43 Boyce ST Beacon, NY 12508 New
UPDATED: 07/03/2026 04:19 PM ON MARKET: 7 days on market
$1,250,000
3 Beds2 Baths1,512 SqFt
Key Details
Property Type Single Family Home
Sub Type Single Family Residence
Listing Status Active
Purchase Type For Sale
Square Footage 1,512 sqft
Price per Sqft $826
MLS Listing ID 1021225
Style Colonial
Bedrooms 3
Full Baths 1
Half Baths 1
HOA Y/N No
Rental Info No
Year Built 1870
Annual Tax Amount $7,076
Lot Size 4,791 Sqft
Acres 0.11
Property Sub-Type Single Family Residence
Source onekey2
Property Description
Some homes are built. Others are composed — note by note, detail by detail — as acts of devotion to beauty. 43 Boyce Street is the latter.
Standing as a masterwork of Second Empire architecture since 1870, this 2,027-square-foot estate rises above Beacon's most coveted residential streets beneath a commanding mansard roof clad in original fish-scale slate — its curved eyebrow dormers catching the Hudson Valley light in ways that no photograph can fully render. The sweeping wrap-around porch, with its classical white columns, turned balusters, and grand ceremonial staircase, sets a tone of effortless, unhurried grandeur before you ever step inside.
The original oval-glass front door opens to reveal a foyer anchored by one of the most remarkable staircases in the Hudson Valley — a soaring chestnut construction with a carved and fluted newel post of almost sculptural complexity, its hand-turned spindle balusters ascending through all three floors like an architectural spine. Crown moldings of extraordinary depth frame every ceiling. Original hardwood floors, laid in rich parquet patterns, glow with the warmth of 150 years of light.
The principal rooms make no apology for their ambition. Spanning over 20 feet in length, the living and dining spaces are divided — and united — by the home's most breathtaking element: full-span, hand-carved fretwork room dividers of a complexity that belongs in a museum. This kind of woodwork is called "Eastlake fretwork" or "gingerbread fretwork" — named after the English designer Charles Eastlake, whose 1868 book Hints on Household Taste sparked a craze for this style of hand-crafted geometric and naturalistic woodwork throughout American Victorian homes of the 1870s–1890s. It was done with a scroll saw and hand chisels by skilled craftsmen, and it typically took months to complete a single installation like this. What makes this one exceptional is the scale — it divides two full-size rooms, meaning it runs a very long span — and the level of detail, which is far above what you see in most surviving examples. Most homes had a version of this removed during 20th-century renovations. The fact that this one is still intact, in this condition, is genuinely rare. Sunburst medallions, interlocking scrollwork, botanical tracery, and geometric lacework are woven into arched wooden screens supported by columned posts, each base finished in paneled wainscoting. Five decorative Victorian fireplace mantels punctuate the rooms — their painted arched surrounds, several adorned with original Aesthetic Movement polychrome panels, are time capsules of an era when even the purely ornamental was made to last forever. Plaster ceiling medallions, crystal chandeliers on original brass chains, and original cast iron radiators complete an interior of almost overwhelming visual richness.
The lower level — the domain of the household's servants in the original family's time — now offers a kitchen, pantry, laundry, an additional room or dining area with its own fireplace, two egress entries, a powder room, and storage. The third floor holds a gracious primary suite with walk-in closet, a second bedroom, a full bath, and two additional rooms — quiet spaces under the mansard's embrace, where the dormers frame the sky above Mount Beacon.
Beyond the gate at 47 Grove Street, the included adjacent parcel provides a two-car garage — a rarity in Beacon's most walkable neighborhoods. Stroll to Main Street and the world of Dia:Beacon, the farm-to-table dining, the galleries, and the effortless cultural life that has drawn the most discerning of New York City's creative and professional class to this river city. The Metro-North Hudson Line deposits you in Manhattan in 90 minutes. The life you find here, however, will feel a world apart.

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