Lefferts Homestead, Prospect Park
Jamaica Avenue was one of the original Indian paths in Brooklyn, but that's for another trip.
After cycling almost to the Queens border I rode back west and then south to the Wyckoff House at 5816 Clarendon Road, the oldest house in Brooklyn:
From there I biked south on Ralph Avenue, then East on Flatlands Avenue, where there are several Dutch houses. Flatlands, or Amersfoort, was one of the original Dutch towns, centered at Flatbush Avenue and Kings Highway.
Stoothoff-Williamson House, 1587 East 53 Street
Stoothoff-Baxter-Kouwenhoven House, 1640 East 48 Street
Two more houses are nearby:
Elias Hubbard Ryder House, 1926 East 28 Street
Wyckoff-Bennett House, 1662 East 22 Street
On to Gravesend, founded by the Englishwoman Lady Moody, where three houses are located, along with two connected cemeteries.
Hubbard-Lucchelli House, 2138 McDonald Avenue
Ryder-Van Cleef House, 38 Village Road
Moody-Van Sicklen House, 27 Gravesend Neck Road
Across the street from the Moody House are the Van Sicklen and Old Gravesend Cemeteries:
From here I rode back towards Flatlands and my encounter with The Wrong Kind Of Bee. Just as I turned onto East 22 Street something, possibly caught under my helmet, stuck a needle into my head. I stopped at the house and took pictures, then waited to see if I had a bigger problem.
Coe House, 1128-30 East 34 Street
Other than the needle pain I felt fine, so I went a few blocks to the Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church, by way of Hubbard Lane, which was one of the original roads of Flatlands, and probably an Indian path as well. The church is on Kings Highway near Flatbush Avenue.
The church buildings are not original, having been hit by lighting and burned down several times. But the cemetery was open:
From there to the last house of the day:
Van Nuyse-Magaw House, 1042 East 22 Street
On the way home I realized that I could also stop at the Flatbush reformed Dutch Church, also a newer building, but with a cemetery dating to at least the 18th Century:
From there I rode home, realized I was having an allergic reaction to the bee sting, and went to the Emergency Room to have it checked out.
Thanks to John Antonides at the Brooklyn Museum for posting a map of all the houses:
http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/community/blogosphere/2007/07/19/dutch-houses-in-brooklyn/