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History & Culture · New York City

Conference House Puts Tottenville at the State's Edge

Conference House Park ties Staten Island's southern shore to colonial history, shoreline geography, and a quieter edge of New York City.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

Conference House Park gives Staten Island a different kind of edge than the ferry terminal.

NYC Parks places the park at the southernmost point of New York State and says it contains four historic buildings that trace borough history over more than three centuries. Parks also describes the broader site as more than 286 acres at the southernmost point of both the city and state.

Tottenville can feel far from the rest of the city because it is, literally, at the bottom of the map. The Conference House adds another layer: a shoreline historic site where Revolutionary-era memory, parkland, and views across the Arthur Kill meet. That makes the south shore feel like a civic boundary as well as a neighborhood, with New Jersey close by and the rest of New York City stretching north behind you.

It is a quiet kind of New York City landmark. The appeal is not a skyline view or a crowded plaza; it is the feeling of standing at the edge and remembering that the city has old shoreline rooms too.

Filed under: History & Culture Staten Island staten-islandtottenvilleconference-houseparksrevolutionary-history

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June 24, 2026

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