The Complete Guide to Historic Richmond Town, NYC’s Living History Museum (2024)

Historic Richmond Town honors the everyday. This living history museum, tucked near La Tourette Parkin central Staten Island, re-creates life as lived by ordinary people in the 19th century—if not accurate to the last tiny detail then certainly, as one of thetradespeople says, “in the spirit of.”

Many of the buildings have been on this plot for centuries; those that haven’t are historic structures moved from elsewhere on Staten Island. And some of those tradespeople have been here for decades, passing on their craft to apprentices or other family members. The real-life cast reads a little like that of a 19th-century small-town novel: the printer is married to the tinsmith, who learned her craft from the village founder’s son and whose father is the carpenter.

The houses are humble. The reenactors don’t dazzle with pyrotechnics. It feels very atypical of New York City. But a visit here will give you an appreciation of simplicity, respect for those who honor that and an understanding of what it is to make, in the words of carpenter Norm Pederson, “a virtue of necessity.”

How to Get Here

If you’re looking to take public transit and you’re not already on Staten Island, a ferry will most likely be involved. From Manhattan, take the Staten Island Ferry to St. George Ferry Terminal and catch the S74 bus to Richmond Road. You can also cross the Verrazzano Bridge from Brooklyn on the S93 and switch to the S74 at Narrows Road/Richmond Road.

The Village

Though Richmond Town focuses mainly on 19th-century life, its history goes back much further. The oldest buildings—including one that was first built back in the 1600s—are on the north side of Richmond Road. Things progress through the ages to include a few 20th-century architectural examples, such as the brick Schwiebert House(built in 1909) and cupola-topped PS 28.

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Public School 28. Photo: Jen Davis

There’s everything you’d expect to see in a village from nearly any era: a courthouse, a church and that public school, for a start. But it’s in the spaces overseen by costumed historians where the “living” aspect kicks in. You can wander around the shops of the tinsmith, carpenterand printer; you can also duck into a general storewhose shelves are lined with products from the 1890s—the height of its success, when it was run by sisters Josephine, Mary and Sarah Black. And you can meet with, learn from and even take home work by the dedicated artisanswho craft their wares in these places. Amanda Schroeder, apprentice tinsmith, notes that each manned building is like an individual museum but also a shop—so the pieces created are frequently for sale.

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General Store. Photo: Jen Davis

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(From left) Edwards Barton House; Print Shop. Photos: David La Spina

Pederson says of his trade, “We’re not trying to do it better. We don’t make things look old. [What I do] is not trying to be beautiful or sophisticated, but mostly functional. If you’re going to make a box, make a good box.” Seems like sound advice.

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Carpenter Shop. Photo: Jen Davis

All the artisans use only the tools that were available at around the time each shop attempts to recreate, and some of the tools date from well before that. After all, this was the boondocks in the mid-1800s—an area largely untouched by the Revolutionary War and not a part of New York City until 1898—so the latest stuff hadn’t made it from Manhattan. As Pederson says, the tapered square drill bit he uses is just the same as what was used by the Romans back in the second century.

As the site lives on, the work is far from done. “We’ve got 60,000 individual artifacts that need to be cataloged and made accessible,” says Sarah Hermann, who creates digital content for Historic Richmond Town and was formerly a material culture interpreter there. In addition, they keep discovering new information that contextualizes the buildings.

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Carpenter Shop. Photo: David La Spina

Using tree-ring analysisof the wood used in its planks and columns, it was discovered that the Voorlezer House (long thought to be the oldest interpretive space on-site) isactually a mid-1700s building rather than a 1690s one. And the 200-year-old Guyon Store is in the midst of a restoration process, spurred by its involvement in a car crash in 2018.

What Else to See and Do

You’re free to wander around on your own, but a guided tourtakes place once a day on weekdays and twice a day on weekends. Special events occur all year-round, including the Richmond County Fair and regular Tavern Terrace concerts. The holidays are always a good time to visit as well; there are lots of themed celebrations, including for Fourth of July, Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Check out our rundownof some of the highlights.

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From left, photo by David La Spina. Right photo by Jen Davis

The Historical Museum, the first floor of which was constructed in 1848, puts on rotating exhibits in addition to showing off various artifacts from Staten Island’s past; a room in the visitors center has a display of documents and photographs.

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Historical Museum. Photo: Jen Davis

If you’ve got kids in tow, it may be hard to resist the lure of Egger’s Ice Cream, a Staten Island institution that sits in a diner car on-site. Over in the visitors center, this confectionery is good for a few sugary throwbacks such as taffy and hard candy.

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Egger's Ice Cream Parlor. Photo: Jen Davis

Fast Facts

  • The first Richmond County Fair in Historic Richmond Town took place in 1979, though that was a reboot of a Staten Island fair that dates back to 1895. Its initial iteration lasted until 1926 and involved some creative acts that might not pass the safety censors these days. In that same devil-may-care spirit, bed racing (one person on a wheeled bed, two people pushing) was introduced in 1981—though no longer takes place.

  • Historic Richmond Town oversees a handful of houses that are not on the village’s 100 acres, including Decker Farm, Judge Jacob Tysen House and—oldest of all—the Billiou-Stillwell-Perine House, whose original sections date to 1663.

  • The driving force behind Historic Richmond Town’s creation was Loring McMillen, a native Staten Islander who was one of the original members of the City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission.

  • The 1920-style diner car that houses Egger’s was used as a setting for the TV series Boardwalk Empire.

The Complete Guide to Historic Richmond Town, NYC’s Living History Museum (2024)

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