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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 23, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
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BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, January 23, 2006
The Beginnings of Organized Fire Fighting in Pelham Manor?
On January 19, 2006 I posted an item to the Historic Pelham Blog entitled
"Pelham
Manor's Earliest Fire Fighting Equipment". In it I described
self-imposed "assessments" made on Village of Pelham Manor residents in
1890 to fund the purchase of fourteen dozen hand grenade extinguishers,
fifty six racks for the extinguishers and a chemical engine (Chemical
Engine No. 1) to fight fires in the area.
I have continued my research and have located even earlier organized
firefighting efforts by residents of the area that became the Village of
Pelham Manor in 1891. Today's Blog posting will detail a little of that
research.
In the early 1880s, a group of local residents formed a “Citizen’s
vigilante committee”. That committee, in turn, created an organization
known as “The Pelham Manor Protective Club.” The Pelham Manor Protective
Club was formally organized on December 15, 1881 – ten years before
incorporation of the Village of Pelham Manor. Indeed, the Club might be
viewed as a precursor to the organization of the Village because it was an
important cooperative body created for the protection of the local
citizenry.
Nearly the entire adult male population of the area – 52 local residents –
subscribed as members of the Pelham Manor Protective Club. The list of
subscribers reads like a “Who’s Who” of early Pelham, including such names
as Robert C. Black, Robert Bolton, Benjamin Corlies, Henry W. Taft, Silas
H. Witherbee and many others. The sole purpose of the Club was “to assist
the public authorities in maintaining law and order within a radius of one
mile from Pelham Manor Depot . . . and to prosecute all persons committing
any crimes or misdemeanors within said district.” Given the importance of
its work, the Protective Club was able to raise a substantial amount of
money.
Upon “subscribing” to the Club, each new member was required to pay an
entrance fee of three dollars and, thereafter, to pay “such dues, not
exceeding fifty cents a month, as the Executive Committee shall
determine.” In addition, the “Articles of Association of The Pelham Manor
Protective Club” authorized the five-member Executive Committee “to levy
assessments for any legitimate object of this club, provided that
assessments levied by the executive committee on any one member in any one
year shall not exceed in the aggregate the sum of NINE DOLLARS over and
above the regular dues.”
Recently, Elizabeth G. Fuller, Librarian of
The Westchester County Historical Society, discovered a very large
leather-bound volume containing more than ten years' worth of handwritten
meeting minutes and other records of the Pelham Manor Protective Club. I
have been transcribing the ten years' worth of records contained in that
volume. See Wed. February 23, 2005:
The Westchester County Historical Society Acquires Records of The Pelham
Manor Protective Club from Dealer in Tarrytown, NY.
This past weekend I reviewed my transcription of those records and located
even earlier efforts by Pelham Manor residents to organize collective
firefighting efforts. The idea seems first to have been explored by the
Executive Committee of the organization on May 2, 1885. An entry that
appears on page 101 of the volume states:
"It was moved and seconded, that a Committee of two be appointed to
consider and report on the best means of providing security against fire
in Pelham Manor. This motion was carried. The Chair appointed as members
of this Committee Messrs. Black and Barnett."
About one month later, the Messrs. Black and Barnett made their report to
the Executive Committee. They reported:
"The Committee on providing means for Protection against Fire reported
that 50 feet of ¾” hose with a Pump-on-Wheels could be purchased for
$25.00 @ $30.00 But the Committee recommended the purchase of the Harden
Hand Grenades at price quoted to Mr. Barnett, viz $8.00 per dozen net,
including wire racks; and stated that the agent of these grenades would be
glad to give a public exhibition in Pelham Manor of the working of the
grenades."
Records of the Pelham Manor Protective Club, p. 107.
The Executive Committee accepted the report and decided to purchase the
grenades. The relevant entries that appear on the same page of the
Journal, state:
"It was moved and seconded : That the Report of the Fire Committee be
accepted with thanks. Carried.
It was moved and seconded : That the Executive Committee purchase 6 dozen
of the Harden Hand Grenades at $8.00 per dozen, including racks and, an
exhibition, and that the Treasurer and Mr. Barnett be appointed a
Committee for making the said purchase. This was carried.
It was moved and seconded : That the Executive Committee purchase 6 dozen
of the Harden Hand Grenades at $8.00 per dozen, including racks and, an
exhibition, and that the Treasurer and Mr. Barnett be appointed a
Committee for making the said purchase. This was carried."
This, for now, seems to be the earliest collective effort by Pelham Manor
to organize firefighting capabilities for the benefit of local residents.
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 @
4:41 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog
Posting for January 23, 2006.
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