Britton Cottage

The house was originally located at the intersection of New Dorp Lane and Cedar Grove Avenue in the New Dorp Beach section of Staten Island,[2] but was moved to its current location in 1967 when it was threatened with demolition.

The earliest section of the house was built to serve court and government functions.

One of its earliest known inhabitants was town clerk and justice of the peace Obadiah Holmes, the son of early Rhode Island settler Obadiah Holmes, who came from Long Island.

Nathaniel Britton, an ancestor of the man for whom the cottage is named, acquired the house in 1695.

Dr. Nathaniel Lord Britton, a botanist and the creator of the New York Botanical Garden, became the owner of the house in the 19th century and deeded the house to the Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences in 1915.

Britton Cottage
Britton Cottage
The Britton Cottage in 1920