About Vassar-Warner Home

Vassar-Warner Home is a not-for-profit, mission-driven organization. Our mission is to serve seniors and their families desiring an independent lifestyle with the added comfort and protection of assistance when needed. Our residents make up a culturally, socially, and economically diverse community in which the staff, volunteers, and trustees seek to provide the compassion and warmth of a true home and the highest quality of service.

A Distinguished History

At close to 200 years old, the historic Greek Revival Vassar-Warner Home building dates to 1835 when it was built as the fourth location for the Dutchess Academy for Boys. In 1870 Jonathan Rowland Warner, a wealthy fur trader who was in rapidly declining health, saw an opportunity to make a lasting contribution to the community. Inspired to create a “refuge for elderly women”, he joined several women’s church groups with the same mission and purchased the former Academy building for $14,300. In addition, Warner paid $25,000 for remodeling and repairs and provided a $10,000 endowment for the Home’s maintenance and repair. The Board of Lady Managers—the delegates from Poughkeepsie’s churches—was established to raise funds, furnish rooms, and visit the sick. An all-male Board of Trustees also was established to invest the endowment and maintain the property. Unfortunately, Warner died three months before realizing his dream of seeing Vassar-Warner Home open its doors.

By 1896 the residence, which began as the Old Ladies Home, was fully occupied, with a waiting list of 1,500. Noting the demand, a local philanthropist—renowned Smith Brothers cough drop manufacturer William W. Smith—approached the Board of Trustees with an offer to fund the construction of an additional 27 new rooms, giving the home its present T-shaped configuration. By the time of his death in 1913, Smith had contributed $140,000 in cash and improvements to the home he referred to as the “Vestibule of Heaven”.

In 1974, the Vassar Home for Aged Men and The Old Ladies Home was incorporated into the Vassar-Warner Home, named after the original benefactors: Jonathan Rowland Warner and brothers Matthew Vassar Jr. and John Guy Vassar, who created the men’s home (that building now is occupied by the Cunneen Hackett Cultural Center). Vassar-Warner Home maintained the two buildings, known as the Men’s Division and the Ladies’ Division, until 1986 when the men moved into the Ladies’ Division, which is the current Vassar-Warner Home.

In 2010, Vassar-Warner Home received a bequest from the estate of Thomas W. Murphy Jr. in, which supported the restoration of the building’s front façade, and in 2011, Vassar-Warner Home celebrated 140 years of exceptional service with a “facelift” and hosted a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony unveiling the newly restored West Front Façade.

After a brief closure in 2024, Vassar-Warner Home reopened in 2025 as Vassar-Warner Home for the Day, an adult day care facility. The program provides support and opportunities for socialization to Hudson Valley seniors and their loved ones. In March 2026, Vassar-Warner Home announced that, with the support of transformative private investments, it will officially reopen its doors to residents in April.

Vassar-Warner Home staff and trustees are currently raising funds for subsidies for seniors, personal care renovation, and to support other projects. For more information about making a donation or bequest, click here.

 

The Non-Profit Difference

Vassar-Warner Home is the only nonprofit independent senior living residence and adult day care in Dutchess County, New York, which allows each participant to be treated as a family member rather than a customer.

As a nonprofit, the organization is not solely dependent on fee-related income, but also is eligible for various grants, including funding through government and foundation programs. Together with individual donations, these grants allow us at the Vassar-Warner Home to support our community through prosperous and difficult economic times.

Through the application and receipt of grants afforded by our nonprofit status, we have the ongoing ability to enhance programming and quality of life at Vassar-Warner Home. For example, a grant from the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation provided funds to help restore the front façade of the building. Additionally, funds secured through the grants and donations help our participants remain at Vassar-Warner Home and avoid moving to a nursing home prematurely.

Vassar-Warner Home’s leadership includes executive staff, plus a Board of Trustees and Foundation Board, the members of which each are volunteers in the communities the organization serves. These cherished members of the Vassar-Warner Home community have a variety of backgrounds and offer experience in finance, human resources, health care and more.

 

Proud members of:

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