Open · Welcomes visitors today
Next service · May 25 · 11:15 AM · Dr. Margaret Eckert Norton · 2,000 ft · Shawangunk Ridge
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280 Henry Road, Cragsmoor, NY 12420
Open to People, Open to God
Est. 1896Shawangunk Ridge, NY

A house of prayer
for all peoples.

Two thousand feet up, where the doors are always open and every seeker is welcomed. Multi-faith. All-affirming. Since 1896.

Right Now · The Chapel

Open every day
Easter through Christmas.

From NYC1h 42m
Elevation2,000 ft
Services heldSince 1897
Live ·Hudson Valley, NY
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Open to people
Open to God
All seekers welcome
Multi-faith since 1896
A house of prayer
Open to people
Open to God
All seekers welcome
Multi-faith since 1896
A house of prayer
— A welcome from the chapel

If you've ever felt excluded by a church
— you belong here.

Cragsmoor's historic Stone Church is the spiritual home for an open and affirming community — and a sacred space visited by thousands from around the world for the chapel's serenity and beauty.

Our community comes from many traditions — Catholic, Presbyterian, Episcopal, Methodist, Jewish. Gay and straight, married and single, young and old. We find common ground in the affirming spirit of this remarkable place.

For my house shall be a house of prayer for all peoples. Isaiah 56:7 · inscribed above the western window
01 · Visit Visitors at the chapel

Open every day
Easter to Christmas.

From Easter through Christmas, the chapel welcomes visitors during daylight hours. No service required — just a place to sit, breathe, and be still.

Plan Your Visit
02 · Celebrate Wedding ceremony

Weddings on the ridge.

Available April through December for weddings, vow renewals, baptisms, and memorial services. Three hours on the day of, plus rehearsal time.

Wedding Info
03 · Support The chapel altar

Help us preserve
the chapel.

Every donation goes directly to the upkeep of the chapel — original 1896 fieldstone, the rose window, the bell tower, the pews. Every gift makes a difference.

Make a Gift
— What to Expect

Your first visit, step by step.

No registration. No greeters. No expectations. The doors are always unlocked from Easter through Christmas — just walk up the path and step inside. Here's what your visit looks like.

i The path leading up to the chapel — The arrival

Walk the path.

Park along Henry Road. The chapel sits at the end of a short stone path — bring a jacket, even in summer. The ridge stays cool.

ii The mahogany doors — The doorway

Through the mahogany doors.

As you enter, look up. A stained-glass window with symbols from eight world religions greets you — Isaiah's words inscribed above.

iii Wooden pews inside — The pews

Sit in any pew.

There are no assigned seats. Light filters through the stained glass; the stone walls hold the cool of the ridge. Sit wherever feels right.

iv A view from the ridge — Stay a while

Stay as long as you'd like.

Sign the guest book. Walk the grounds. The Stone Arch on the north side has a 50-mile view of the Rondout Valley.

April 5, 2026 Easter morning at the chapel
Featured · Easter Sunday

Two services on the ridge.

Easter on the Shawangunk begins at first light at the Stone Arch — sunrise over the Rondout Valley — and concludes mid-morning with full Easter service in the nave. All are welcome at both, no matter where you've come from.

— Sunrise Service
6:15 AM
at the Stone Arch · north side of the chapel
— Easter Service
11:15 AM
in the nave of the chapel
View Full Schedule ↗
— Summer Worship · 2026

Every Sunday at 11:15.

From Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day, a different worship leader from a different tradition takes the pulpit each Sunday.

— Opens summer worship
25
May · Sunday

Dr. Margaret Eckert Norton

Opening of the 2026 summer season.

11:15 AM
— Sunday 02
01
June · Sunday

Rev. Jeffrey Golliher

Episcopal · scholar of contemplative practice.

11:15 AM
Margaret's 100
— Sunday 03
08
June · Sunday

Jeffrey C. Slade, Esq.

M.Div., Union Theological Seminary, NYC.

11:15 AM
— Sunday 04
15
June · Sunday

Dave Clegg

Former Ulster County District Attorney.

11:15 AM
— Sunday 05
22
June · Sunday

Dr. Bruce Saylor

Aaron Copland School of Music.

11:15 AM
— Sunday 06
29
June · Sunday

Nigel Pearce

Grace Congregational Church · Harlem.

11:15 AM
— Music Sunday
13
July · Sunday

Sweet Harmony

Bob Costa and friends · the chapel's beloved music Sunday.

11:15 AM
The Annual Festival

Lessons &Carols.

Saturday · December 13 5:00 PM The Stone Church
Days
Hours
Min
Save the Date
— From the Pulpit

Reflections worth returning to.

A decade of voices from a dozen traditions — sermons, conversations, music. A small library, all watchable on demand.

Bishop Andy Dietsche

"Jesus learns who he is."

A meditation on baptism, identity, and the moments that shape a life. Bishop Dietsche has been a returning voice at the chapel for years.

Watch
Trebbe Johnson

"We can transcend downward through beauty."

On finding the sacred in difficult places. A reflection from one of the chapel's most beloved guest preachers.

Watch
John Henderson

"Out of the woods: a conversation on Buddhism & Christianity."

An exploration of common ground across two traditions — exactly the kind of multi-faith dialogue the chapel was built for.

Watch
Watch All Reflections
— A 130-Year Heritage

From fieldstone in 1895 to a house of prayer for the 21st century.

The chapel was commissioned in 1895 by Eliza Hartshorn as a memorial to her late husband. 130 years later, the doors are still open — and the bell still rings.

1895
— The vision

Eliza Hartshorn commissions the chapel.

As a memorial to her late husband Dr. Isaac Hartshorn, Eliza provides the land and bears all expenses. Frederick Dellenbaugh draws the plans.

1897
— First service

The 900-pound bell rings.

The tower bell is raised on June 19, 1897. The first service is held the following day. Local mason John Keir's work is consecrated.

1916
— Stewardship begins

Ownership passes to the Episcopal Church.

Upon Mrs. Hartshorn's death, ownership passes to Rev. Daniel Odell, who in 1922 gives it to the Altar Guild of the Episcopal Church.

1932
— The rose window

"Her smile was like a benediction."

The exquisite rose window in the western wall is added by Lamb Studios of New York — a gift from Frederick Dellenbaugh in memory of his wife Harriet.

1995
— A new beginning

Friends of the Stone Church form.

A nondenominational organization assumes all costs of maintaining the chapel in its original condition. Multi-faith worship begins.

Today
— A house for all peoples

Open to everyone, year after year.

Weekly services from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Annual Lessons & Carols in December. Weddings, baptisms, memorials. Doors always open.

— Moments at the Chapel

Through every season.

Full Gallery
Lessons & Carols— Lessons & Carols · Winter
Stained glass— Stained glass · Western wall
Outdoor gathering— Summer service · Outdoor
Chapel exterior— Exterior · Springtime
Chapel interior— Interior · Light through windows
Community gathering— Community · Memorial Arch
Stained glass detail— Glass detail · The west window
Christmas service— Christmas tree · Sanctuary
Chapel from the ridge— Architecture · Stone tower
The altar— Interior · The altar
Visitors at the chapel— Visitors · A summer day
Carols evening— Carols · Candlelight
— Stay Connected

A note from the chapel, once a month.

Updates from the ridge — when we open in the spring, who's preaching this Sunday, what's happening through the seasons. No spam, ever.

No spam · Unsubscribe anytime · We'll never share your email

"Welcome — keep an eye out for our next note from the chapel."