Alice Austen House

Claim
marker

2 Hylan Blvd (at Cross Streets at Edgewater Street)
Staten Island, NY 10305

marker
(718) 816-4506
Incorrect info? Correct your listing
Reviews
( 0 )
( 0 )
( 2 )
( 0 )
( 0 )

Best

All reviews seem negative

Worst

All reviews seem positive

No image

Alice in Staten Island 8/21/2005

Alice Austen House Museum is a very beautiful old home that has a lot of history and culture. It's been around for centuries and has a lot of different exhibits. It is very interesting and a unique way to spend an afternoon. The entrance fee is not expensive the staff is very knowledgeable about the history of the museum. more

No image

Important Site for Photography Buffs 8/15/2005

Although most peopl eend up at the Alice Austen House because someone has had a wedding or party on the grounds, you really should take the time to visit for the landmark's historic value and museum as well. Not only is there a lot of info about turn of the century Staten Island, but the site is also of great interest to anyone into the history of photography. A great SI site, but little-known. The view of the harbor and Verrazanno bridge is gorgeous and cool on a hot summer day as well. more
< Previous 1 Next >
Summer SALE!!!:
15% OFF all yearly plans
Use year15 at checkout. Expires 1/1/2021

The Alice Austen House Museum on Staten Island recalls the world of an exceptional woman, photographer Alice Austen. Austen's quaint, Victorian cottage-style home, with a magnificent view of New York Harbor, displays prints from the large glass negative collection of her work that depict turn-of-the-century American life. The original house, one of the City's oldest, dates back to the 1690s. Once part of a farm near the scenic Narrows, the property was bought in 1844 by John H. Austen, Alice's grandfather. Austen expanded the small, one-and-a-half-story farmhouse, named it "Clear Comfort" and gave it a romantic Gothic Revival facelift that included steeply peaked dormer windows and flourishes of "gingerbread" wood trim. The parlor is restored to look as it did in the 1890s with an arrangement of ornate period furniture, rugs, Delft fireplace tiles and Oriental vases. Alice Austen was born nearby at Woodbine Cottage in 1866. After her father abandoned the family, she and her mother moved into her grandparents' home. Alice continued to live in the house until 1945. Taught by her uncle, Austen took up photography with a passion, shooting more than 7,000 pictures that captured a quieter Staten Island, as well as a growing, bustling New York City.

Editorial
  • In Short
    Visitors to this late 17th-century gingerbread-trimmed cottage, and its surrounding garden overlooking the Narrows, will experience late 19th-century Staten Island as they check...

  • 7/11/2005 Provided by Citysearch
Additional information
  • Hours: Thu-Sun: 12pm-5pm Closed January-February and major holidays
  • Neighborhoods: Rosebank
badge