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Sad end to a stately, historic building

CORNWALL — Rumsey Hall came down this week, after a decades-long saga of failed attempts to save it.

The beautiful building with a rich history had been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1990, with the designation of “threatened.�

It was built in 1848 as the Alger Institute, a private school for boys. It was later home to the Housatonic Valley Institute. At the turn of the century, the private Rumsey Hall School moved from its founder’s home in Seneca, N.Y., to Cornwall. The school used the former Cornwall Mission School buildings.

The school moved to Washington Depot in 1949. Rumsey Hall was then purchased by a local couple, John and Nora Wise.

 In 1956, when Marvelwood School was established in Cornwall, it leased Rumsey Hall, but preserved the name. Marvelwood moved to Kent in 1995.

The building was offered to the town upon the death of Nora Wise, by then a widow. At a town meeting, residents voted to accept it.

The Cornwall Housing Committee spent eight years trying to find a way to make senior housing work there.Those and other efforts to find a way to keep the building in use failed.

In hindsight, the beginning of the end probably came when the 1989 tornado blew the roof off the building. Rain soaked the inside, hastening its deterioration. A tarp had covered the building since.

In the early 1990s, Drew Hingson bought Rumsey from the town for $150,000, with a promise that he would restore it.

Hingson was unable to make it work, and lost the building to foreclosure.

This year, the building was condemned by the building official and plans were made to take it down.

Site work began late last week with the clearing of brush and some trees on the Bolton Hill Road property. The work is being done by R.V. Noad Construction, based in Goshen.

The work will be paid for by the town, which will recoup the $34,750 demolition costs, plus any related cost, through a tax lien on the property, which is still owned by Hingson.

Residents approved footing the bill at an Oct. 1 town meeting, where they were told the demolition order issued by the town’s building official required the town do whatever is needed to make sure the order is followed.

Work got off to a bit of a slow start with the requirement for and a final OK from the health department on the removal of all windows in the building.

A very small amount of asbestos was found in some window putty samples, requiring all the windows be treated as hazardous material.

But first thing this past Monday morning, Oct. 25, Vinnie Noad manned a large backhoe with a grapple claw and began what looked like a precise attack on the crumbling two-story, T-shaped structure. He removed metal pipe, a claw-footed bath tub and other scrap metal and wood that might be reclaimed.

The center section was brought down first, with two side wings (teetering from lack of support, coming down shortly after). It was all done well before the day was over.

A small crowd gathered, and took photos and video. All expressed the same sentiment: They wished there had been a way to save it, but they were not sorry to see the end of what had become a dangerous eyesore.

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