History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Marbletown's Stone Ridge Story Is Built Into Main Street
Marbletown's story runs through Stone Ridge, early stone houses, old farms, and the Catskill-Shawangunk edge of Ulster County.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
Marbletown is the kind of Ulster County place where the name Stone Ridge feels almost too fitting. The town history reaches back to land applicants in 1703 and points to the Wynkoop Lounsbery house at Stone Ridge, built in or before 1772.
That gives the town an old-house, old-road feeling without needing one oversized landmark to do all the work. The story is in hamlets, stonework, farm lanes, historic houses, and the way a Main Street can still feel tied to the fields around it.
The setting adds another layer. Ulster County Tourism places Marbletown on the eastern edge of the Catskills and the northern edge of the Shawangunk Ridge. It also notes Stone Ridge, High Falls, abundant farmland, mountain views, four nationally registered historic districts, the Delaware and Hudson Canal Museum, the O&W Rail Trail, and Marbletown Town Park with its Esopus Creek beach.
That is a lot for one town, but it does not feel random. It feels like a Hudson Valley place where old settlement, ridge scenery, farms, rail-trail reuse, and water access all sit close together.
Stone Ridge gives the larger town an easy center to picture. Once you have that name in your head, Marbletown starts to make sense: older buildings, farm stands, ridge edges, creek water, and enough history along the road to slow a person down.