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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

Amtrak 449 Lake Shore Limited between Pittsfield and South Station, Boston

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

Mega-bus between Albany and Ridgewood, N.J. and Penn Station, NYC

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

Peter Pan Bus Lines between *Albany, Great Barrington, *Lee, Lenox, *Pittsfield, Stockbridge, Williamstown and Boston South Station and Boston Logan Airport  (*greater frequency, better fares)

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 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]

Sidewalk Sale (And a History Lesson) in Kent, CT

Rural Intelligence: Rural Road Trips: Excursions Image

Kent is one of the great strolling towns in our region. It has art galleries with integrity, bookstores for real readers, cafes, a few well-curated antiques shop, several housewares and clothing boutiques—and not a chain store in sight. Shopping in Kent is never better than during the annual Sidewalk Sale, which runs August 7 - 10, with most shops offering great bargains on summer merchandise.

Five Favorites in Kent
Belgique Patisserie & Chocolatier
Routes. 7 & 341; 860.927.3681

Morrison Gallery
8 Old Barn Road; 860.927.4501

Ober Gallery
14 Old Barn Road; 860.927.5030

Richard J. Lindsay, Bookseller
15 North Main Street; 860.927.3025

R.T. Facts antiques
22 South Main Street; 860.927.1700

One of Kent’s secret gems is the Sloane Stanley Museum, which is located just off Route 7 about a mile north of the town center. The museum is devoted to the life and collections of Eric Sloane (1905 -1985), an artist, author and illustrator who chronicled country life in books, paintings and drawings. Before he died, Sloane got the Connecticut-based Stanley Works to build a museum for his hand-tool collection and to give it to the state of Connecticut to run. Sloane set up the museum himself, creating displays and painting all the signage in his distinctive hand.  The displays are so charming that even if you think the history of hand tools is boring you will be captivated by vignettes that show how brooms were made from a single piece of wood or by the butter churn that is powered by a dog running on a treadmill.

The museum includes a recreation of the artist’s studio (below) that was located in nearby Warren. You’d swear it’s a vintage movie set (from, say, Holiday Inn or Christmas in Connecticut) but the docent swears it’s an exact replica of Sloane’s actual workplace. It is startling because it feels as if Sloane has only departed the room minutes ago and will return soon to his books and paintbrushes.
Rural Intelligence Road Trips

Sloane Stanley Museum
31 Kent-Cornwall Road (Route 7), Kent; 860.927.3849
Open: Wednesday - Sunday, 10 AM - 4 PM through October 31.
(Closed for the winter; reopens in May.)

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Posted by Dan Shaw on 08/07/08 at 06:12 PM • Permalink