Local properties have been recommended for inclusion in the state and national registers of historic places.

Gov. Kathy Hochul on Thursday, March 14, announced recommendations by the state Board for Historic Preservation to add 15 properties to the registers. The nominations include churches in North Harpersfield and a home in Mount Vision.

“New York is defined by its diverse culture and history, and we are continuing efforts to preserve and protect our state’s inspiring stories,” Hochul said in a media release. “With the addition of all 15 of these sites, we are encouraging the public to learn more about our past.”

In Mount Vision, in Otsego County, a house at 120 Balcom Road “embodies building characteristics brought by settlers from southern New England into Central New York during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries,” the release said. Built around 1810, “this is a rare example of a subtype of the traditional New England Colonial house type called the New England Large House.” A description said, “The two-story, five-bay form expands a single-pile two-room over two-room layout with a row of half-depth rooms spanning the rear of the house on both floors under the main roof. The house incorporates a massive center chimney and displays a roughly symmetrical exterior with influences from late Georgian and early Federal design.”

New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Commissioner Pro Tempore Randy Simons said, “New York’s cultural and historic resources are extraordinary. They can range from large-scale manufacturing facilities to modest rural residences, but they are all tangible connections to our past. State and National Register listing is an important step to recognizing these sites. In addition to the honorific designation, the listing helps make the properties eligible for various public preservation programs and incentives, such as matching state grants and federal and state historic rehabilitation tax credits. With this support and with opportunities for investment, these resources can continue to be active spaces and contribute to the economic vitality and pride of place of their communities today.”

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