mon.

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Kiersted House

The stone house, parts of which date from the 1720s, serves as the home of the Saugerties Historical Society and a museum. Inside you can see original architectural details, including wide-plank floors and fireplace mantels. The front lawn is the site of summertime concerts, periodic colonial reenactments, and other special events.

119 Main St., Saugerties, NY, 12477, USA
845-246–9529
Sight Details
Free
Memorial Day–Columbus Day, weekends 1–4 and by appointment

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Lake Taghkanic State Park

The centerpiece of this 1,569-acre park, Lake Taghkanic has two sandy beaches, picnic areas, boat rentals, playgrounds, restrooms, and trails for hiking. You may camp here from early May through October, choosing between tent or trailer sites or rustic cabins (with bathrooms and hot and cold water). Kids enjoy climbing the water tower. Cross-country skiing, snowmobiling, ice-skating, and ice fishing are options in winter.

1528 Rte. 82, Ancram, NY, 12502, USA
518-851–3631
Sight Details
Parking $8
Daily sunrise–sunset

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LEGOLAND New York Resort

This brick-tastic experience has seven “lands”–Brick Street, Bricktopia, LEGO NINJAGO World, LEGO Castle, LEGO City, LEGO Pirates, and Miniland–LEGO fans can explore. Special features include the unique-to-this-resort (a.k.a only one in the world), LEGO Factory Adventure Ride, which puts guests in the middle of a LEGO factory by shrinking them down to digital miniversions of themselves so they can experience how bricks are created, and the park’s Miniland, which has original brick creations of landmarks from all five New York City boroughs and around the Empire State as well as the resort’s hometown of Goshen. Another cool feature is the musical fountain, Stepping Tones, which plays music and spurts water as various sensors are activated; this is the only place you can see the fountain besides LEGOLAND Billund in Denmark.

Fan favorites include the Build & Test center where future LEGO Master Model Builders can flex their skills by building anything they can think of–cars, boats, skyscrapers–and then test them out. LEGO NINJAGO World has LEGO NINJAGO The Ride where participants train at the Monastery with Master Wu. LEGO Castle has LEGOLAND’s signature Dragon and Dragon’s Apprentice roller coasters (for those under five), as well as the Tower Climb Tournament. LEGO City has the Driving School and the Coast Guard and Fire Academies as well as the Palace Theater where guests can see LEGO Movies in 4D and the Water Playground (reservations only). LEGO Pirates is where you’ll find the popular rides Splash Battle and Anchors Away! Brick Street has the appropriate-for-all-ages Brick Party Carousel, which instead of the traditional horses, has a motorcycle and a tiger to name a few, as well as the Big Shop, the largest LEGO retail space in North America. 

Locust Grove

After Samuel Morse, the inventor of the telegraph, bought this circa-1830 house, he remodeled it into a Tuscan-style villa. It still contains the possessions and keepsakes of the family that lived here after him. The Morse Gallery, inside the visitor center, has exhibits of telegraph equipment and paintings by Morse. The grounds include gardens and hiking trails.

2683 South Rd., Poughkeepsie, NY, 12601, USA
845-454–4500
Sight Details
$11
House May–Nov., daily 10–3; grounds daily 8am–dusk

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Locust Lawn

Josiah Hasbrouck—a lieutenant in the American Revolution and U.S. congressman during the presidential terms of Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe—built the 1814 Federal-style mansion, which has an impressive three-story central hall. The house and its original furniture and paintings remained in the family until Hasbrouck's great-great-granddaughter opened it to the public in 1959. Tours are available by appointment.

436 South Rte. 32, Gardiner, NY, 12525, USA
845-255–1660
Sight Details
$11
June–Oct., weekends 11–4

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Luykas Van Alen House

The 1737 restored Dutch farmhouse is especially noted for its collection of Hudson Valley paintings. The grounds include the Ichabod Crane Schoolhouse, a one-room schoolhouse that was actually used until the 1940s. It takes its name from the character in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving. Irving, who tutored at Lindenwald, purportedly modeled the character after a schoolmaster who taught in the area.

2589 Rte. 9H, Kinderhook, NY, 12106, USA
518-758–9265
Sight Details
$10
Jun.–Oct. weekends noon–4
Closed Oct. 9–Jun. 30; Mon., Wed.–Fri. Jul. 1–Sept. 3; Mon.–Fri. Sept. 5–Oct. 8

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