Historic Pelham Blog Archive
May 26, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
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BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
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Friday, May 26, 2006
The 27th Conference on New York State History Will Include Presentation
of Paper on Pelham Manor & Huguenot Heights Association
The 27th Conference on New York State History will be held June 1 - 3,
2006 at the Herbert H. Lehman Center for American History, Columbia
University. The conference is sponsored by the Herbert H. Lehman Center
for American History and the New York State Archives Partnership Trust in
conjunction with The Association of Public Historians of New York State.
Below are a series of links relating to the conference, including:
Conference Web Page and Program.
Conference Program Adobe PDF.
Conference Program, Microsoft Word Format.
Registration Form.
On Saturday, June 3rd I will present a paper between 10:15 a.m. and
12:15 p.m. as a member of panel session 702 entitled "The Suburb". The
paper is entitled: "The Pelham Manor & Huguenot Heights Association: An
Analysis of the Effects on Today's Village of Pelham Manor of a 'Failed'
Effort to Develop a New York City Railroad Suburb During the 1870s".
The panel will be moderated by Dr. Kenneth T. Jackson, Jacques Barzun
Professor of History and the Social Sciences at Columbia University and
Dr. Lisa Keller, Associate Professor of History and Director of the
Journalism Program in the School of Humanities, Purchase College, State
University of New York.
With the coming of the so-called “branch line” of the New York, New Haven
& Hartford Railroad in 1873, a group of enterprising men who lived in New
York City and the Town of Pelham created “The Pelham Manor & Huguenot
Heights Association”. They capitalized the Association by contributing 500
acres for development as an elegant bedroom community – an early “railroad
suburb” as Kenneth T. Jackson, author of Crabgrass Frontier (Oxford
University Press, Inc. 1985) has labeled such communities. Only twelve
weeks later the failure of the Philadelphia financial firm Jay Cooke and
Company touched off the Financial Panic of 1873. A prolonged financial
depression followed the panic. Though the Association continued its
development efforts for several years, it failed and entered receivership.
The brief work of the Association, however, had a profound influence on
the makeup of the budding settlement that, fifteen years later, was
incorporated as the Village of Pelham Manor.
The paper that I will present traces the history of the Association and
provides biographical sketches of its principals. The paper further traces
the influence of the Association on the area that became today’s Village
of Pelham Manor. The paper argues that the Association failed due not
simply to the depression that followed the Panic of 1873, but due to a
complex set of interrelated factors that included the difficulty of
commuting on the branch line at the time. The paper further argues that
those who put together the Association played a major role in subsequent
informal efforts to achieve their original objectives for development of
the area. These informal efforts were the driving force behind the
incorporation of the Village of Pelham Manor and substantively influenced
the layout and makeup of the Village today.
The methodology for preparation of the paper included an exhaustive survey
of original 19th century maps, advertisements, photographs, papers and
other such materials supplemented with a careful use of secondary
resources designed to support the arguments specified above.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:02 AM
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