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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 6, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
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Monday, June 6, 2005
Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park in Pelham Manor: Origins of
the Idea to Create a Park
Regular readers of the Historic Pelham Blog know that I often post the
equivalent of my research notes as I work on particular projects. Recently
I have been doing research on the history of the Martha Emmons Weihman
Memorial Park located on the Esplanade at Boston Post Road behind Huguenot
Memorial Church. I have been doing the research to assist The Junior
League of Pelham, Inc. That organization is engaged in an effort to raise
approximately $200,000 to restore the park. Recent postings on the topic
include:
Thu. June 2, 2005: Obituary of Martha Emmons Weihman From The Pelham
Sun, August 16, 1940
Tue. May 24, 2005: Clifford and Martha Weihman of Pelham (Part I of II)
Wed. May 25, 2005: Clifford and Martha Weihman of Pelham (Part II of II)
Tue. May 31, 2005: The June 6, 1940 Fire That Destroyed the George M.
Reynolds Mansion (Part I of II)
Wed. Jun. 1, 2005: The June 6, 1940 Fire That Destroyed the George M.
Reynolds Mansion (Part II of II)
Over the weekend I located an interesting article from the October 4, 1940
issue of The Pelham Sun. The article constitutes the first
mention in the extant record that the area on which the Reynolds Mansion
stood was being considered for a park. According to the article, shortly
after the fire, the Village of Pelham Manor feared that the site -- zoned
for apartment houses -- was the only site left in the zoned area where a
large apartment house could be built. Thus, the Village decided to raise
$15,000 through issuance of bonds to fund acquisition of the property. The
article appears below, in its entirety.
“VILLAGE WILL BUY APARTMENT SITE TO AVOID ZONE THREAT
$15,000 WILL BE PAID FOR BOSTON POST RD. CORNER
-----
Site of Apartment House Which was Gutted by Fire is at Edge of Multifamily
Area.
-----
With a view toward eliminating what is termed as the most serious threat
against the Zoning Ordinance, the Village of Pelham Manor is negotiating
for the purchase of Boston Road Frontage at the Esplanade, one of two
remaining sites in the residential area on which apartment buildings may
be erected. The property, on the southeasterly corner of the Esplanade and
the Boston Road is the site of a frame apartment building that was gutted
by a spectacular fire on the night of June 6. The building was more than
two-thirds destroyed, and the village officials insisted that the
remainder of the structure be torn down. The work of demolition is well
under way.
Mayor Edmund C. Gause is authority for the statement that the sale of the
property to the village at a cost of $15,000 is in the process of
negotiation. It is expected that title will pass to the village in the
next few weeks. The property is owned by the Bowery Bank, which took it
over in foreclosure of a mortgage.
Mayor Gause told The Pelham Sun that the purchase price of the property
will be financed by a bond issue, which will be floated before the end of
the year.
‘The board of trustees saw fit to purchase this property to make sure that
it will never be used for the construction of an apartment house,’ Mayor
Gause told The Pelham Sun yesterday. ‘It is on the easterly edge of the
apartment house zone, and adjacent to the Huguenot Memorial Church, and
remains one of the last threats against the zoning ordinance in the
village.’
Mayor Gause said it is his purpose to develop the property as a park by
attractive landscaping. He indicated that the northeasterly corner of the
Esplanade and the Boston Post Road is the other remaining threat against
the zoning ordinance. ‘No attempt has been made to develop this tract
yet,’ he said.
The three-story apartment building on the site to be purchased by the
village was formerly one of Pelham Manor’s most striking residential
mansions. More than 20 years ago it was converted into an apart-house. At
the time of the fire there were nine families residing there. The blaze
which gutted the two upper floors was started by an electric iron. Most of
the tenants were out of the building at the time of the fire.”
Source: Village Will Buy Apartment Site To Avoid Zone Threat, The
Pelham Sun, Vol. 30, No. 28, Oct. 4, 1940, p. 1, col. 6.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:13 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 6, 2005.
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