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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 6, 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, April 06, 2005
A Behemoth Looks to the Suburbs: Talk of New York City Annexing
Pelham As Early As 1870
By Act of the New York State Legislature, on June 6, 1895
the present boundary line between Westchester and Bronx County was
established. As a consequence of this development, City Island, other
islands including Hunters Island, the Twins, Hart Island and much of the
Town of Pelham that today comprises a large portion of Pelham Bay Park
afterward passed to New York City.
For much of the time prior to June 6, 1895, City Island was Pelham's main
population center and an important political force able to stymie
development in much of the remainder of the Town including the hamlets
known as Pelhamville, Pelham Manor and Prospect Hill Village. As Lockwood
Barr put it in his book on the history of Pelham published in 1946 "the
Pelhams breathed a sigh of relief when City Island was made part of New
York City." See 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. 80 (Richmond, VA: The Dietz Press, Inc. 1946).
Annexation was long in coming. In fact, published accounts suggest that it
had been in the works for more than a quarter century before June 6, 1895.
There were a series of articles published in the New York Herald
published in 1870 that discussed annexation plans. The articles even
suggested that New York City coveted the entirety of Pelham -- not just
City Island and portions on the mainland near City Island.
For example, in the August 12, 1870 issue of the New York Herald
a report stated:
"ANOTHER BIG JOB.
________________
Project to Enlarge the City of New York - Portions of Westchester
County to be Annexed - A Grand Canal Contemplated - Additional Suburban
Improvements.
For some time past it has been well understood among certain influential
political leaders in New York and Westchester county that a great
annexation project, with other gigantic suburban improvements, are to be
brought forward and pushed through at the next session of the Legislature.
The most important scheme affecting the interests of the taxpayers of
Westchester county is the projected incorporation of the towns of
Morrisania, West Farms, Westchester and the lower section of Yonkers with
the city of New York. It is understood that numerous residents of the
towns named, not only favor the annexation of the sections indicated, but
also the towns of East Chester, Pelham, New Rochelle, Mamaroneck,
Scarsdale, White Plains and Greenburg, also the southern portions of
Harrison and Rye, running [sic]
THE BOUNDARY LINE
from the Hudson river at Tarrytown, along the northern line of
Greenburg and White Plains, thence in a direct line through the towns of
Harrison and Rye to the Connecticut line at Porchester [sic]. Inducements
are held out to the citizens of the towns named, by the projectors of the
scheme, which will doubtless have the desired effect. The convenience of a
plentiful supply of Croton water (by the construction of an additional
reservoir if necessary), and the protection of the Metropolitan Police and
Fire departments, are promised, and a large proportion of the population
would doubtless hail such an event with satisfaction. . . . "
Source: Another Big Job, N.Y. Herald, Aug. 12, 1870, p. 4, col.
6.
Only a few months later, it seems, the mood of residents in the areas
to be annexed had changed. The New York Herald published an
article in its December 13, 1870 issue entitled "Agitation in
Westchester". It said:
"AGITATION IN WESTCHESTER.
______________
The Annexation Project as Viewed by the Inhabitants - Proposed
Boundary Lines of the Metropolis-Conflicting Opinions-What Tammany Intends
to Do.
In view of a contemplated project to annex a portion of Westchester
county to New York considerable agitation at present exists among property
holders in the lower towns, whose opinions are as diversified as their
interests are varied. Thus the residents in the extreme southern portion
of the county regard with unlimited approbation the proposed measure
whereby they are to be made part and parcel of the metropolis, while their
neighbors living a few miles distant from the city limits are loud in
DENUNCIATION OF THE SCHEME.
A bill has already been drawn up for preservation to the Legislature at
its approaching session which seeks to incorporate the towns of Morrisania,
West Farms, Westchester, Yonkers, Eastchester, Pelham and New Rochelle as
part of New York, the proposed boundary line commencing at the northwest
corner of the town of Yonkers, on the Hudson river, and running thence
along the northern line of the last-named town to the Bronx river, thence
continuing in a northerly direction to Long Island Sound and taking in the
towns of Eastchester and New Rochelle. The project meets with
DECIDED OPPOSITION
in the towns of New Rochelle, Yonkers and Eastchester, where its
opponents contend that if annexation must be resorted to the projectors
thereof ought to content themselves with the absorption of the three lower
towns first, and, in such event, running the line along Spuyten Duyvil
creek, from the Hudson river to the present north western boundary of the
town of West Farms, at Kingsbridge, thence along the northern line of the
town of Westchester, thence along the easterly line of that town to
Eastchester Bay and Long Island Sound. In the three towns named there are
about 52,000 inhabitants. A large number of
THE YONKERS PEOPLE ARE ESPECIALLY HOSTILE
to the proposed measure, preferring to be incorporated as a separate
city, retaining control over the entire township rather than risk the fate
of annexation. The local press has been agitating the momentous subject
for some weeks, and it is expected that public meetings for full and free
discussion of the project will shortly become epidemic in the territory
around which the Tammany leaders have resolved to throw the aegis of their
benign protection."
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
7:05 AM
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