The Depuy Canal House in downtown High Falls. Credit: Amber S. Clark

To truly grasp the spirit of Marbletown, itโ€™s instructive to consider the story of Elsie.

Elsie, a proudly working class, unashamedly cantankerous reminder of the days when the Marbletown hamlet of High Falls was not, as latter-day advertising has christened it, โ€œthe center of the universe,โ€ but rather a hardscrabble little postcanal town. Elsie lived in a trailerโ€”not a house trailer, but a camper trailerโ€”near the canal in downtown High Falls, cheek-by-jowl with top-rated restaurants and designated historic sites. The trailer had no running water or electricity; one would probably have to search the farthest corners of Marbletownโ€™s hill-hamlets to find another such residence.

Elsie didnโ€™t have muchโ€”her cats, a small garden, an adult son who occasioned as much stress as comfort. But she was no recluse; rather, everyone in High Falls was familiar with the sight of Elsie walking around town on her errands, stopping to chat with everyone.

โ€œSheโ€™d never ride when she could walk,โ€ remembers realtor Mary Collins, whose cozily elegant offices are a small stoneโ€™s throw from Elsieโ€™s place. โ€œSo the help had to be somewhat subtle. Vaughan [Smith, the proprietor of Westcote Bell Pottery] took her cats to be spayed. I arranged firewood deliveries. John Novi [chef/owner of the renowned DePuy Canal House] ran a hose over so sheโ€™d have water. Betty Davenport [of the Davenport Farms family] and a lot of other people always gave her clothing. And Aidan [Quinnโ€”yes, that Aidan Quinn] tried to get her a nicer trailer, but the town wouldnโ€™t allow it.โ€

Thus was Elsie able to maintain her independence and considerable social life for years longer than one might expect. Finally, a medical emergency brought her to the attention of officialdom and she was whisked to the hospital and then to a senior residenceโ€”where, hair and nails done and quite contented, she still receives regular visits from her High Falls crew.

Not Your Everyday Mall

High Falls and Stone Ridge are the two most populous hamlets of Marbletown, which sprawls over 55 square miles and is home to roughly 6,000 people. Together, they make up the two limbs of the townโ€™s L-shaped business district. Along Routes 213 (High Falls) and 209 (Stone Ridge) are an eclectic array of places ranging from working farms to arts centers and professional offices, from places to grab a sandwich to elegant traditional dining and haute cuisine foodie havens. As for retail, one could do oneโ€™s entire holiday shopping list within Marbletownโ€™s borders, from straight Aunt Mabelโ€™s angel figurines to Cousin Nedโ€™s imported incense and the very latest in food processors for Mom.

National chains are scarce. A Rite Aid pharmacy co-anchors the only thing in town that could be described as a โ€œshopping plaza,โ€ and when its construction was first proposed, things got heated. โ€œI was on the planning board at the time,โ€ recalls Collins, โ€œand it was a huge, huge thing. The original owners had a very high-end, vintagey operationโ€”a dress designer and so on. When the new owner planned a mallโ€”well, most of the land had been a nursery. It meant losing a lot of trees. It was a fight. But we did the best we could, and it turned out pretty decent.โ€

Not to mention useful. The Town Center shopping complex houses, along with assorted small businesses, the only supermarket for some miles around: Emmanuelโ€™s, with a large selection of organics, hormone-free local meats, sushiโ€”and a good stock of budget-brand staples for the cost-conscious. Local art is showcased on the walls, inside and outโ€”the building is wrapped in a mural depicting a diverse community going about its businessโ€”and the cashiers are warmly courteous. Like Elsie moving to her new digs, itโ€™s possible that the worst thing Stone Ridge residents had to fear was fear itselfโ€”especially with folks like Collins on the planning board. โ€œThe lights would have shone right into the Hasbrouck House,โ€ she says, naming the fanciest inn in the hamlet. โ€œYou know that big berm along the side of the parking lot? Thatโ€™s why it exists.โ€

Civic Participation
Citizen involvement in government and good works is a Marbletown tradition thatโ€™s going strong. When a series of community visioning meetings were held back at the turn of the century, they were scheduled on weekends so that part-time residents and working folks alike could be heard. โ€œSuch a wide variety did show up, and everybody got to know each otherโ€”it was great,โ€ says Collins.

โ€œFrom the survey done in 1997 and the visioning process that was done between 2000 and 2002, weโ€™ve moved forward with a lot of great work around conservation and the preservation of both open space and history,โ€ says Brooke Pickering-Cole, who was appointed supervisor last year after serving for four years on the town board and two years as deputy to the previous supervisor, Vin Martello. โ€œLast spring, we decided to create a sustainable economic development task force and move the process along that path, too,โ€ says Pickering-Cole. โ€œWe got the new master plan done in 2005โ€”it mandates the preservation of farmland, natural resources, and history. We passed a historic preservation landmark law [Marbletown has over three dozen 18th-century stone buildings] and a bond issue to purchase development rights.โ€ In 2007, the Open Space Institute added another 382 acres of farmland to the over 3,400 acres of Marbletownโ€™s protected rolling hills.

Marbletown, explains Pickering-Cole, calls its open space plan a โ€œnatural heritage plan.โ€ โ€œAnd we have an additional farmland protection plan in draft form,โ€ she says. โ€œAll that is only part of the job. Itโ€™s a crucial part, but equally crucial is โ€˜How do we see the community evolving?โ€™ The actual people, I mean. You can have beautiful scenery, but if people arenโ€™t prospering and healthy and happy, so what?โ€ To that end, the economic development task force is holding its own series of visioning meetings. โ€œThe task force has been working on ideas for clean energy, micro-farming, balanced housing, and how to retain the younger people and keep the older folks in their homes,โ€ says the supervisor. โ€œTheyโ€™ll share their ideas, people will get into groups and talk it through. I have no doubt weโ€™ll have our next full plate served up. I love this work.โ€

Arts and Education

Plenty of full plates get served each weekend in High Falls, where the Canal Houseโ€”operated by the man dubbed โ€œthe father of the new American cuisineโ€ by both Time magazine and the Food Networkโ€”has several other eateries as neighbors: the High Falls Cafe, which offers live music and hearty food; the First Bite (the former New York Store), which serves excellent sandwiches; and the delicious Eggโ€™s Nest, where Richard Murphy keeps the menu and the decor equally fresh, eclectic, and fun.

Food for the soul is also in good supply in Marbletown. The Marbletown Arts Association, made up of over 120 visual, literary, and performing artists, immerses the town in culture each fall, when itโ€™s ArtHarvest time. In the spring, the Stone Ridge Libraryโ€”a 100-year-old organization housed in a stone building that dates to around 1798โ€”hosts its annual fair, a lively explosion of books, music, and food that beckons folks from all over. The library is busy year round, and strives to be up-to-the-minute useful; besides the standard mystery-book groups and kids story hours, it houses a workforce development center and hosts public discussions.ย  There is also a community college, SUNY Ulster, offering a varied menu of continuing education and a private elementary school.

Then thereโ€™s MaMA. Also known as Marbletown Multi-Arts, the maturing brainchild of educator and world traveler Robert Evry Mann, the center utilizes a renovated church to offer classes in tai chi, yoga, and dance, in addition to performances and parties. The Ridge Gym, across Main Street, offers other options for mind-body development. And should one need to get well before undertaking such vigorous endeavors, just a hair to the north is the Stone Ridge Center for the Healing Arts.

Things are moving right along in Marbletown in 2009: MaMA is building more studio space, and the town is installing sidewalks along Route 209. Over in High Falls, restoration of the historic Rock Cliff Houseโ€”long beloved by much of the county as a spot to chill over a beer and a game of poolโ€”is proceeding apace. Plans are under way for a restaurant and inn, with a walking trail connected to the hamletโ€™s center. A former garage is being converted to shops and a deli.

Good Karma
While both Stone Ridge and High Falls have distinct personalitiesโ€”as do Marbletownโ€™s outlying hill-hamlets, their winding roads laced with a mix of long-time countryfolk and weekendersโ€”the road between them is becoming much more than a way to get from here to there. A new hamlet of sorts is forming at the corner of Route 213 and Lucas Avenue, where the four corners are anchored by the venerable High Falls Food Co-op, the Morning Brew (a cozy breakfast spot), Jakeโ€™s Garage, and Nectar, a three-year-old import emporium summarized as โ€œHome-Art-Teaโ€ on the business card of owner Jenny Wonderling.

After passing a statue of Ganesh and entering Nectar, every sense is engaged. Spicy-clean incense and soaps and herbal tea blend into one light perfume. Polished wood and brass and colorful fabric draw the eye in every direction, and Wonderling has just found a rare blues CD at the request of a customer; its sounds fill the store. Toys and home furnishings and gifts from every continent are attractively arrayed, a great deal of it fair trade; all of the furniture is made from reclaimed wood. The on-site tea salon beckons the wanderer to sit and chatโ€”at which point, if things arenโ€™t too hectic, one is likely to be offered a cup of organic, hand-blended tea. โ€œAmazing things happen over a cup of tea,โ€ Wonderling observes.

Customer Dakota Blair is in search of unique menโ€™s clothing, so Wonderling reaches out to her network, finds a supplier, and hands him the phone. โ€œThe British tended to design towns without a central town square, because the weather there was so nasty everybody had to be inside the pub,โ€ Wonderling says. โ€œI think itโ€™s the responsibility of a business owner to provide a substitute town square where people can connectโ€”I think of this as sort of the healthy corner bar. We do readings and parties, and I never know whatโ€™s going to happen next on any given day.โ€ย  The next party in this lushly exotic setting will be held November 7 from 5 to 8pm to celebrate Wonderlingโ€™s relaunch as sole proprietress. Her personal celebration: donating 5 percent of all sales between the seventh and December 25 to Family of Woodstock.

If Marbletown is prospering, perhaps itโ€™s the karma incurred by people like Wonderling and Alan Markel of Alanโ€™s Computers. Located in the Stone Ridge plaza, Markel has made it his personal mission to make sure no one who needs a computer goes without. It began with veterans; then he realized that โ€œeverybodyโ€™s in some kind of a struggle. So I started working with Goodwill, the Salvation Army, Family of Woodstockโ€”anybody who might know who needs a computer,โ€ he explains. โ€œAnd I tell people to call me, not be embarrassedโ€”weโ€™ve all been through it. Iโ€™ve refurbished and passed along something like 400 computers now.โ€

It may be true that, as a New York Times writer waggishly observed several years ago, โ€œThere is no marble in Marbletown.โ€ But from the bluestone hills of Lomontville to the lowlands beside the canalโ€”from Elsieโ€™s trailer to the posh estates of Legget Roadโ€”a careful observer can find much that is far more precious than gold.

RESOURCES
Alanโ€™s Affordable Computers www.alanscomputers.net
Depuy Canal House www.depuycanalhouse.net
Eggโ€™s Nest www.theeggsnest.com
Emmanuelโ€™s Marketplace (845) 687-2214
Marbletown Arts Association www.marbarts.com
Marbletown Multi-Arts www.cometomama.org
Mary Collins Real Estate www.marycollinsrealestate.com
Nectar www.nectarimports.com
Rondout Valley Business Association www.rondoutvalleybusinessassociation.org
Rondout Valley Growers Association www.rondoutvalleygrowers.org
Stone Ridge Library www.stoneridgelibrary.org
Town of Marbletown
www.marbletown.net

The Depuy Canal House in downtown High Falls. Credit: Amber S. Clark
Elsieรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs Trailer. Credit: Amber S. Clark
The interior of Nectar in High Falls Credit: Amber S. Clark

Anne's been writing a wide variety of Chronogram stories for over two decades. A Hudson Valley native, she takes enormous joy in helping to craft this first draft of the region's cultural history and communicating...

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