The
Church Sanctuary
New Utrecht Reformed
Church is one of the original
churches of the Reformed
Church
in America and was
established in 1677. The first
church building was constructed
in 1700 at Main Street (now 84th
Street, also Liberty Pole
Boulevard) just off 16th Avenue,
on the site now occupied by the
Metropolitan Baptist Church and
right next to the New
Utrecht Cemetery. The
original church was an
octagonal-shaped building with a
tall spire. During the American
Revolution (1775-1783) the
British used it as a hospital
and as a riding school. The
present church sanctuary, using
the stones from the original
church, was built in 1828-29 at
18th Avenue and 84th Street
(also Liberty Pole
Boulevard). This
church, built in Gothic Revival
style, was one of the first
buildings to be officially
declared a landmark by the New
York City Landmarks Preservation
Commission on March 15, 1966 and
both the church and the cemetery
are listed in the National
Register of Historic Places.
An expanded landmark
site, designated in 1998,
includes the Parish House, built
in 1892 and the Liberty Pole
(see below).
The former Parsonage
was built on the church grounds
in 1906.
The
Liberty Pole
The Liberty Pole was
first constructed in 1783 at the
end of the American Revolution
by the inhabitants of the Town
of New Utrecht to commemorate
their liberation from and
withdrawal of British troops.
The present pole, the sixth to
be placed in front of the
present church and exhibited
during the 1939-40 World's Fair,
was erected on the church
grounds in 1946 and is the only
Liberty Pole remaining in the
original thirteen United States.
An annual commemoration of the
Liberty Pole, Liberty Weekend,
take place in late May or early
June each year, commemorating
the anniversary of the erection
of the first Liberty Pole.
More information
on the history of New
Utrecht
Reformed Church and
the Town of New Utrecht can
be found at Friends
of
Historic
New Utrecht and the New Utrecht Liberty
Pole Association.
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