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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 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!
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Thursday, April 28, 2005
Ladies' Day on Travers Island in the 19th Century
The New York Athletic Club opened Travers Island to club members for
inspection of the new clubhouse on June 8, 1889. See Travers
Island, N.Y. Times, Jun. 9, 1889, p. 3 ("The new Summer home of the
New-York Athletic Club on Travers Island, near Pelham Manor, on the Sound,
was opened yesterday for inspection by the members and their friends.").
Soon the NYAC moved its annual "Ladies Day" festivities to the new summer
home.

Post Card View of Original NYAC Clubhouse Opened in
1889, Later Destroyed by Fire
There is an excellent account of the 1890 Ladies Day held
at Travers Island that was published in The New York Times. It
provides an excellent overview of the wide variety of events held during
such gatherings as well as an interesting record of the competition on
that day nearly 115 years ago. Today's blog posting will reproduce that
account in its entirety:
LADIES DAY AT TRAVERS ISLAND.
__________
INTERESTING GAMES OF THE NEW-YORK ATHLETIC CLUB.
If the gods who control the elements had been bribed they could not have
given the New-York Athletic Club more perfect weather for their
forty-fourth annual ladies' day games than was enjoyed by fully 5,000
people at Travers Island, Pelham Manor, yesterday. A more ideal day's
outing can scarcely be imagined. Every arrangement and detail left in the
hands of the various committees on reception, entertainment, &c, was
carried out to perfection.
The affair was the most successful and at the same time the most
fashionable ever given by the New-York Athletic Cloub.
Among the small army of people entertained was a great number of women
prominent in society and men conspicuous for their success in business and
the professions. Special trains were run both ways and there was an
abundance of stages to take the people to and from the island.
Many came early in the morning and staid [sic] late to enjoy dancing and a
supper. While the social side of the affair was such a success, however,
the games were rather weak. The starters did not exceed one-fifth of the
entries. The prizes were medals, gold, silver and bronze, for first,
second, and third men respectively.
The only record breaking was with the shot and hammer. George R. Gray of
the New-York Athletic Club put the fourteen-pound shot 47 feet 7 7/8
inches. H. L. Lambrecht's record is 46 feet 3 3/4 inches. He put the
sixteen-pound shot 46 feet, beating th record (his own) of 45 feet 2
inches. The eighteen-pound shot for which there is no record, he put 41
feet 9 1/2 inches. The twenty-one-pound shot he put 38 feet 8 5/8 inches,
breaking the record made by Quackberner of 35 feet 10 inches. W. L. Condon
of the New-York Athletic Club knocked the fifteen-pound hammer record of
107 feet 7 inches, held by himself into a cocked hat by throwing 123 feet
6 3/4 inches. Many doubted the accuracy of the measurement, but the record
was undoubtedly broken by many feet.
The games were without accident, except to C. H. Sherrill, Yale's
sprinter, who sprained the tendon that has long been troubling him, in the
100-yard dash. He fell and had to be carried from the field. Following is
the summary of the games:
600-YARD RUN. -- Three starters. Won by J. S. Roddy, Manhattan Athletic
Club and Princeton College, second. Second heat won by T. I. Lee, New-York
Athletic Club; time, 0:10 3-5; L. H. Carey, Manhattan Athletic Club,
second. Final won by L. H. Carey; time, 0:10 1-5; T. I. Lee, second.
120-YARD HURDLE RACE. -- Five starters. F. C. Puffer, New-Jersey Athletic
Club, and George Schwegler, New-York Athletic Club, drew a bye. Heat won
by H. L. Williams, New-York Athletic Club and Yale College, time, 0:17
3-5; E. Lentilhon, New-York Athletic Club, tied for second; Lentilhon took
place on toss. Final won by Williams; time, 0:16 4-5; Schwegler second.
ONE-MILE RUN. -- Five starters. Won by A. B. George, Manhattan Athletic
Club; time, 4:35 4-5; W. McCarthy, Manhattan Athletic Club, second.
880-YARD RUN. -- Four starters. Won by J. S. Roddy, Manhattan Athletic
Club and Princeton; time, 2:10 2-5; W. H. Wright, New-York Athletic Club
and Harvard College, second.
220-YARD RUN. -- Three starters. Won by L. H. Carey, Manhattan Athletic
Club; time, 0:23 2-5; T. J. Lee, New-York Athletic Club, second.
220-YARD HURDLE. -- Six starters. First heat won by E. Lentilhon, New-York
Athletic Club; time 0:33 4-5; A. Brown, Pastimes, second. Second heat won
by H. L. Williams, New-York Athletic Club and Yale College; time, 0:27
2-5; George Schwegler, New-York Athletic Club and Yale College, second.
Final won by Schwegler; time, 0:27 1/2; Williams second.
440-YARD RUN. -- Four starters. Won by L. H. Carey, Manhattan Athletic
Club; time, 0:53; J. C. Devereaux, Manhattan Athletic Club, second.
OBSTACLE RACE. -- Won by J. H. Bell, New-York Athletic Club; B. G.
Woodruff, New-Jersey Athletic Club, second.
PUTTING THE 16-POUND SHOT. -- Five contestants. George R. Gray, New-York
Athletic Club, 44 feet 6 3/4 inches; F. L. Lambrecht, Manhattan Athletic
Club, 40 feet 11 5/8 inches; E. J. Giannini, New-York Athletic Club, 37
feet 1 inch.
POLE VAULT. -- Five contestants. E. D. Rider, New-York Athletic Club and
Yale College, 10 feet 4 inches; J. Crane, Jr., Boston Athletic
Association, tied at 10 feet 1 inch. Crane won on toss.
RUNNING HIGH JUMP. -- Four contestants. R. K. Pritchard, Manhattan
Athletic Club, 5 feet 10 inches; H. L. Hallock, Manhattan Athletic Club,
and F. C. Hooper, Berkeley Athletic Club, tied at 5 feet 6 inches. Hallock
won on toss.
THROWING 16-POUND HAMMER. -- Four contestants. W. L. Coudon, New-York
Athletic Club, 123 feet 6 3/4 inches; F. L. Lambrecht, Manhattan Athletic
Club, 112 feet 8 1/2 inches; M. O'Sullivan, Pastimes, 88 feet 2 inches.
RUNNING BROAD JUMP. -- Nine contestants. E. E. Barnes, New-Jersey
Athletic Club, 21 feet 9 1/2 inches; Victor Mapes, Berkeley Athletic Club,
20 feet 11 1/2 inches; C. T. Wiegand, New-York Athletic Club, 20 feet 4
inches.
Source: Ladies' Day At Travers Island, N.Y. Times, Jun. 8, 1890, p. 5.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
6:08 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for April
28, 2005.
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