The Bull Stone House

The Bull Stone House The Bull Stone House is an historic house and living museum open for tours by appointment only.

It has had been owned and occupied by the same family who built it for 300 years. An historic house museum built in the early 1700's by pioneers William Bull and Sarah Wells and still used as a homestead by descendants of the couple.

We will be part of the NY Path Thru History this coming Saturday! It's an annual celebration of the history of New York!...
10/02/2022

We will be part of the NY Path Thru History this coming Saturday! It's an annual celebration of the history of New York! You are ALL WELCOME!!
When: Saturday, Oct. 8, 1-4 pm
Where: The Bull Stone House
Tour the historic, 300-year-old home, which is still occupied as a residence by the same family that built it, the 100 acres through the walking trails!

The Bull Stone Homestead September 2021.
09/23/2021

The Bull Stone Homestead September 2021.

154th Annual Bull Family Reunion and Picnic is Aug. 7, 2021Descendants of 1715 immigrant William Bull and Sarah Wells wi...
07/13/2021

154th Annual Bull Family Reunion and Picnic is Aug. 7, 2021

Descendants of 1715 immigrant William Bull and Sarah Wells will once again reunite at the historic Bull Stone House for their annual family reunion, a tradition they have been doing for more than a century and a half.

The 154th Annual Bull Family Reunion and Picnic, which is the second-longest continuous family reunion in America, will be held in person and virtually on Saturday, Aug. 7, 2021. The picnic will be held at the family’s historic homestead just off Sarah Wells Trail in Campbell Hall on land that has been in the family since 1718. The homestead is part of the original Wawayanda Patent purchased from 12 leaders of the Indigenous People by 12 merchants from New York City in 1703. The original deed hangs in the government offices of Orange County.

William Bull was an early settler born in England and raised in Ireland. He came to Orange County in 1715 as a hired stone mason to build in Chester for New York City merchant Daniel Crommelin. Six years earlier, Sarah Wells was just a teenager and an indentured servant to New York City dock master Christopher Denne when she accepted the mission to lead a small expedition into the unsettled wilderness of Orange County.
Along with three men of the local Munsee tribe and three hired carpenters, Sarah sailed north on the Hudson River by single-mast sloop to Plum Point in New Windsor. In May of 1712, the small expedition hiked 20 miles to the banks of the Otter Kill, where the native men and carpenters built Sarah a tree branch wigwam. The settlement became the first by European immigrants in the interior of the county.

William built many stone houses over his years in Orange County, including what is now Knox’s Headquarters in Vails Gate. It was used by American generals in the American Revolution and is now a state park.
The couple were married in 1718 and raised to adulthood 12 children, who all married and had many children. William died in 1756 and Sarah died at the age of 100 and 15 days in 1796. She had 335 descendants when she died and her grandchildren began the family genealogy on the day of her funeral. The Bull family has been recording the genealogy ever since and now counts more than 100,000 people in their genealogy with more than 20,000 people alive today.

“This year’s gathering will be pretty special after the year we have all gone through,” said family President Lyle Shute of Campbell Hall. “But William and Sarah’s stories are remarkable and perfect examples of how we are all capable of overcoming even the toughest challenges.”
The family has owned and occupied for 10 generations the Bull Stone House throughout the centuries and it is currently the residence of a descendant from the ninth generation. It is likely the last house in America from this period still occupied by the same family and is an example of how one family has sustained a house from early settlement to modern times.

The family incorporated 100 years ago to maintain the homestead, the genealogy, the family reunion, and to share the incredible history with the general public.
The in-person picnic and the virtual reunion will begin at 10 am on Aug. 7. The William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association, a nonprofit membership corporation, will hold its annual meeting during the event at 1 pm. The membership will vote on Board of Trustees appointments.

All descendants of the intrepid couple are invited to the reunion and picnic. For more information, please go to www.bullstonehouse.org. Tours of the homestead are available to the general public by appointment only. For tours, please contact the family resident caretaker Julie Boyd Cole at [email protected], or text or call 845-496-2855.

05/20/2020
In light of current circumstances in the Hudson Valley & NY State with the COVID-19  Novel Coronavirus Pandemic, I have ...
03/22/2020

In light of current circumstances in the Hudson Valley & NY State with the COVID-19 Novel Coronavirus Pandemic, I have made a decision to shutdown operations at the Bull Stone House & Property beginning today at 2pm, until further notice. This includes all tours, public visitation to the property, meetings and other similar indoor & outdoor gatherings/visitations. This is for the safety of our caretaker Julie Cole, her family, and others, and to be in compliance with Gov. Cuomo’s 100% shutdown of non-essential business operations which takes effect 8pm tonight March 22, 2020. Judy Wood-VP and Linda Bull – HIC chairperson, are in agreement, and I have spoken with Julie as well. As the situation evolves, we will revisit what is in the best interest of our mission and safety of our family.
Thank You
Lyle R. Shute
President
William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association

Help support the William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association. If you're shopping on Amazon for Cyber Monday, us...
12/02/2019

Help support the William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association. If you're shopping on Amazon for Cyber Monday, use this link and Amazon will donate a portion of the sale. Thank you.

When you shop at AmazonSmile, Amazon will donate to William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association Inc. Support us every time you shop.

Farewell sweet Frank. Thank you for being such a special part of our Bull family. Sending you love and sympathy Jurechko...
11/26/2019

Farewell sweet Frank. Thank you for being such a special part of our Bull family. Sending you love and sympathy Jurechko family.

We are open Saturday October 12th from 1:00-4:00 pm! Come take a tour of the house and barn. Enjoy walking the grounds, ...
10/12/2019

We are open Saturday October 12th from 1:00-4:00 pm! Come take a tour of the house and barn. Enjoy walking the grounds, bring a picnic if you like.

The homestead of the William Bull and Sarah Wells family, some of the earliest settlers in Orange County, will be open for tours as part of the ILoveNY...

07/21/2019

The Bull Stone House will be the location of the 152nd Annual Bull Family Reunion Aug. 3. The descendants of William Bull and Sarah Wells of Orange County, NY., will hold the picnic for their cousins. It is the second-longest continuous family reunion in America!

Address

183 County Route 51
Campbell Hall, NY
10916

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