History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Greenburgh Holds House and Woods
Greenburgh's local identity combines Revolutionary War encampment ground, Odell House, and the nature center's Scarsdale-side trails and programs.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Greenburgh’s history is easier to feel when it has an address. Odell House on Ridge Road gives the Revolutionary War story a real front door. During the 1781 French American encampment, Rochambeau stayed there while Washington was nearby, and thousands of troops camped across Greenburgh’s hills and valleys.
The Friends group traces the house in stages from the 1700s into later additions, which makes it feel less like a frozen monument and more like a home that kept changing with the town.
That is a good kind of local history: big names, but also a road, a house, a hillside, and a preservation project people can actually picture. Odell House sits at 425 Ridge Road, and the town now has a chance to turn a complicated old place into something neighbors can visit and understand.
Greenburgh also has a softer daily-life layer at the Nature Center at Greenburgh on Dromore Road in Scarsdale. Trails, animals, school programs, events, and outdoor learning give the town a different kind of memory, the kind made from weekend walks and kids meeting a great horned owl or other resident animals.
Put the two together and Greenburgh feels less like a generic Westchester suburb. It has encampment ground with national stakes and neighborhood woods with very local habits. One story asks you to imagine soldiers, horses, oxen, and officers moving through the hills. The other asks you to follow a trail, listen for birds, and let children learn the place at walking speed.