The Jay Heritage Center (JHC) was honored with a New York State Historic Preservation Award for Excellence in Non-Profit Achievement last week in recognition of its rehabilitation and stewardship of the Jay Estate Gardens.
The award was one of only ten conferred this year for excellence in the preservation and revitalization of New York State’s historic and cultural resources. It was the only award made to a Westchester County non-profit.
The awards ceremony was held at the New York State Museum in Albany and also recognized project teams responsible for the renewal of Pier 56 and El Barrio in Manhattan, the T Building in Queens, and the rehabilitation of the Niagara Falls River Gorge Stairway.
The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (NYSOPRHP) applauded the ingenuity of a three-room garden design by landscape architects Nelson Byrd Woltz that complements JHC’s programming. Historic features that had long lost their integrity and were subsumed by invasive species were successfully rehabilitated and can now be interpreted for the public.
Integral team members included the engineering firms of Silman and Langan and archaeologist Dr. Eugene Boesch. Funding for the project came entirely through a $500,000 grant from NY State’s Regional Economic Development Council and generous donations from the public.
The 23-acre Jay Estate is a large campus for young citizen scientists and the reimagined Jay Estate Gardens are its newest, most dynamic classrooms. Apart from their impact as hand-on laboratories to study the natural sciences, the gardens also serve as a living tableau – a botanical backdrop – against which the narratives of all the families, owners, and servants, free and enslaved, who lived and worked on this site are being explored. In fact, deliberate design choices were made to protect extant archaeological resources including those associated with Indigenous and enslaved African American residents of the property such as the Valentine Family (pre-1787- 1847).
Together with guidance from the staff at NYSOPRHP, the Jay Estate Gardens recaptured the character of the historic gardens. The new green spaces hold the potential to help inspire underserved youth to pursue careers in a multitude of professions from historic preservation to horticulture to archaeology.
Together with members of the board and staff of the Jay Heritage Center, the project has been supported by numerous entities from concept through execution and usage including the African American Men of Westchester, the Japan Society of Fairfield County, the Port Chester Youth Bureau, Meals on Main Street, American Women of African Heritage, Westchester County Parks, Lower Hudson Partnership for Invasive Species Management (LHPRISM) and many more. Constructed and executed during the height of the Covid pandemic, volunteers continue to contribute hundreds of hours of time to help maintain the space.
More information can be found on the Jay Heritage Center website.
Photo of Jay Heritage Center provided.
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