Bronck House, Historic Dutch colonial house in Coxsackie, United States.
Bronck House is a stone dwelling in Dutch colonial style in Coxsackie featuring thick walls, a steep gable roof, and several attached buildings. The structure displays typical architectural elements of Dutch colonial settlements with its distinctive design and spatial layout.
The house was founded in 1663 by Pieter Bronck, a Swedish immigrant, and remained under family ownership for over 270 years. Its conversion to a museum in the 1930s opened this early European dwelling to public access.
The rooms display Dutch doors, wide floorboards, and furnishings from the settlement era, showing how early European families organized their daily lives and domestic spaces in the Hudson Valley.
The site sits near US Highway 9W between the New York Thruway and Coxsackie, making it easy to find from the roadside. The Greene County Historical Society operates the property as a museum with staff on-site to guide visitors.
The grounds include a 13-sided barn built in the 1830s, an unusual geometric shape that reflects the shift from wheat farming to dairy production. This rare building style shows how farmers adapted their structures to changing agricultural needs.
The community of curious travelers
AroundUs brings together thousands of curated places, local tips, and hidden gems, enriched daily by 60,000 contributors worldwide.