The Albertus Van Loon House (/vænˈloʊn/, like van loan) is a 1.5 story native stone home in the village of Athens, New York, United States. Built in 1724 by Albertus Van Loon, one of eight children of Jan Van Loon,[5]
it is one of the oldest extant buildings in its part of New York State.[citation needed]
It is located at 85 North Washington Street (also known as New York State Route 385), inside the Village of Athens Multiple Resource Area (MRA).[6]
History
Jan was the earliest Europeansettler to the area, and gave the settlement its first name: Loonenburg. Only one wall of his house remains in the current structure, at 39 South Washington Street.[2]
Albertus was among those who donated land for the town church, today occupied by the Zion Lutheran Church in Athens in 1853.[6] His house is in what was called the Upper Village.[5] The home is an elongated rectangle; a gambrel roof was added between 1775–1800. After Albertus died in 1754,[7] the Van Loon family lived in the house for three generations and moved out in the early 19th century.[6]
^ abcPowers, Robert M.; Gobrecht, Larry E. (July 1979). "Village of Athens Multiple Resource Area"(PDF). National Register of Historical Places. United States Department of the Interior Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service. Retrieved 18 December 2009.