New York Porch

History & Culture · Hudson Valley

West Haverstraw Carries Brick Memory by the River

West Haverstraw's own history ties the village to Hudson River brickyards and one Railroad Avenue business that kept going.

Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026

West Haverstraw has a river-industry memory that still gives the village some grit. The village history calls brickmaking the area’s great business and places late-1800s and early-1900s brickyards along the Hudson River from Haverstraw Village to Grassy Point.

The wider Haverstraw story adds the reason. Hudson clay, river shipping, and brick demand tied this part of Rockland County to building far beyond the village itself. You do not have to turn that into a heavy lesson to feel it. A riverfront, an old industrial edge, and roads like Railroad Avenue are enough to change how the place reads.

There is also a small everyday detail that keeps the story from becoming museum glass. Martino’s Meat Market on Railroad Avenue has been in operation since 1913 and remains in the Martino family. That is a friendly kind of local continuity: brick memory by the river, and a long-running business on a street name that remembers movement.

For someone driving through West Haverstraw, those details help the village stand apart from the larger Haverstraw name. The brick story points to clay, labor, kilns, barges, and the Hudson. The market detail brings the scale back down to a storefront people can still recognize.

Filed under: History & Culture West Haverstraw Rockland County west-haverstrawbrickyardshudson-riverrailroad-avenuelocal-history

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July 6, 2026

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