Skip to Header Skip to Navigation Skip to Content
logo

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage

Rye, NY | Rye Brook | Westchester County | Real Estate | Homes for Sale | Houses for Sale

Article

Bedford Hills, NY 10507

Historic Bedford Hills is located in the heart of Northern Westchester County in New York State. This beautiful suburban hamlet is located about 45 minutes north of New York City.
Once known as Bedford Station when the railroad was built in 1847, Bedford Hills extends from the railroad station, to the farms and estates eastwards along Harris and Bedford Center roads, and south along the busy Route 117 business corridor toward Mt. Kisco.
Bedford Hills is one of the three hamlets that make up the Town of Bedford. The other two hamlets of the Town of Bedford are, Bedford Village (the original 1680 settlement), and Katonah (named after Chief Katonah who sold the original area to the settlers).
On November 7, 1848, the Post Office was opened.
As the economy grew, so did the population of the area around the Bedford Station. Businesses began to open, catering to local residents, as well as wealthy New York City residents who began building substantial summer homes in the Bedford area.
The year 1925 marked a most important event in the status of Bedford Hills. The Town of Bedford needed a Town House. On September 22, 1925 the proposition to build a Town House in
Bedford Hills was submitted to the voters. The proposal was soon approved, and the Town House was built in Bedford Hills in 1927. It was a milestone for Bedford Hills which had finally come into its own. The location of the Town offices was convenient, only a few minutes drive from Bedford Village or Katonah. Now residents of the other hamlets had to come to Bedford Hills to attend council meetings or appear at court proceedings.
Bedford Hills is also the site of the largest women's prison in New York State, which opened its doors in 1901. Once Westfield State Farm, is now officially named Bedford Hills Correctional Facility. The prison also helped to put Bedford Hills "on the map" as well as to bring more jobs to the area.

The arrival of major highways in the mid 1900's such as the Saw Mill River Parkway, along with the later construction of Interstate highway 684 in the late 1960's, made it easier for people to quickly travel back and forth from New York City and Bedford Hills. Route 117 through Bedford Hills has become an active, booming commercial strip.

Our Heritage: On December 23, 1680, 22 men from Stamford, Connecticut, founded the Town of Bedford when they purchased, fur coats, blankets, wampum and cloth, a tract of land three miles square known as the "Hopp Ground" from Chief Katonah and several other Indians.

These "proprietors" from Stamford were New England Puritans who promptly set about to plan their new settlement providing for a meetinghouse, gristmill on the Mianus River and burying ground. Today's Village Green is one-third its original size but the graveyard and surrounding principal streets remain substantially as they were originally planned in 1681.
Bedford was part of Connecticut in 1697 when a patent fixed the boundaries as a six-mile square and it wasn't until England's King William issued a royal degree in 1700, to settle a boundary dispute, that Bedford became part of New York.
The Town's importance grew during the Colonial period and served as the wartime Westchester County seat during the Revolutionary War after the Battle of White Plains and until Bedford was burned by the British on July 11, 1779. After the Revolution, Bedford became one of two seats of County government, alternating with White Plains until 1870. The Court House in Bedford Village, built in 1787 and renovated in the 1960s, is Westchester County's oldest government building.

Three distinct hamlets, each with its own personality and rich history, make up the Town of Bedford.
Bedford Village
The original 1680 Bedford settlement was in Bedford Village in the southeastern portion of the Town, with its Village Green and historic buildings dating to the 18th and early 19th centuries. Among these are the 1787 Court House and several homes built after the British burned the village during the Revolution. In 1972, the Bedford Village Historic District was established by local ordinance and is listed on both the New York State and the National Register of Historic Places. The burying ground, established in 1681, was apparently still in use after the Colonial period as the latest headstone dates to 1885. A museum in the Court House is open to the public.
Katonah
Katonah, in the northwestern part of Bedford, saw its Historic District, in 1983, listed on the State and National registers of Historic Places. This district encompasses the Bedford Road area, a section of the hamlet designed by landscape architects, G.S. and B.S. Olmstead. Noted for its Victorian architecture, Katonah now stands somewhat south of where the original hamlet was located and before it was obliged to move in the late 1890s to make way for the expansion of the New York City watershed when the Muscoot Reservoir was built. Fifty houses were moved to their present sites in the hamlet. Katonah is widely known as home to Caramoor, Katonah Museum of Art and the John Jay Homestead, retirement home of John Jay, the first chief justice of the United States Supreme Court.
Bedford Hills
Once known as Bedford Station when the railroad was built in 1847, Bedford Hills extends from its bustling business center at the railroad station to farms and estates as it spreads eastward along Harris, Babbitt and Bedford Center roads and south along the busy Route 117 business corridor toward Mt. Kisco. This hamlet is the site of the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, the largest women's prison in New York State. Bedford Hills is also the seat of Town government and home to the Town House, built in 1927, and several other Town buildings where the Police Department and Town offices are located.
*compiled from Bedford gov. website and chamber of commerce website

 


Articles & Links

Contact

April Gasparino, ABR, CBR, GRI, SRES - Associate Broker - 2009 Silver Award Winner
Phone (914) 804-4779

Office

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage
9 McCullough Place
Rye, NY 10580
April Gasparino, ABR, CBR, GRI, SRES - Associate Broker - 2009 Silver Award Winner
  Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage  
Phone (914) 804-4779
  Contact