The Hyde Park Explorer podcast series is your companion guide as you hike the trails throughout the Roosevelt-Vanderbilt National Historic Sites. The program provides a wide range of audio offerings designed to enhance your hiking experience.
Hyde Park Explorer
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Hyde Park and the Hudson River Valley are steeped in American history. Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt were certainly famous local residents, but there’s more of the Hyde Park story waiting for you to discover.
Welcome to the Hyde Park Explorer. We’ve produced this series of podcasts to help enhance your hiking experience, and bring you closer to some of the special places along the trail. The Hyde Park trails will lead you through National Park sites, a state park, town parks, and nature preserves.
Together, we welcome you to enjoy our trails and encourage you to hike safely and responsibly. Please respect fragile habitats and private property by staying on the trails. Take only pictures and leave only footprints. Hyde Park and the Hudson River Valley are steeped in American history. Over four hundred years ago, the Dutch explorer Henry Hudson first plied the waters of the river that now bears his name. In the mid-1800s, the breathtaking views of the river and distant Catskill Mountains inspired the first great American art movement—the Hudson River School of landscape painters.
Hyde Park was the ancestral home to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He was deeply proud of, and connected to, his Dutch roots, its people, and history. FDR and his wife Eleanor were certainly famous local residents, but there’s more of the Hyde Park story waiting for you to discover. Trails can connect us with the past, immerse us in the present, and transport us to the future. The Hyde Park trails are officially designated as National Recreation Trails. This means that they are part of a larger family that includes the National Historic Trails, which retrace some of America’s greatest journeys, and the National Scenic Trails, which traverse some of America’s greatest landscapes.
We hope you will go on and enjoy many other trails, whether here in Hyde Park, elsewhere in the Hudson River Valley, or on any other America’s national trails. And we hope you will find ways to get involved with the trails and great places in your community.
Sites:Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, Home Of Franklin D Roosevelt National Historic Site
Duration:1-2 Hours
Reservations:No
Pets:Yes
Location:Farm Lane Trail
Season:Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall
Time Of Day:Day
Roosevelt Farm Lane is part of the historic road network that connected the Roosevelt Home, Val-Kill, Top Cottage, the Home Farm, and FDR’s tree plantations. From the 19th century through 1945, the flat, fertile lands along the Albany Post Road and Violet Avenue were used for growing crops, while the rugged,rocky and wet interior was only suitable for growing trees. FDR planted over 21 acres of trees were planted between 1912 and 1944.
Get to know Eleanor Roosevelt—wife, mother, and grandmother; Hyde Park neighbor, activist, and diplomat—as you hike the paths she walked daily for recreation and quiet contemplation. See the historic buildings that hosted family gatherings as well as powerful dialog among national leaders. Explore the woodland trails that inspired many of Eleanor’s famous My Day columns.
Sites:Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, Home Of Franklin D Roosevelt National Historic Site
Duration:1-2 Hours
Reservations:No
Pets:Yes
Season:Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall
Time Of Day:Day
This trail takes you to the highest point on the Hyde Park Trails. When you reach the summit, you will have made the same climb that kings and queens and a host of foreign leaders made during some of the most critical days of the 20th century. Top Cottage, FDR’s humble hilltop getaway hosted pivotal meetings that shaped world history. It also provided guests with a dramatic vantage point from which to view the natural beauty of the Hudson River Valley, FDR’s cherished home.
It all began here—on the banks of the Hudson River. For centuries, the river sustained the livelihood of Native Americans, European explorers and landowners, African American slaves, and the scions of American industry. These trails traverse time, taking you on a journey from the first waterfront settlements through the Gilded Age of the early twentieth century.
Welcome to Hyde Park’s backyard! The Winnakee Nature Preserve is a community treasure, with over 100 acres of pristine woodland providing habitats for a surprising array of wildlife. Explore the woods where FDR developed his interest in forestry. Hear the stories of the Hyde Park volunteers who worked to preserve this land, and who continue to restore and maintain the woodland trails for your recreation and enjoyment.
With a presence in Hyde Park dating back to the mid-1800s, generations of Hacketts earned a name as some of the region’s leading philanthropists. The Hackett Trail takes you on a historic path through farm and forest, on land that was donated by the family for the express purpose of recreation and youth activities. The trail also takes you to the site of an important archeological discovery: a once-thriving African-American community that prospered in the 1700s.
Home Of Franklin D Roosevelt National Historic Site
While the Roosevelts had a plenty of space for an expansive garden, the small space garden exhibit demonstrates different systems for gardening with whatever space you have available. The designs displayed here address the common challenges faced when gardening and provide sensible solutions for the home grower. With as little space as it takes to set down your groceries, you could be growing fresh veggies.