Historic Pelham Blog Archive
March 2, 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, March 02, 2005
Using eBay ® -- of All Things! -- To Assist You With Your Research Into
Local History
As you read this, there are many people out there
rummaging through their attics, digging through their drawers and
reviewing their old papers, postcards and photographs to find things that
they might offer for sale online via the eBay® Web site. You should be
thankful. Each of them is doing historical research for your benefit.
As odd as it may sound, you can learn a lot about Pelham history -- as
well as the history of any locality you choose -- by watching the eBay®
Web site closely and searching it wisely. This posting will address one
such example intended as a teaching tool to help those who would like to
learn how they might use the eBay® Web site the same way.
Not long ago, one of the many searches I ran on eBay®
(using, of course, the advanced search feature) was a search for the
simple and common-sense term "Pelham". Among the hundreds of items that
the search query returned was a very odd item. It was a four-page "Programme"
for the "Spring Meeting" of the "Country Club Steeplechase Association"
held in "Pelham, Friday, June 1st, 1888." An image of the cover of the
program appears immediately below.

There are references in many of the materials relating
to the history of Pelham to a "race track" near the little red school
house on Split Rock Road. But, I had never heard of the "Country Club
Steeplechase Association". Another mystery was born. And, what is local
history research other than trying to solve such "mysteries"?
Perhaps the most interesting part of this "mystery" is the fact that
someone who did not live in Pelham, did not know anything about Pelham and
was not interested in the history of Pelham had found this item in some
old papers and made it available to a worldwide audience because she
offered it for sale on eBay®.
My first step was the tried, true and tested step of
searching the ProQuest® Historical Newspapers' New York Times
Database. I repeatedly have blogged about that database and how to access
it for free and use it properly to perform research. (For example,
click here and scroll to the bottom of the page to read the February
8, 2005 posting entitled "Searching Historic Newspapers Online for
Information About Pelham".)
I structured the following query, using quotation marks around the phrase
and associating the phrase -- by using the term "AND" -- with Pelham:
"Country Club Steeplechase" AND Pelham. The search query returned twelve
articles, every one of which dealt with the very association responsible
for the "Programme" I had seen on the eBay® Web site. A review of those
twelve articles provided a wealth of data that allowed me to structure
more and more queries that turned up more and more articles about the
Steeplechase Races in Pelham that attracted "blood of the bluest tinge"
from New York Society (according to one of the reports).
I have since been able to locate the track on maps from
19th Century Atlases and have developed a wealth of data about the Spring
and Autumn runnings of the event during the 1880s to permit me to prepare
an article that will be the next local history article for publication in
The Pelham Weekly. And, for those who might have been wondering,
the race track was located on lands near the
little red school house on Split Rock Road.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:40 AM
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