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The district takes up most of the southeastern half of the village. Kinderhook Creek, the village's eastern line, is also the district's eastern boundary.It deviates from the village boundary in the north to cross to Chatham Street (Route 9) near the intersection with the old railroad right-of-way, which it follows down to Railroad Avenue and then turns west along the back property lines of ...
Kinderhook was settled before 1651 [6] and established as a town in 1788 [7] from a previously created district (1772), but lost substantial territory to form part of the town of Chatham in 1775. Kinderhook was one of the original towns of Columbia County. More of Kinderhook was lost to form the town of Ghent in 1818 and the town of Stuyvesant ...
Chatham Center – A hamlet on NY-66, west of the geographic center of town and north of Chatham village. East Chatham – A hamlet at the eastern town line, east of Old Chatham. Kinderhook Lake – A lake partly in the town by the western town line. Malden Bridge – A hamlet in the northern part of the town, east of North Chatham.
The area listed by the U.S. Census as Niverville extends east into the town of Chatham so that it surrounds Kinderhook Lake. New York State Route 203 passes east of the hamlet proper and along the eastern shore of Kinderhook Lake, leading southwest 2 miles (3 km) to Valatie and northeast 6 miles (10 km) to Nassau.
Kinderhook (Kinderhoeck in Dutch) is a village in the town of Kinderhook in Columbia County, New York, United States. The village population was 1,170 at the 2020 census, slightly down from 1,211 at the 2010 census. [2] [3] The village of Kinderhook is located in the south-central part of the town on US 9.
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Martin H. Glynn, 40th Governor of New York, from 1913 to 1914, [9] [10] was born in the Town of Kinderhook in 1871, and shortly thereafter moved with his family to Valatie, where his family operated Glynn Tavern on Main Street. [11]
It includes the remnants of the one thriving hamlet of Riders Mills, located along the Kinderhook Creek and largely wiped out by a flood in 1869. Most of the buildings are residential and date to the early to mid-19th century and reflect a variety of popular architectural styles such as Georgian and Greek Revival .