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The district contains two contributing buildings; the Mount Kisco Town and Village Hall (1932) and the United States Post Office (1936). Both are in the Colonial Revival style. The Town and Village Hall is a 2-story, cruciform plan brick building on a limestone foundation and topped by a slate -covered hipped and gable roof.
Mount Kisco is a village and town in Westchester County, New York, United States. The town of Mount Kisco is coterminous with the village. The population was 10,959 at the 2020 United States census. [3] It serves as a significant historic site along the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route.
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The area is nearly 100% residential homes with a concentration of commercial activity along South Bedford Road (State Route 117) along the Mt. Kisco border and North Bedford Road. The area is served by three commuter rail Metro North train stations—Bedford Hills, Katonah and Mount Kisco—with regular service on the Metro-North Harlem Line to ...
Today the church is known as the United Methodist Church of Mt. Kisco. [3] On November 4, 1982, both the church building and the parsonage were listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a single filing.
The clock at the Mount Kisco station. The New York and Harlem Railroad laid tracks through Mount Kisco during the 1840s, installing a station in the community as far back as February 1847. [5] The station was originally named "New Castle," for one of the two towns that Mount Kisco was originally part of, the other being the Town of Bedford.
It was the country estate of William Douglas Sloane, president of W. & J. Sloane. [2] It includes a neo-Georgian mansion completed in 1907. It was designed by Delano and Aldrich and is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, rectangular mansion with open porches on the ends and a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story service wing.
St. Mark's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at the junction of N. Bedford Rd. and E. Main Street in Mt. Kisco, Westchester County, New York. It was designed by architect Bertram Goodhue in 1907 and built from 1909 to 1913 in the late Gothic Revival style. The church was expanded in 1927–1928.