FRIENDS OF JOHN JAY HOMESTEAD 

Post Office Box 148 • Katonah, New York 10536 • Friends: 914.232.8119 • Site: 914.232.5651

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John Jay Homestead State Historic Site invites you and your class to learn about the life of Founding Father John Jay and to explore the exciting times in which he lived. After a lifetime of public service, John Jay and his family retired to his farm in Bedford in 1801. Jay had been the chief negotiator of the Treaty of Paris, and had served as Chief Justice, Secretary for Foreign Affairs and as a two-term Governor of New York. Jay’s wife, Sarah, died shortly after moving to Bedford and Jay never remarried. Upon John Jay’s death in 1829, the farm and home were inherited by William Jay, John’s second son. William Jay became a prominent leader of abolitionists, and the Homestead became a center in the anti-slavery movement.

The House has been restored to look as it did during John Jay’s lifetime. Students get a first-hand look at the changing nature of everyday life by comparing today’s lifestyles with those of Jay’s era. A variety of programs allow teachers to select visits or outreach programs that
complement and coincide with their own curriculum. All age groups use the house and furnishings as a resource to develop an enthusiasm for the past, and an understanding of the founding of the United States.

More reasons to visit …
The John Jay Homestead has developed all education programs to meet current State curriculum standards for U.S. and New York State History. These programs encourage students to use the critical thinking skills of a historian or social scientist by requiring them to read, analyze, apply, synthesize and evaluate historical information.

The education staff will work with teachers to design programs around specific curriculum needs such as DBQ's (Document Based Questions).

What about the cost?
The fee for an on-site visit is $2.00 or $3.00 per student depending on the program.
All of our programs can be done either on-site or in the classroom. These programs have been made possible in part through contributions from Friends of John Jay Homestead, Inc. The Margaret Mayo-Smith Bus Fund provides funding for transportation to the site for schools that demonstrate need. Download the Grant Application.

When can we schedule a visit?
To make it easier for teachers to schedule a time to come for a group tour of John Jay Homestead, we have created an Availability Calendar.  View our Availability Calendar.

Do we offer an Outreach Program?
Yes, we do. O
ur outreach program is a flat fee of $50.00 per class. All of our programs can be done in the classroom. Please call Bethany White, our Education Coordinator, at 914.232.5651 ext 101 or email her for more information on the Outreach Program.


Grades K-4

Then and Now
This program allows students to compare and contrast their everyday life with the way the Jay family lived here in the early 1800's. By looking at objects such as chamber pots and open hearth toasters, students become historic detectives using their analytical skills to determine the objects purpose. Students are also asked to look at the items in the home and try to "guess" their modern equivalents, (e.g. the mortar and pestle is the colonial versio of the blender). As well as the tour of the home, students discuss the difference in urban/rural/suburban locations. Finally, students will participate in an artifact detective activity where they handle artifacts and try to "discover" their uses, or play historical games.


Standards:
  • Social Studies -- 2
  • English Language Arts -- 1, 3
  • Arts -- 3
Download the Preparation documents: Crossword, Fun Facts, 4th grade Prep Pack

Grades K-12

John Jay’s Farm

This program utilizes the historic structures on the property as well as a series of maps to discuss the evolution of agriculture and how technological advances affected the industry.

Standards:
  • Social Studies -- 1, 3, 4
  • English Language Arts -- 1, 3, 4
  • Math, Science, and Technology -- 4, 5
Download the Preparation documents: Crossword, Fun Facts, 4th, 5th & 6th grade Prep Pack, 7th & 8th grade Prep Pack.

Grades 4-8

John Jay, Revolutionary Spymaster

Why does the CIA have a room at its Liaison Conference Center named after John Jay? Widely celebrated for his political achievements, it is often overlooked that John Jay played an important role in creating a Patriot spy network to help defeat the British during the American Revolution. Students will move through the Homestead learning about New York’s defense, the split loyalties of its inhabitants, different spying techniques and historical anecdotes about important political figures.

Standards:

  • Social Studies -- 1, 2, 5
  • English Language Arts -- 1, 3, 4
Download the Preparation documents: Crossword, Fun Facts, 4th, 5th & 6th grade Prep Pack, 7th & 8th grade Prep Pack.
Grades 6-12 The Constitution in New York, and the Jays

What’s the difference between a President and a King? What are taxes for? What did the Constitution say about slavery? What kind of federal government might New Yorkers want, and was that different from, say, residents of frontier states, or states in the South? Why was it so important that New York ratify the Constitution, if there were already enough supporting states to make it become law? How much power should states have?


Moving through the historic house and using objects from our collection and documents from the Jay archives, students will explore how states with very different economies and interests, having just fought a long, expensive and bloody war against a king, agreed to come together and adopt a government with strong powers. Standards:
  • Social Studies: -- 1, 5
  • Language Arts: -- 1, 3, 4
Download the Preparation documents: Crossword, Fun Facts, 4th, 5th & 6th grade Prep Pack, 7th & 8th grade Prep Pack.
 
Grades 8-12

Slavery, Anti- Slavery and the Jay Family

How is a servant different from a slave? What’s the difference between manumission and abolition? Why did many of the Founding Fathers continue to own slaves as they established a nation where “all men are created equal?” We provide an immersive, hands-on experience that will help your students answer these and other probing questions. While they tour the historic house museum and study primary sources, including objects and documents, your students will come to understand John Jay’s conflicting attitudes as slave owner and manumission advocate and learn about his son William’s role in the abolition movement. They will also learn about the lives of some of the slaves who lived at the Homestead . An optional post-visit classroom activity using other documents is also available.

Standards:

  • Social Studies -- 1, 2, 5
  • English Language Arts -- 1, 3, 4

Download the Preparation documents: Crossword, Fun Facts, 7th & 8th grade Prep Pack.
 
To schedule an on-site visit or outreach program please contact Education Coordinator Bethany White at 914.232.5651 ext 101 or e-mail bethany.white@parks.ny.gov

 

Friends
- P.O. Box 148, Katonah, NY 10536 - phone: 914.232.8119 - fax: 914.232.5974 - e-mail: friends@johnjayhomestead.org
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Site - P.O. Box 832 - 400 Jay Street, Katonah, NY 10536 - phone: 914.232.5651 - fax: 914.232.8085 - www.nysparks.com