History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Gardiner's Tuthilltown Mill Shows Why the Shawangunk Kill Mattered
Gardiner's early settlement story begins at Tuthilltown, where waterpower on the Shawangunk Kill helped anchor a mill community below the ridge.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Gardiner’s story is often seen from the ridge, but its early settlement thread sits down on the Shawangunk Kill. The Shawangunk Mountains Scenic Byway history explains that waterways capable of hydropower shaped Euro-American settlement in the region, and that in what is now the Town of Gardiner, the earliest recorded settlement was at Tuthilltown, where a mill was built on the Shawangunk Kill in 1745. That one fact connects the dramatic landscape to ordinary work.
Gardiner is not simply a view of the Gunks or a climbing-adjacent town. It is a place where ridge streams, grain milling, farms, and road corridors made settlement practical. Tuthilltown keeps that older working landscape visible beneath the outdoor-recreation reputation.
That is a nice correction to the usual view-based story. The ridge may be the drama, but the kill and the mill explain how people worked and stayed there.
Tuthilltown gives Gardiner a ground-level memory: waterpower, grain, road bends, and farm settlement below the cliffs. It makes the town feel less like a backdrop for recreation and more like a working Hudson Valley place with long roots.