Dutch heritage sites

Along the river Hudson from Albany into New York City, there are all kind of places remembering the time the Dutch came, were there and still are.
In Westchester County you find the Old Dutch church of Sleepy Hollow, still with the original Dutch bell in the belfry.
In Rockland County there is the De Wint House, an outstanding example of Colonial Dutch architecture. It was George Washington’s temporary headquarters during the American Revolutionary War.
In Dutchess County you find the Franklin D. Roosevelt home. The lifelong home of the president.
In Albany county is The New Netherland Museum & Half Moon, a reproduction of the ship that Henry Hudson sailed from Holland to the New World in 1609.
In Nyack you find in the streets all kind of Dutch signs.
In Harlem is the Dyckman House, the last remaining farmhouse on Manhattan Island.
Up Manhattan you find Peter Minuit, commemorated by Peter Minuit Plaza, a small park at the foot of Manhattan, New York City, by a marker in Inwood Hill Park at the site of the actual purchase. Telling how New York was bought from the Indians for sixty guilders. A real Dutch price.
And down in Battery Park is the statue of Peter Stuyvesant, the last governor who gave New Amsterdam to the English who called it at once New York.

See also the map Celebrating Everything Dutch in the Hudson Valley, www.EverythingDutch.org

Which historical places can you find in your neighbourhood? And what can you do with the special stories around them for your business?
What kind of heritage provides your company to the environment you are part of?