Ophir Farm and Manhattanville
College
Manhattanville and Purchase Environmental Protective Association
(PEPA) are currently working together to preserve Ophir Farm Estate's
historic structures and cultural landscape, much of it co-located
on the college campus.
Anne Gold, executive director of the Purchase Environmental Protective
Association (PEPA) and aide to the president of Manhattanville
College, created a book, Ophir Farm and Manhattanville College,
to celebrate the land's rich history and recent advances while
identifying noteworthy sites on the Purchase campus to incorporate
into a public walking trail.
The designation of the Manhattanville College Historical Walking
Tour as an official segment of the New York State Greenway Trail
System represented a triumph for the preservation of Ophir Farm
as well. The inclusion provided widely acknowledged recognition
to the site and walking tour.
The historical walking trail contains 14 locations including Reid
Castle, assigned to the National Register of Historical Places
in 1974, and surviving structures from the "Model Farm Group." This
well-preserved sample of the model-farm era includes the dairy,
stable/coach house and farmhouse. Also featured the Ann Holladay
Stone Chapel, a Norman Gothic-style building and one of only three
remaining family chapels in Westchester County. Maya Linn, renowned
architect and creator of the Vietnam War Memorial, restored the
140-year-old stone chapel along with the creation of a neighboring
solar-powered classroom in the surrounding environmental park.
PEPA financed the printing and mailing of the book, which was
mailed to every household in Purchase, local educators, supportive
organizations and government officials. The Ophir Farm and Manhattanville
College book and the Historic Walking Tour are used as educational
tools by Manhattanville professors, school groups and community
organizations, including the Purchase Elementary School and the
Harrison Girl Scouts.
Trail visits and special interactive workshops help future generations
learn respect for our common heritage, and develop a sense of time
and community. The book and walking tour also helps Manhattanville
College pursue related grant proposals and has introduced the staff
and students to historic preservation techniques and trail maintenance.
We are enthusiastic about the efforts to preserve Ophir Farm and
hope you will read this beautiful new booklet to learn more about
it. The Ophir Farm and Manhattanville College book and trail map
are free and can be requested by calling the PEPA office at 914-323-5360
or download a PDF below:
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