National Register of Historic Places listings in New York

Buildings, sites, districts, and objects in New York listed on the National Register of Historic Places:

Map of the counties of New York State
Map of the counties of New York State

There are over 6,000 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in New York State. Some are listed within each one of the 62 counties in New York State. Of these, 258 are further designated as National Historic Landmarks.

This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted June 19, 2020.[1]

Numbers of properties and districts

The numbers of properties and districts in New York State or in any of its 62 counties are not reported by the National Register. Following are approximate tallies of current listings from lists of the specific properties and districts.[2]

House at 3 Crown Street, Nelsonville, in Putnam County
New York State Capitol, in Albany County
Eagle Island Camp, Saranac Lake, in Franklin County
Empire State Building, Manhattan, in New York County
First Baptist Church of Painted Post, Painted Post, in Steuben County
Buffalo City Hall, Buffalo, in Erie County
County # of sites[2]
1.1 Albany: Albany 68
1.2 Albany: Other 148
1.3 Albany: Duplicates (1)[3]
Albany: Total 215
2 Allegany 28
3 Bronx 73
4 Broome 63
5 Cattaraugus 35
6 Cayuga 70
7 Chautauqua 46
8 Chemung 44
9 Chenango 46
10 Clinton 54
11 Columbia 141
12 Cortland 29
13 Delaware 73
14.1 Dutchess: Poughkeepsie 96
14.2 Dutchess: Rhinebeck 40
14.3 Dutchess: Other 124
14.4 Dutchess: Duplicates (1)[4]
Dutchess: Total 259
15.1 Erie: Buffalo 162
15.2 Erie: Other 74
Erie: Total 236
16 Essex 114
17 Franklin 80
18 Fulton 27
19 Genesee 24
20 Greene 103
21 Hamilton 22
22 Herkimer 68
23 Jefferson 147
24 Kings 179
25 Lewis 33
26 Livingston 89
27 Madison 82
28.1 Monroe: Rochester 110
28.2 Monroe: Other 99
28.3 Monroe: Duplicates (1)[5]
Monroe: Total 208
29 Montgomery 65
30.1 Nassau: Hempstead 33
30.2 Nassau: North Hempstead 51
30.3 Nassau: Oyster Bay 68
Nassau: Total 152
31.1 New York: Below 14th 185
31.2 New York: 14th-59th 160
31.3 New York: 59th-110th 109
31.4 New York: Above 110th 97
31.5 New York: Islands 15
31.6 New York: Duplicates (1)[6]
New York: Total 565
32 Niagara 91
33 Oneida 84
34.1 Onondaga:Syracuse 106
34.2 Onondaga 54
34.3 Onondaga: Duplicates (1)[5]
Onondaga: Total 160
35 Ontario 68
36 Orange 185
37 Orleans 27
38 Oswego 93
39 Otsego 72
40 Putnam 51
41 Queens 107
42 Rensselaer 116
43 Richmond 57
44 Rockland 90
45 St. Lawrence 77
46 Saratoga 77
47 Schenectady 76
49 Schoharie 52
49 Schuyler 20
50 Seneca 40
51 Steuben 58
52.1 Suffolk: Babylon 6
52.2 Suffolk: Brookhaven 51
52.3 Suffolk: East Hampton 31
52.4 Suffolk: Huntington 100
52.5 Suffolk: Islip 25
52.6 Suffolk: Riverhead 14
52.7 Suffolk: Shelter Island 10
52.8 Suffolk: Smithtown 24
52.9 Suffolk: Southampton 37
52.10 Suffolk: Southold 26
Suffolk: Duplicates (1)[7]
Suffolk: Total 323
53 Sullivan 79
54 Tioga 55
55 Tompkins 59
56 Ulster 189
57 Warren 75
58 Washington 54
59 Wayne 39
60.1 Westchester: New Rochelle 12
60.2 Westchester: Peekskill 13
60.3 Westchester: Yonkers 27
60.4 Westchester: Northern 97
60.5 Westchester: Southern 88
Westchester: Duplicates (3)[8]
Westchester: Total 234
61 Wyoming 26
62 Yates 66
(duplicates) (62)[9]
Total: 6,107
George Eastman House, Rochester, in Monroe County
Fort Stanwix National Monument, Rome, in Oneida County
Clinton County Courthouse Complex, Plattsburgh, in Clinton County
Hook Windmill, East Hampton, in Suffolk County
Statue of Liberty National Monument, Ellis Island and Liberty Island, Manhattan, in New York County
US Post Office-Albion, Albion, in Orleans County
Hawley-Green Historic District, Syracuse, in Onondaga County

See also

References

  1. "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on June 19, 2020.
  2. The approximate counts are the best available. There are frequent additions to the listings, and occasional delistings, and the counts here may not be perfectly updated. Also, not counted are most boundary increase listings, which increase the area covered by a historic district and which carry a separate National Register reference number. An exception is Grand Central Terminal Park Avenue Viaduct which is treated here as a separate property, although it was added to the National Register as a boundary increase to the Grand Central Terminal.
  3. The Albany Felt Company Complex is shared between the city of Albany and the neighboring town of Menands, and is thus on both lists.
  4. The Hudson River Heritage Historic District is located in both the Rhinebeck list and the Dutchess County: Other list.
  5. The New York State Barge Canal passes through both county and city.
  6. Riverside Park and Drive is located in both the above 59th to 110th Streets list and the above 110th Street list.
  7. Within Suffolk County, Long Island National Cemetery is included for both the towns of Babylon and Huntington.
  8. Within Westchester County:
    • Bronx River Parkway Reservation is included in lists for both northern and southern Westchester.
    • Old Croton Aqueduct is included in lists for both northern and southern Westchester, and the city of Yonkers as well.
  9. The following sites are listed in multiple counties: Adirondack Forest Preserve (Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer, St. Lawrence and Warren), Bear Mountain Bridge and Toll House (Rockland and Westchester), Brooklyn Bridge (Kings and New York), Buskirk Covered Bridge (Rensselaer and Washington), Champlain Canal (Saratoga and Washington), Cypress Avenue West Historic District (Kings and Queens), Delaware and Hudson Canal (Orange, Sullivan and Ulster), Double-Span Metal Pratt Truss Bridge (Clinton and Essex), Earlville Historic District (Chenango and Madison), Beth Olam Cemetery and Evergreens Cemetery (Kings and Queens), Glens Falls Feeder Canal (Warren and Washington), Helen Hill Historic District (Essex and Franklin), Hudson River Heritage Historic District (Columbia and Dutchess), Hudson/Athens Lighthouse (Columbia and Greene), Keeseville Historic District (Clinton and Essex), Manhattan Bridge (Kings and New York), Mechanicville Hydroelectric Plant (Rensselaer and Saratoga), Melius-Bentley House (Columbia and Dutchess), New York Central Railroad Adirondack Division Historic District (Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, Herkimer, Oneida and St. Lawrence), Palisades Interstate Park (Orange and Rockland), Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge (Ulster and the city of Poughkeepsie) Queensboro Bridge (New York and Queens), Sixteen Mile District (Columbia and Dutchess), Stone Arch Bridge (Clinton and Essex), Swing Bridge (Clinton and Essex), Taconic State Parkway (Columbia, Dutchess, Putnam and Westchester), U.S. Military Academy (Orange and Putnam), USS Spitfire (Clinton and Essex), Washington Bridge (Bronx and New York), Seneca River Crossings Canals Historic District (Cayuga and Seneca), New York State Barge Canal (Albany, Rensselaer, Washington, Saratoga, Schenectady, Montgomery, Herkimer, Oneida, Madison, Onondaga, Oswego, Cayuga, Seneca, Wayne, Monroe, Orleans, Niagara and Erie), First Presbyterian Church of Deposit (Broome and Delaware)

National Register of Historic Places travel itineraries:

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