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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 12, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
A Brief History of City Island Published in a Book by Stephen Jenkins in
1912
As I have noted so many times on the Historic Pelham Blog, City Island
once was part of the Town of Pelham until its annexation by New York City,
effective in 1896. Throughout much of the nineteenth century, City Island
was the political and population center of the Town of Pelham. Thus,
today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog will provide the text of a
brief history of City Island included in the book "The Story of The Bronx
from the Purchase Made by the Dutch from the Indians in 1639 to the
Present Day" by Stephen Jenkins published in 1913.
"City Island may be reached by train on the Suburban branch of the New
York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad to Bartow station. Until within a
year, a one-horse, bob-tailed car, a relic of former days, used to connect
with each train, and, for a fare of five cents, the passenger was taken to
Marshall's Corners at the end of Rodman's Neck; for an additional fare, he
was carried to the end of the island. In 1910, a monorail electric line
was inaugurated; but its first day of business was an unfortunate one, for
the car met with an accident and several people were killed. [sic] The
road has been run since with more or less success; but at this writing,
the rolling stock has decreased to one car; and that is uncertain in its
operation when the weather is bad, or windy -- the very time when one most
wants to use the line.
City Island was originally called Minnewits, or Great Minnefords, Island.
The origin of the name is doubtful, it being ascribed to Peter Minuits,
the Dutch Governor and purchaser of the island of Manhattan, and also to
Minnefords, Minifers, or Minnewies, the original Indian proprietors. It
was within Thomas Pell's purchase of 1654, and also within his manor-grant
of Pelham. It received its name of City Island from a scheme of
inhabitants of 1761-62 to establish upon the island a city that was to
outrival New York. General Heath uses the name 'New City Island' in his
Memoirs, so that the name must have been well established in
Revolutionary days.
On May 10, 1763, a ferry was established 'acroost from Mr. Samuel Rodman's
Neck to said Island.' The same year a ferry was established from the north
end of the island and leased to Mrs. Deborah Hicks, 'the best and fairest
[sic] bidder.' On May 13, 1766, a ferry was established between
the south end of the island across the Sound to Long Island; it was leased
to John Barnes for five years.
The first purchaser from Thomas Pell, the manor-lord, was John Smith of
the town of Bruckland [Brooklyn]. The island, on June 19, 1761, came into
possession of Benjamin Palmer, the builder of the free bridge at Spuyten
Duyvil, for £2730. He appears to have suffered considerable loss during
the war; for, in 1788, he sent a petition to 'His Excellency, George
Clinton, Esq., Governor in and over the State of New York, and
Vice-Admiral of the Navy of the same,' for relief. This failing, he again
petitioned for redress of grievances in 1789, this time to 'His
Excellency, George Washington, President of the United States.' His
distress was mitigated by a subscription, as told elsewhere.
The Revolution prevented the accomplishment of the plan of building a city
upon the island, though it was revived in 1790. The island was cut up into
4500 lots, each twenty-five feet front and one hundred feet in depth,
besides two squares of thirty lots each, reserved for churches,
meeting-houses, schools, etc. Ten pounds was the stated price of the lots,
and many were brought and sold at that price. In 1818, Nicholas Haight and
Joshua Husted owned nearly all of the island, as well as Rodman's Neck and
what became later the Marshall estate. In the year following, forty-two
acres passed into the possession of George W. Horton.
In 1804, the State Legislature passed an act allowing the construction of
a bridge between the island and the mainland and subscriptions were
started for its erection; but the attempt failed for want of support. On
December 1, 1873, a toll bridge, erected by a stock company, was thrown
open to the public. It occupied the site of the bridge laid down on the
map of 1761. It was one thousand feet long with a draw of one hundred and
twenty feet; the draw being that of the original Coles, or Harlem Bridge,
at Third Avenue. A large part of the materials used in its construction
came from the old United States frigate North Carolina, which had
been condemned and sold by the National Government. This bridge was made a
free bridge in 1895, at the time of annexation, and was replaced by the
present fine steel structure, constructed at a cost of $200,000, not
including approaches, which was opened for public use on July 4, 1901.
Work had begun upon it in December, 1898.
Notwithstanding the ferry and the bridge, City Island had been more or
less isolated before the opening of Pelham Bay Park, in 1888, and the
advent of the bicycle. The inhabitants were engaged chiefly in fishing,
piloting, and oyster culture. The fishing was formerly very fine, and upon
a Sunday or other holiday the old bridge was lined with ardent anglers.
The demolition of the old wooden bridge has driven many of the anglers to
the wharf at the south end of the island, at the end of the island's one
long thoroughfare. In 1762, the owners of the island petitioned for four
hundred feet under water, and the land was granted to them by
Lieutenant-Governor Cadwallader Colden, May 27, 1763. When the new wharf
was built at the lower end of the island in 1901, we find Mrs. De Lancey
asserting her claims to the land under water as an inheritrix of the
ancient grant, but the case was decided against her. The nearest railroad
station is at Bartow, about two miles distant from the business activities
of the island, so the people have had to depend to a great extent upon
water communication.
There are several yacht clubs located here, and the activities connected
with the water constitute the principal business of the island. Several
shipyards build and repair pleasure vessels, and in the winter season many
of the crack yachts are laid up and housed here. Upon several occasions
the defenders of the America's Cup have been so laid up. The yachting
industry is principally with sailing vessels; in stormy weather, many
sailing vessels from the Sound find safe anchorage near the island until
the weather moderates.
There are numerous bathing pavilions, and the bathing is considered
healthful, as the island extends so far into the Sound, and the great
water-front of Pelham Bay Park with its lack of villages and towns
prevents the contamination of the water by sewage. Row-boats, sail-boats,
and small launches are plentiful; and there are dozens of places at which
they can be hired for sailing and fishing, while several of the hotels and
restaurants have more than a local fame. The fishing has always been
famous, though fallen off within the past quarter of a century, according
to the local anglers. Bolton gives some marvellous stories of successful
catches, both as to individual sizes of fish and to quantity, and as he
was a clergyman we are, perforce, obliged to believe him.
So self-contained and isolated were the population that when, after
annexation, so the story goes, one of the assistant superintendents of
schools of the city visited the local school for purposes of inspection,
the population waited upon him en masse and notified him that
they had been able to get along for over a century without supervision,
and that they did not propose to have their teachers and children bothered
by superintendents from the city. They have, however, conformed to the
inevitable, and now have a fine, modern building, in which the city
provides not only instruction for the children, but once a week, from
October to May, also furnishes a free lecture in the evening. The colonial
entrance to the school building seems peculiarly fitting to the locality.
Probably, the greatest object of interest on the island is the 'Macedonian
Hotel.' It bears the following legend:
This House is the remains of the the English Frigate 'Macedonian,'
captured on Sunday, October 25th, 1812, by the United States Frigate
'United States,' commanded by Capt. Stephen Decatur, U. S. N. The action
was fought in Lat. 24° N., Long. 29°30' W., that is about 600 miles N. W.
of the Cape De Verde Islands off the W. coast of Africa and towed to
Cowbay in 1874.
All of which is true, if we omit the first words of the statement: 'This
House is the Remains of'; thought I do not accuse the owner of the
hotel of intentionally misleading the public. Besides, the house is
the remains of the Macedonian, but not of the one captured in
Decatur's gallant action. The original British Macedonian was a
new ship at the time of her capture, and was afterward repaired and taken
into the United States Navy. She was blockaded in the Thames River,
Connecticut, until the close of the War of 1812, and then served as a
cruiser until 1828, after which she did nothing. In 1835, she was broken
up at the Norfolk, Virginia, navy yard. Meanwhile, Congress appropriated
funds to build a new ship of the same name, which was commenced in 1832
and launched at Gosport, Virginia, in 1836. She was rebuilt at Brooklyn in
1852, and broken up in 1874 at Cow Bay, Long Island, that graveyard of
condemned and obsolete vessels. For a time, this second, American-built
Macedonia was used as a practice ship at the United States Naval Academy
at Annapolis, where the figure-head of the original British frigate is
still preserved as a relic of the heroic days of our infant navy. I
I From The United States Naval Academy, by Park Benjamin; with
some slight changes and additions by the author."
Source: Jenkins, Stephen, The Story of The Bronx From the Purchase Made
by the Dutch from the Indians in 1639 to the Present Day, pp. 427-32 (NY
and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons The Knickerbocker Press 1912).
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:49 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
July 12, 2006.
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