Historic Pelham Blog Archive
October 12, 2005
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Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Pelham's First Automotive Taxi Service from the New Haven Line Train
Station
The Pelham Sun printed an interesting record of what likely was
Pelham's first automotive taxi business based at the New Haven Line train
station in its February 25, 1943 issue. The account appeared in connection
with the thirtieth anniversary of the business, known as Curry Bros., held
on February 13, 1943. See Curry Bros. In Tax Service Thirty
Years, The Pelham Sun, Vol. 32, No. 47, Feb. 25, 1943, p. 6, col.
3.

Early Post Card
View of Pelham Train Station
as it Looked at About the Time Curry Bros.
Began its Taxi Service on February 13, 1913.
Joseph J. Curry and his brother, Dennis F. Curry, were
born in New York City and moved to Pelham in about 1908. For many years
they lived with a sister in a home located on Seventh Avenue near Fourth
Street. They first operated a trucking business in Pelham. In 1913,
however, they began operating cabs from Pelham Station on the New Haven
Line. According to the account of their business published in The
Pelham Sun:
"When they began, the Town of Pelham was just beginning to
feel its growth as a residential suburban community. Automobiles were few,
and good roads quite scarce in the villages, so the taxi-cab business
became popular. As the residential advantages of the Pelhams appealed more
and more to the business man of the nearby metropolis as an ideal place
for a home, the town grew and the demand for taxi service increased."
Times, of course, were different then. Early brass-trimmed
cars, according to the same account were just making their debut in
Pelham, but they had removable tops fastened to the body of the vehicle
with straps that rendered them "noisy, cold, drafty and uncomfortable in
winter or wet weather".
For a time in the 1920s, the taxicab business might be
described as chaotic at best. The Curry Bros. had obtained the concession
to operate taxicabs from Pelham Station. Rival taxicab services reportedly
tried to muscle in on the brothers' Pelham Station business. Among those
who sought to compete with the Curry Brothers were Charles Cammerano,
Charles Tamke, Tom Stewart, Charles Stockman and Tom Spafford. "Some of
these", The Pelham Sun reported, "paid for sub-concessions but
more often the Curry Brothers were called upon to resist invaders by force
of words and wielding of fists."
As the business thrived, a third brother -- Cornelius
Curry -- joined the business. The business was successful for many years
due to the hard work of the threesome. In 1943, the local newspaper wrote:
"Thirty years in the taxi business in the Pelhams has
meant 30 years of sleeping in the few hours between the last train at
night and the first one in the morning, and getting a little rest in
between. Thirty years means the service must have been good or it would
not have survived those years."
Source: Curry Bros. In Taxi Service Thirty Years, The
Pelham Sun, Vol. 32, No. 47, Feb. 25, 1943, p. 6, col. 3.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:29 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
October 12, 2005.
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