Card no. 42 -
photos This walk combines a slice of New York history with a visit to one of Manhattan's least-known residential neighborhoods.
Begin at Edgecombe and 160th Street (M2 bus to Edgecombe and 160th Streets or C train to 163rd Street).The oldest private house in New York, the
Morris-Jumel Mansion, sits on the hill overlooking the Harlem River, a position that recommended it as temporary headquarters for George Washington in 1776. Handsomely restored, with grounds that are especially pretty in spring and summer, the house is well worth the trek uptown. The entrance is on
cobblestoned Jumel Terrace, between West 160
th and 152
nd Streets, just east of St. Nicholas Avenue. Directly opposite is
Sylvan Terrace, a charming row of painted wooden houses built in the early 20
th century along the mansion's former carriageway. Turn right out of Sylvan Terrace to West 162
nd Street, then right to the far side of
Edgecombe Avenue for a glimpse of
Yankee Stadium, just across the Harlem River. Walk south on
Edgecombe to West 160
th, turn right and
walk to Broadway to visit the
Hispanic Society, between West 155
th and 156
th Streets, a treasure house of Spanish and Portuguese art, and its neighbor, the
American Academy of Arts and Letters (633 W. 155
th). Continue south to
Trinity Church's graveyard, the last cemetery in
Manhattan to still accept tenants. Proceed farther south on Broadway to West 145h and turn left to Convent Avenue, then right into
Hamilton Heights, a charming neighborhood of single-family houses that seem frozen in an earlier time. Return to Broadway along
West 141st and pick up the 1 or 9 train to West 137
th or 145
th Street.
From City Walks: New York: 50 Adventures on Foot by Martha Fay