Dey Mansion,
199 Totowa Road, Wayne, NJ 07470

The Dey Mansion, a superb
example of Georgian architecture, achieved national
recognition as General George Washington’s revolutionary
war headquarters in the Preakness Valley and is
considered to be the “Jewel of the Passaic County Park’s
Department”.
Constructed between 1740-1750 by Dirck Dey, a Dutch-born
planter, the mansion is an amalgam of Dutch and English
influences, a rich and dramatic composition of country
and urban elements that had few mid-18th century
counterparts west of the Hudson River. Dey, in all
probability, left the completion of the mansion to his
son, Theunis. During the Revolution, Theunis commanded
the Bergen County Militia. Colonel Dey offered the
easterly side of the house to General Washington when
the commander-in-chief used it for his headquarters in
July, October and November of 1780.
Succeeding generations of the Dey Family resided in the
house until 1801, when it was sold to a private owner.
In 1930, the now defunct Passaic County Park Commission
purchased the Dey Mansion, together with several barns
and 55 acres of land. A plan of restoration was
developed under the direction of Charles OverCornelius
who "was" a former Associate Curator of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art and a recognized authority on early
American architecture. The building was opened to the
public on October 8, 1934. It is now managed by the
Passaic County Parks Department. Located on a two-acre
site, the grounds feature a formal garden and picnic
area. Ample parking is available. Dependencies include a
blacksmith shop and plantation house. In 1969, the
National Trust for Historic Preservation considered the
restoration of Dey Mansion an “outstanding one.”
The Dey Mansion, a meeting place for several
revolutionary war organizations, is the headquarters of
the Robert Erskine’s Militia, a reenactment group
dedicated to recreating the military life of the events
at the Dey Mansion. The Dey Mansion is also the meeting
place for such important and prestigious organizations
as the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Sons of
the American Revolution, the Children of the American
Revolution and Colonel Pawling’s Independent Corps
Levies.