Private public partnership In 2010, stakeholders and preservationists concerned about the potential closure of 55 New York State parks gathered at a public forum in Greenburgh, New York to suggest solutions to then Governor
David Paterson. It was suggested that negotiating public-private partnerships with trusted non-profits might be an alternative to shuttering historic sites. This conveyance of responsibility turned out to be particularly suitable for the Jay Estate. The Jay Heritage Center was already one of the three owners of a parcel of public parkland that overlooks
Long Island Sound. JHC owns and the
New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (NYSOPRHP) and Westchester County Parks share interest in the remaining (with NYSOPRHP owning 90% and Westchester County Parks owning 10%). The agreement received unanimous and bipartisan support from the
Westchester County Board of Legislators in November 2012. Officials saw the agreement as a means towards preserving the site's future with trusted curators but also acknowledged that the covenant was a means towards removing all taxpayer costs for maintenance of the property. In August 2013, under Governor
Andrew Cuomo JHC was finally awarded management of the Jay Estate by NYSOPRHP and
Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino through a
public-private partnership agreement. The agreement was renewed in 2023. NY State Parks Commissioner Rose Harvey commented on the agreement in a lecture titled ''Stewardship of New York's Cultural and Natural History'' on April 29, 2014. The Commissioner articulated the importance of saving the site: "Here we are at the boyhood home of the only native founding father and the first Chief Justice of the United States, author of New York's constitution and two time governor, abolitionist and patriarch of several generations of similarly public minded descendants. It is a reminder of how many leaders called New York home and it is a source of state pride that we have preserved this home."
Landscape JHC is entrusted to stabilize and rehabilitate culturally significant landscape features at the Jay Estate including 1822 stone
ha-ha walls, of historic sunken gardens that date back to the 1700s, a meadow, an apple orchard, and elm tree
allée. JHC was awarded a $500,000 Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) grant in December 2014 to help restore the historic Jay Gardens.
Buildings owned by the Jay Heritage Center JHC owns two of the buildings outright and receives no annual governmental funding for them. The two structures are the
1838 Peter Augustus Jay House and a 1907 carriage house. The carriage house was designed by the architect
Frank A. Rooke who designed
Claremont Stables and several Sheffield Farms dairy plants in Manhattan. Commissioned by the later residents Warner and Grace Talcott Van Norden, the Classical Revival, yellow folly has its original, four-faced
Seth Thomas clock and three pairs of mahogany pocket doors. In 2022, it was renamed the Sue and
Edgar Wachenheim III Exhibit and Performance Center following a transformative gift of $1.5 million.
Buildings managed by Jay Heritage Center The 1907 Zebra House, Jay Ice House, Palmer Pump House, 1917 Indoor Tennis House, and an 18th-century farmhouse – belong jointly to New York State Parks and Westchester County Parks but are being managed and restored by JHC with fund raised by JHC. On August 4, 2015
Governor Andrew Cuomo announced more than $6.2 million in grant awards to help 16 historically significant properties repair severe damage from
Superstorm Sandy in 2012; JHC was one of those organizations and awarded $391,056 for stabilization and restoration of the 1917 Palmer Tennis House which is also in its care. "The Palmer Tennis House, the third oldest indoor tennis court in the United States, experienced roof damage during Hurricane Sandy. The Jay Heritage Center will stabilize and restore the wood truss system and copper trimmed skylights, as well as the stone foundation and clapboard siding. Improvements to the tennis house, constructed circa 1917, will facilitate historic usage and interpretation." In 2019, JHC received a prestigious $50,000 grant from the Gerry Charitable Trust to rehabilitate the site of an 1849
Alexander Jackson Davis building and create a garden pavilion for educational purposes. ==Programs and events==