Historic Pelham Blog Archive
March 28, 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.
Monday, March 28, 2005
Split Rock: A Pelham Landmark for Centuries
Split Rock has been a Pelham landmark, some say, for as long as there
has been a Pelham. Today, this giant glacial boulder is located near the
New England Thruway where it meets the Hutchinson River Parkway. As its
name implies, the gigantic boulder seems to have been split in half. It
has a colorful history and has been associated with a variety of local
legends and traditions. A recent photograph of the boulder appears
immediately below.

Background
During colonial times, what we now know as Split Rock Road in Pelham Manor
extended across much of today’s Split Rock Golf Course in Pelham Bay Park.
A former Pelham Town Historian described the road as follows:
“‘The Split Rock Road,’ as it is familiarly called by the residents of
Pelham, originally the private driveway from the Post Road to the Manor house of John Pell [near today’s Bartow-Pell Mansion],
can boast an age equal with that of the Boston Road. It was once the sole
highway of communication between this neighborhood and City Island, where
numerous fishermen and pilots obtained a livelihood.”
In early times, Split Rock Road was a Native American path. On October 18,
1938, The Park Department of the City of New York erected a Historic
Marker dedicated to the “Old Indian Path” that came to be known as Split
Rock Road.
Much of the Battle of Pelham occurred along Split Rock Road. Split Rock
was a popular destination for generations of Pelham families. With the
creation of the Split Rock Golf Course, much of Split Rock Road
disappeared, though parts of it still exist along various of the fairways
of the course.
Legends and Anecdotes
Several of the stories and legends associated with early settler Anne
Hutchinson (who was massacred along with many of her family by Native
Americans in 1643) are tied to Split Rock. For many years it was believed
that she settled near Split Rock. Scholars such as Otto Hufeland and
Lemuel Welles disproved that tradition, concluding that the location of
the Hutchinson settlement and massacre was within the Town of Eastchester.
In 1911, a bronze tablet was placed on Split Rock by the Colonial Dames of
the State of New York in honor of Anne Hutchinson. It read:
"ANNE HUTCHINSON
Banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony
in 1638
Because of her Devotion to Religious Liberty
This Courageous Woman
Sought Freedom from Persecution in New
Netherland
Near this Rock in 1643 She and her Household
were Massacred by Indians
This Tablet is placed here by theColonial
Dames of the State of New York
ANNO DOMINI MCMXL Virtutes Majorurn Filiae
Conservant"
Reports say vandals later destroyed this
tablet although the Colonial Dames of the State of New York reportedly
replaced it with another. There appears to be no such plaque on the
boulder today.
In 1958, while engineers were overseeing the
construction of The New England Thruway, plans were made to dynamite the
Split Rock boulder. Bronx County Historian Theodore Kazimiroff
reportedly led a group who convinced the engineers “to move the Thruway
a few feet north and the rock was spared.”
Visiting Split Rock Today
Split Rock is difficult, but not impossible,
to visit today. There are several ways to get to it. One way is fairly
easy and quite a fascinating and pleasant hike.
Go to the very end of Beech Tree Lane,
located near the back of Manor Circle off of Pelhamdale Avenue just east
of the I-95 overpass on Pelhamdale Avenue. At the end of the street you
actually will be within the Bronx.
At the end of the street is a pathway that
enters onto the Bridle Path in Pelham Bay Park. You will see the Pelham
Bay Golf Course. Facing the Golf Course, take a right on the Bridle
Path. Wear sturdy waterproof shoes since the path can be quite wet and
muddy at times.
After a short distance, you will perceive
that the "path" seems sunken and looks like an ancient road. That is, in
fact, what it is. This portion of the pathway once was a part of a long
country road -- some say a "driveway" -- from John Hunter's estate on
Hunter's Island in the mid-19th century to the roadway that we know
today as Boston Post Road (U.S. 1).
You shortly will see that the roadway seems
to incline up a little hill to a large iron bridge over the tracks of
the Branch Line that opened in the early 1870s. In his book on the
history of Pelham published in 1946, Lockwood Barr wrote about this
roadway and bridge as follows:
"John Hunter had a private lane from the
Island over to the Prospect Hill section of Pelham Manor. This private
lane paralleled the present southern boundary line of Pelham Manor, up
to the point where the line crosses the tracks of the New Haven Branch
Line Railroad. At that point, now stands a steel bridge over the tracks,
and on either side of the railroad still remain the earthen approaches
to the span. When the Branch Line was built in 1873, this bridge was
erected because of the legal difficulties involved in closing an old
road. A map of Pelham of 1850 clearly shows this lane, used by John
Hunter to get from his Mansion over to his Provost Farm, then bounded by
the Hutchinson River, the Boston Post Road, and old Split Rock Road. In
his will, John Hunter made disposition of his farm lands on the mainland
in the Town of Pelham, and recognized the necessity of providing ". . .
right of way with Cattle and teams over the lane now used by me across
my farm, commonly called and known as the Sackett Farm, situate in the
said Town of Pelham opposite Hunter's Island and between the farms of
Geo. Thacker and Elbert Roosevelt; and also the right of way from said
lane thorugh the woods of said Sackett Farm, to and from the Provost
Farm." This right of way was conveyed in the deeds subsequently
transferring the Island. This old lane was closed when the golf course
of Pelham Bay Park was made, but the lane and the bridge form part of
the Bridle Path in the Park."
Source: Barr, Lockwood, A Brief, But Most
Complete & True Account of the Settlement of the Ancient Town of Pelham
Westchester County, State of New York Known One Time Well & Favourably
as The Lordshipp & Mannour of Pelham Also the Story of the Three Modern
Villages Called the Pelhams, p. 101 (Richmond, VA: The Dietz Press, Inc.
1946).
Proceed over the bridge and continue
walking. You will reach I-95 and, indeed, will wonder if the Bridle Path
has ended. It has not. For a short distance of a couple of hundred
yards, the Bridle Path is difficult to perceive and, in fact, is located
only a few yards away from the roadside of I-95. Occasionally you will
see hoof prints and even wood used to mark the boundaries of the path.
Keep walking parallel to I-95 on your right with the fence that encloses
Split Rock Golf course on your left.
After a short distance the Bridle Path will
angle to the left and become a wide, graveled horse path again. Watch
carefully to your right. You will see an entrance roadway from the
Hutchinson River Parkway onto I-95. Between I-95 and the Hutchinson
River Parkway entrance roadway onto I-95 you will see Split Rock -- a
giant boulder that appears to be split in half. You will even be able to
scramble down the small incline from the Bridle Path to a grassy area
next to the roadway where you can see Split Rock even more clearly. It
may be hard to imagine, but this is the very spot where -- for many
generations -- Pelham residents brought picnic lunches and sat in the
quiet countryside admiring the lovely view of the countryside around
Pelham.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
6:40 AM
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