The Mount Vernon Hotel Museum & Garden (formerly known as the Abigail Adams Smith Museum) presents the period of the Mount Vernon Hotel (1826-1833). Constructed in 1799 as a carriage house for a 23-acre estate, and converted into the Mount Vernon Hotel in 1826, this stone building sits on land originally owned by Colonel William Stevens Smith, and his wife Abigail Adams Smith, daughter of John Adams.
This fashionable country resort was popular among New Yorkers who wished to escape the hustle and bustle of the city which at that time extended only as far north as 14th Street. The Hotel advertised itself as “free from the noise and dust of the public roads, and fitted up and intended for only the most genteel and respectable” clientele. In those days, one could take the stagecoach or steamboat up to 61st street and spend the day at the hotel sipping lemonade in the ladies parlor or playing cards in the gentlemen’s tavern.
In 1833, the house became the home for three generations of a New York City family. In 1905, as the area became more industrialized, the building was purchased by Standard Gas Light Company (today’s Con Edison). The Colonial Dames of America, a woman’s patriotic society purchased the building in 1924. After extensive restoration to the structure, the Colonial Dames opened the site to the public in 1939. The building endures as a rare reminder of an important era in New York City’s history.
The Museum is dedicated to the collection, preservation, and exhibition of art and artifacts, and the historical research of objects and subjects pertaining to the interpretation of the Mount Vernon Hotel, and related information in America in the first half of the 19th century, particularly the hotel industry, the pursuit of leisure, travel, and the customs of Americans within the context of the history of New York City. The Museum promotes dissemination of historical knowledge through tours of its historic rooms, education programs, exhibitions, publications, lectures, symposia, and any other means deemed appropriate by the Board of Managers of the Colonial Dames of America.