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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 1, 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.
Friday, April 01, 2005
The Earliest Newspaper in Pelham?
Background
Pelham has a rich tradition of local newspaper reporting. Long before
today's Pelham Weekly, there were such Pelham newspapers as
The Gazette (1890), The Pelham Manor Tribune (1893), The
Press (1896), The Record (1897), The Republican
(1903), The Post (1901), The Democrats (1903), The
Register (1905), The Pelham Sun (1910 - today), The Free
Press (1921) and The News (1927). In addition, during the
mid-19th century newspapers published in nearby villages such as New
Rochelle included sections devoted to Pelham news.
The history of news gathering and news publishing in Pelham has not been
well documented. For now it appears that the earliest newspaper published
in Pelham may have been The Pelham Chronicle edited by William
Jay Bolton and issued "about every other week" during the 1840s. See
Bolton, Reginald Pelham, William Jay Bolton Associate of the National
Academy, Artist, Author, Worker in Stained Glass and Minister of the
Gospel, 9(2) The Quarterly Bulletin of the Westchester County
Historical Society 25, 26 (Apr. 1933).
William Jay Bolton
William Jay Bolton was a son of the Rev. Robert Bolton who built Bolton
Priory and founded Christ Church in Pelham Manor. William Jay Bolton was
an exceptional artist who eventually was admitted to the National Academy
of Design where he won prizes including a coveted "Silver Palette" for one
of his works. Roberts, Anne Elliott, William Jay Bolton -- Artist in
Glass, The Pelham Sun, Jul. 22, 1954. He put his talents to good
use as he, his brothers and father worked to beautify Bolton Priory and
the nearby church building they had constructed.
He became a master stained glass window artist assisted by his brother
John Bolton. He began working with glass when he created some small panels
"bearing the arms of the Pell family and those of his father's forbears"
for windows in Bolton Priory, the family residence. See Bolton,
Reginald Pelham, William Jay Bolton, supra, pp. 27-28.
Thereafter, he created for the little Christ Church building what is
believed to be the nation's first figured stained glass window. The
beautiful window, which depicts figures for the "Adoration of the Magi",
may still be seen in the church.
The Pelham Chronicle
During the 1840s, William Jay Bolton began the publication of a tiny
little newspaper distributed about every other week. The cost of the paper
was a "donation" of the reader's choice.
No printed copies of the little newspaper are known to exist.
Interestingly, though, the collections of The Office of The Historian of
The Town of Pelham contain two slim leather-bound journals filled with
handwritten pages that appear to be William Jay Bolton's drafts for many
of the issues of the little newspaper that he prepared and distributed. In
addition, the journals contain a number of beautiful sketches of early
Pelham scenes that appear to have been created by William Jay Bolton for
inclusion in the little newspaper.
Over the next three weeks I will be photographing each page of the two
journals as the first step in the process of transcribing and analyzing
the contents of The Pelham Chronicle. As the project progresses,
I will report on interesting developments.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
7:07 AM
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