Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 11, 2006
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Wednesday, January 11, 2006
1931 Artist's Rendering of the Planned Store Complex at Four Corners on
Boston Post Road
There is a tudor revival style commercial complex that stands at Four
Corners in Pelham. (Four Corners is the local designation for the
intersection of Pelhamdale Avenue and Boston Post Road in the Village of
Pelham Manor.) Though many Pelham residents visit the stores in the
complex all the time, few know much about the little complex.
The image below, from the collections of The Office of The Historian of
The Town of Pelham, is an artist's rendering of plans for the complex
submitted to the Village of Pelham Manor in connection with zoning
hearings held in 1931. Today's Historic Pelham Blog posting will provide a
little background on these hearings.

In 1931, Pelham residents Arthur W. Cole and Bradley Randall proposed
to build the store complex on the southeast corner of the intersection of
Boston Post Road and Pelhamdale Avenue. Though today we know that
intersection as "Four Corners", for more than sixty years it was known as
"Red Church Corner" because of the Little Red Church built by the
congregation of Huguenot Memorial Church that once stood on the southwest
corner of the intersection where today's Huguenot Memorial Church stands.
There were several preexisting structures on and near the site at the
time including small real estate offices, a gasoline station and the old
Red Church building that had been moved from its original location and
transformed into a store and apartment complex. Messrs. Cole and Randall
could not build the proposed store complex without a zoning change for the
site. In 1931, the Village of Pelham Manor's zoning restrictions called
for apartment house construction of "not less than four stories" on the
site.
The history of the apartment zoning for the site is somewhat odd. For
years, zoning along Boston Post Road east of Pelhamdale Avenue had been a
sore point. According to one report, "[p]roperty owners themselves set the
restriction at four story construction" in an effort to avoid hodge-podge
development of the real estate along Boston Post Road in this area.
Pelham Manor Mayor Lawrence P. Sherman announced in 1931 that the
Village Board would not rezone the site in the absence of consent from
each of the property owners that previously had agreed to the four story
construction restriction. Messrs. Cole and Randall worked hard to obtain
those consents and the Village rezoned the site to allow for construction
of the complex. One report at the time noted proudly that:
"Plans for the new building, as outlined by Mr. Randall, will greatly
enhance the beauty of the historic Red Church Corner. Setbacks have been
arranged to provide parking space in front of the building. The plan also
includes the remodeling of the old red church building to conform with the
Tudor architecture of the new building. Mr. Randall has announced that
several of the stores and offices are already contracted for."
Source: Application For Zone Change In Manor To Be Reviewed at Public
Hearing, The Pelham Sun, Jun. 5, 1931, p. 1, col. 5.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:45 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
January 11, 2006.
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