History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Hurley Has a Stone-House Street and an Ashokan Reservoir Scar
Hurley's town history ties Old Hurley stone houses, a brief capital moment, bluestone hamlets, and Ashokan Reservoir displacement into one local identity.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Hurley has two very different kinds of memory inside one town. Old Hurley’s Main Street is known for stone houses that have served as residences for more than 300 years. Hurley also briefly became New York State’s capital in 1777 after Kingston burned during the Revolutionary War. That is already a lot for one quiet-looking street.
Then the story turns north and west. West Hurley and Glenford were farming and bluestone communities before New York City’s Ashokan Reservoir project condemned land, flooded older hamlets, and divided the town. Hurley’s history is larger than colonial stone and pretty old houses. It also includes quarry work, lost places, and the cost of building a water system for a distant city.
That makes Hurley richer and sadder than a stone-house postcard. The town carries Revolutionary government, long-lived residences, bluestone hamlets, and reservoir disruption together. A drive through Hurley can look peaceful, but the ground remembers both preservation and loss.
That balance is what gives the town its bite. The stone houses show endurance; the reservoir story shows what was moved, flooded, and divided.