Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead

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1669 E 22nd St, Brooklyn, NY 11229, USA
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N40° 36' 39" W73° 57' 4.8"   (40.610833333333, -73.951333333333)
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The Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead, located at 1669 E. 22nd Street in Madison, Brooklyn, New York, is a National Historic Landmark. It is believed to have been built before 1766. During the American Revolution, it housed Hessian soldiers, two of whom, Captain Toepfer of the Ditfourth regiment and Lieut. M. Bach of the Hessen-Hanau Artillerie, scratched their names and units into windowpanes.
It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976. It is part of the Revolutionary War Heritage Trail.
According to an embroidered needlepoint artwork currently on display in the main home building, it was owned and occupied by the Wyckoff Family from 1776 to 1835. The Bennett family owned and occupied it from 1835 to 1983, and the Mont family has owned and occupied it since 1983.
From Wyckoff Bennett Mont House placard (in front of house, next to sidewalk, inside
fence):
"This Dutch-American farmhouse is a quiet reminder that the Battle of Brooklyn, one of
the biggest conflicts of the Revolutionary War, took place when Kings County was still
mostly farm country. The county boasted fewer than 4,000 inhabitants, one third of whom
were slaves working on and owned by families descended from 17th-century Dutch
immigrants.
Hendrick Wyckoff built the house in 1766. The site he chose lay along Kings Highway,
then the county's main east-west artery. After the British invasion in 1776, Hessian
soldiers were quartered here. Several of them left their mark by etching their names and
rank on window panes among them Toepfer Captain Regt. De Ditrurth and "M. Bach
Lieutenant V. Hessen Hanau Artillerie's". When the Battle of Brooklyn began on August
27, 1776, these men may well have taken part in the attack that drove American defenders
from the Battle Pass, in what is now Prospect Park, and nearly destroyed the army under
command of George Washington."
The property is one of the last privately owned Dutch Colonial houses in New York City. Starting sometime around the year 2000 the City of New York planned to buy the house and land from its present owners, Annette and Stuart Mont, who would have remained on the property rent-free but those plans have since fallen through.

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Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead

Address: 1669 E 22nd St, Brooklyn, NY 11229, USA
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