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RI Archives: Rural Road Trips

View past Excursions articles.

View all past Rural Road Trip articles.

Travel Essentials

Amtrak Empire Service between Albany, Hudson or Rhinecliff, NY and Penn Station, NYC

Bonanza Bus Lines between Williamstown, Lee, Stockbridge, Great Barrington, MA, or Canaan, CT and Port Authority Bus Terminal, NYC

Metro-North Railroad between Wassaic, Dover Plains, or Poughkeepsie, NY and Harlem (125th Street)  or Grand Central Station, NYC

Weather Underground
The radar is especially useful for tracking snow, sleet and thunderstorms.

Gas Prices
The price of gas at many of the stations in your area (enter zip code) and those immediately surrounding it. 

Historic Homes, Museums & Gardens

Annandale-on-Hudson, NY

Montgomery Place 434-acre intact Hudson River Valley estate

Athens, NY

Howard Hall Farm a laboratory for restoration training

Austerlitz, NY

Old Austerlitz

Catskill, NY

Cedar Grove home of Hudson River School founder, painter Thomas Cole

Hudson, NY

The American Museum of Firefighting

Hyde Park, NY

Home of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt

The Vanderbilt Mansion relic of the Gilded Age

Germantown, NY

Clermont an early Hudson River estate

Olana home of Hudson River School painter Frederic Church

Kent, CT

Sloane Stanley Museum artist’s studio and tool collection

Kinderhook, NY

U. S. President Martin Van Buren house

Lenox, MA

The Mount Edith Wharton’s estate and gardens

Frelinghuysen Morris House & Studio Cubist paintings in a Modernist house

Ventfort Hall the Gilded Age Museum

Old Chatham, NY

Shaker Museum and Library

Pittsfield, MA

Hancock Shaker Village

Arrowhead home of Herman Melville.

Rhinebeck, NY

Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome aircraft and auto museum; air shows

Wilderstein Historic Site elaborate Queen-Anne style house of the Suckleys. 

Poughkeepsie, NY

Locust Grove home of Samuel F.B. Morse

Sheffield, MA

Ashley House c. 1735 house; oldest in Berkshire County

Staatsburgh, NY

Mills Mansion house remodeled in Beaux Arts style by McKim, Mead & White

Stockbridge, MA

Chesterwood Estate & Museum home of Lincoln memorial sculptor Daniel Chester French

Mission House 1739 house with Colonial Revival garden

Naumkeag McKim, Mead & White summer cottage and gardens

Williamstown, MA

The Folly at Field Farm Modenist house and sculpture garden

[See more Excursion articles]

The 4th of July:  Bombs Bursting in Air

Rural Intelligence Road Trips Not all 4th of July celebrations are alike.  Some are as American as, say, the Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary War, while others are as American as baseball. Some aren’t even on the 4th. Given that and the capricious micro-pockets of inclement weather we’ve been having recently, it’s conceivable that a die-hard could catch fire department sanctioned fireworks displays somewhere in our region on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights.  Great news for us fireworks-enthusiasts; bad news for our poor, long-suffering dogs.
  .
An old-fashioned Independence Day Celebration at Clermont

What more fitting place to spend the 4th than at a magnificent house on the Hudson that was burnt to the ground by the British in 1777?  (The house we see today, a replica of the first, was rebuilt immediately after the War of Independence.)  Clermont’s is an all-day event with an emphasis on the pleasures and politics of the past.  Watermelon-seed-spitting contests, 3-legged races, Punch-and-Judy shows, Revolutionary War re-enactors engaged in the boisterous build-up to the Shot Heard ‘Round the World, culminating here in an impassioned reading of the Declaration (which, as it happens, the orginal owner of Clermont, who served in the 2nd Continental Congress, helped draft). All day and evening, there’s interesting and high-quality stuff to do for both children and adults, so check out the website (link below) for details.  The fireworks, clearly visible from the Clermont grounds, actually take place across the river in Saugerties.  But beware: once the parking lot is full, the gates will be closed.  So come early with a blanket and a picnic and wait for dark in one of the most beautiful settings in these United States.
Clermont State Historic Site
Friday, July 4
1 Clermont Avenue, Germantown; 518.537.4240
Friday, July 4; noon - 10
Admission: $7 per car
 
Family Fest in Chatham

At the Columbia County Fairgrounds, there will be live music by the Skeeter Creek Band, free rides for little ones, pony rides, face painting, wall climbing, a hay maze, and, of course, the astonishing array of fried foods for which our great nation is so justly infamous.  The festivities begin at 3 and stretch through the fireworks, which start at 9:30.  Those who just want to see the fireworks, may, for a $10 donation to the Little League, park and watch from their field across from the Fairgrounds.

Family Fest in Chatham
Columbia County Fairgrounds
Route 66, Chatham
Friday, July 4; 3 - 10
Admission: $5, free/children under 3, free parking at the Fairgrounds from 3 o’clock on
 

Lime Rock Park Fireworks

WKZE’s Marshall Miles
, will broadcast live from 6 – 8 on Saturday, the 5th. Fireworks start around 9; the refreshment stand will be open.

Lime Rock Park
497 Lime Rock Rd. (Rte. 112); Lakeville; 860.435.5000
Saturday, July 5th (Rain date: Sunday, July 6th)
6 - 10
Admission: $10 per car (proceeds go to the Rotary Club’s Community Services Campaign)
 
Something for Everyone in Rhinebeck

The Hudson Valley Philharmonic performs on Friday followed by fireworks. On Saturday, there are two demolition derbies, afternoon and evening. with fireworks at nightfall. On Sunday, WBPM presents Freedom Fest Classic Rock Concert, with music by Jimmy Johnson, Survivor; John Cafferty, Beaver Brown Band; Gary “US” Bonds; Larry Hoppin; and Robby Dupree. 

Dutchess County Fairgrounds
Route 9, Rhinebeck
Friday, July 4, 5 - 10
The Hudson Valley Philharmonic at 7; fireworks after dark
Saturday, July 5, 10 - 10
Demolition derbys: 2:30 & 7; fireworks after dark
Admission both nights:
Walk ins: $7/advance; $11/gate. $6/Rhinebeck residents
Carloads: $30/advance; $40/gate
Freedom Fest Rock Concert
Sunday, July 6, 11 - 6; no fireworks
Admission: $25/per person
All events: rain or shine
 
Pittsfield: An Old School 4th

In one of the last remaining wooden ballparks in the country, where everyone from Lou Gehrig and Satchel Paige to Bob Dylan has done his thing, the fireworks come after the game, which comes after the cast of ...Spelling Bee has sung the national anthem, and they don’t utter so much as an “Oh, say, can you see…“ until long after the parade that USA Today recently declared one of the 10 best in the USA. The fireworks can be seen from outside the ballpark, but they don’t start until the game ends. The parade, which starts on South Street at West Housatonic and goes on to Wahconah Park, customarily attracts over 50,000 people.  According to our friend, Pittsfield Director of Cultural Development, Megan Whilden, here’s why:  “Note that Governor Patrick will be marching, as he did last year, as will Senator John Kerry.  Also, cheerleaders, color guards, marching bands, giant balloons, bagpipers, the Pittsfield Dukes ballplayers, firetrucks (two years ago we had cartwheeling firefighters!), rollerskating teams, step dancers, Corvettes and antique cars, the cast from Barrington Stage Company’s Youth Theatre production of Suessical, oh, and so much more.  Bring a lawn chair! Oy vey!“

Parade
Friday, July 4, 10 - 12. 
For directions and parking information (the latter highly recommended) click on the link above.
Baseball and fireworks at Wahconah Park
Friday, July 4,  6:30
Saturday, July 5,  7
39 Alford Road; between Pittsfield and Great Barrington; 413.447.3853
Tickets: $6/general admission; $8.50/box seats

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Posted by Marilyn Bethany on 07/01/08 at 07:54 AM • Permalink