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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 23, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
The Westchester County Historical Society Acquires Records of The Pelham
Manor Protective Club From Dealer in Tarrytown, NY
Elizabeth G. Fuller, Librarian of
The Westchester County Historical Society, recently discovered a very
large leather-bound volume containing more than ten years' worth of
handwritten meeting minutes and other records of the Pelham Manor
Protective Club -- the precursor to the village government formed when the
Village of Pelham Manor was incorporated in 1891. She found the volume
among the collections of a dealer located in Tarrytown, NY. There is no
record regarding how the materials ended up at that location. Ms. Fuller
successfully acquired the treasure for the collections of The Westchester
County Historical Society. (Below is an image of the cover of a DRAFT
minutes book stored among similar records maintained in the collections of
The Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham.)

The WCHS has made the volume available to a representative of The
Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham who was able to photograph
the hundreds of pages of records contained in the volume to permit
transcription, study and analysis. The records span the period from 1881
when the Pelham Manor Protective Club was first formed until shortly after
the Village of Pelham Manor was incorporated and, consequently, took over
many of the functions that had been served by the Club during the previous
ten-year period.
The discovery of these records is one of the most significant developments
in the study of the history of Pelham Manor in many years. They show the
evolution of a so-called "Vigilance Committee" formed to handle policing
issues in the area into a political force that grew so unhappy with Town
Government that it became an important force in the decision to
incorporate the area to form the Village of Pelham Manor in 1891.
In the early 1880s, a group of local residents formed a “Citizen’s
vigilante committee”. That committee, in turn, created an organization
known as “The Pelham Manor Protective Club.”
The Pelham Manor Protective Club was formally organized on December 15,
1881 – ten years before incorporation of the Village of Pelham Manor.
Indeed, the Club might be viewed as a precursor to the organization of the
Village because it was an important cooperative body created for the
protection of the local citizenry.
Nearly the entire adult male population of the area – 52 local residents –
subscribed as members of the Pelham Manor Protective Club. The list of
subscribers reads like a “Who’s Who” of early Pelham, including such names
as Robert C. Black, Robert Bolton, Benjamin Corlies, Henry W. Taft, Silas
H. Witherbee and many others.
The sole purpose of the Club was “to assist the public authorities in
maintaining law and order within a radius of one mile from Pelham Manor
Depot . . . and to prosecute all persons committing any crimes or
misdemeanors within said district.”
Given the importance of its work, the Protective Club was able to raise a
substantial amount of money. Upon “subscribing” to the Club, each new
member was required to pay an entrance fee of three dollars and,
thereafter, to pay “such dues, not exceeding fifty cents a month, as the
Executive Committee shall determine.” In addition, the “Articles of
Association of The Pelham Manor Protective Club” authorized the
five-member Executive Committee “to levy assessments for any legitimate
object of this club, provided that assessments levied by the executive
committee on any one member in any one year shall not exceed in the
aggregate the sum of NINE DOLLARS over and above the regular dues.”
Over the coming months I will be transcribing, annotating and analyzing
the records of the Pelham Manor Protective Club as a consequence of the
kind and gracious courtesy of Katie Hite, Executive Director of the
Westchester County Historical Society and her talented colleague,
Elizabeth G. Fuller. I will report here on the status of the project and
significant discoveries as I review the records.
To learn more about the Pelham Manor Protective Club, see Bell,
Blake A., The Pelham Manor Protective Club Founded in 1881, The Pelham
Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 24, June 11, 2004, p. 12, col. 1.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:30 AM
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