Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 23, 2005
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Friday, September 23, 2005
Pelham Tries To Kill The Plan To Create
Pelham Bay Park: 1887
The year was 1887. The City of New York was in the midst of efforts to
create a massive park to be known as Pelham Bay Park. Only three years
earlier the state legislature had enacted a statute authorizing the taking
of lands in Westchester County -- including much of the Town of Pelham --
for the creation of the new park.
The people of Pelham were outraged. Among the many things they did to
fight the plan (unsuccessfully, as we now know) included a petition and a
meeting with the Mayor of New York City in March 1887 to oppose the park
plan. The New York Times wrote of their efforts as follows:
"THE PELHAM PARK.
WESTCHESTER PEOPLE ASK MAYOR
HEWITT'S AID TO KILL THE SCHEME.
A large delegation from the town of Pelham, Westchester County, waited on
Mayor Hewitt yesterday afternoon. Dr. John A. Hardenbrook, of
Barton-on-Sound [sic], introduced Supervisor Sherman T. Pell, Postmaster
Hogan, Roadmaster Hall, Frederick Vickery, Henry D. Carey, Charles
Mahoney, and a dozen or more other gentlemen.
Supervisor Pell, in addressing the Mayor, said that the delegation
appeared for the purpose of presenting a petition signed by the taxpayers
of the town, asking his co-operation and that of the Common Council in
requesting the Legislature to repeal so much of the act of 1884 as related
to the assumptions of lands in Westchester County for a park to be known
as Pelham Bay Park. The petition sets forth that the taking of these lands
in Westchester County was mainly in the interest of a few landed
proprietors who expected to get upward of $2,000 an acre for swamp lands.
Mayor Hewitt emphatically said: 'Gentlemen, I am very glad to meet you. I
appreciate the situation exactly. I think it is an outrageous thing that
the Legislature should have passed a bill to acquire lands for park
purposes eight miles from the Harlem Bridge, and saddling the expense upon
the taxpayers of this city. I suppose you were a happy and contented
community until some speculative rascals set their eyes upon your locality
and sought to use it for their own selfish ends. I am glad you have
called, and I assure you I shall send your petition with my recommendation
to the Board of Aldermen at its next meeting.'"
Source: The Pelham Park. Westchester People Ask Mayor Hewitt's Aid To Kill
The Scheme, N.Y. Times, Mar. 25, 1887, p. 2.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:15 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 23, 2005.
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