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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 18, 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.
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Aaron Burr Tries To Pull a Fast One in the 1790s and Must Sell His Farm
in Pelham
There is a fascinating story behind Aaron Burr and the brief time he
owned a farm in Pelham in the 1790s. Today's posting to the Historic
Pelham Blog will detail that story.
On February 26, 1790, Aaron Burr purchased a 146-acre farm in Pelham
commanded by a mansion that stood near today's "Split Rock Road" and
Boston Post Road known as "The Shrubbery". The home, built in the mid-18th
century, was a Pell family homestead owned for many years by Joshua Pell.
The 146-acre tract was part of a larger farm owned by Joshua Pell before
the Revolutionary War. Joshua Pell had a son, also named Joshua, who
served as a British officer in upstate New York during the Revolutionary
War.
Mark Gaffney, an attorney and local historian, has studied the Joshua Pell
"Jr." estate. (It seems that the father and son did not actually use the
designations "Sr." and "Jr.") He has determined that during the 1780s New
York State's Commissioners of Forfeiture sold the 146-acre tract to Isaac
Guion for 988 pounds. The land had been confiscated from Joshua Pell "Jr."
The will of Joshua Pell "Sr." entitled his children to receive monetary
legacies when his entire farm (including the 146-acre tract) was divided
in half and devised to two of his older sons: Joshua Pell "Jr." (who was
entitled to receive the northern half) and Edward Pell (who was entitled
to receive the southern half.) The children of Joshua Pell "Sr." filed a
lawsuit in which they were represented by Aaron Burr. As a consequence of
the lawsuit, in 1789 the New York State Treasurer paid Joshua Pell "Jr."
988 pounds in compensation for "wrongful taking" and paid Isaac Guion 125
pounds for his expenses.
Significantly, in 1790 Aaron Burr bought the very 146-acre tract at issue
in the lawsuit. He bought the northern half of Joshua Pell Sr.'s original
farm -- the Joshua Pell "Jr." tract -- from Nicholas and William Wright.
He acquired the land subject to the right of dower of Phoebe Pell , the
widow of Joshua Pell "Sr." For the complete text of this deed, see
Wed. June 14, 2006:
Text of Deed by Which Aaron Burr Acquired Pelham Lands in 1790.
Burr soon sold the tract to his step-son, Augustine J. F. Prevost. At
least one author has studied that sale and concluded that it was part of a
scheme by Aaron Burr to hide his involvement with the tract.
In his book Cipher / Code of Dishonor, Dr. Alan J. Clark analyzed the sale
and concluded that during the 1790s, Burr was involved in a secret scheme
to move the Boston Post Road (which, at that time followed today's
Colonial Avenue in Pelham) to its present location which passes near where
The Shrubbery once stood. At the same time (and as part of the same
scheme), Burr sought to form a toll road leading from Manhattan through
the West Farms area of what was then southern Westchester County. This, it
seems, was all part of a land speculation scheme in which Burr sought to
profit by acquiring the lands of poor farmers who found it difficult to
sustain large farms in the area in the aftermath of the devastation
wrought by the predations of two armies in the so-called "Neutral Ground"
between New York City and upper Westchester County during the
Revolutionary War. By moving the Boston Post Road so that it passed next
to his newly-acquired farm in Pelham and by placing a toll road in the
West Farms area near the Burr Family's ancestral home to shorten the
travel time from New York City, Burr hoped to increase the value of those
properties and, before the scheme became known, perhaps acquire other
properties in the area that likewise would increase in value.
In his fascinating book, Dr. Clark describes the scheme as follows:
"[I]n 1790 Aaron Burr purchased as a summer residence 'The Shrubbery',
manor house of the Pell family since 1740 on the Boston Post Road in
Pelham, New York for his bride, Theodosia Prevost married in 1782. Burr
conveyed the home to his stepson Augustine Frederick Prevost in 1794.
Next he entered on a scheme to move the New York to Boston road (now the
Boston Post Road) and form a toll road in the West Farms area of southern
Westchester County and Connecticut near his Burr family ancestral home.
Dr. Joseph Browne married Catherine (Caty) De Visme, Theodosia's half
sister, in a joint wedding with the Burrs at the Hermitage. He owned some
of the land on which the road was to be built. Dr. Brown had acquired it
from the estate of John Embree in 1785. Road commissioners, engineered
into the legislation for absolute control by Burr himself, were Dr. Joseph
Browne, George Embree (the family of the city of Embree deeded to Trinity
Church during the war and back to Effingham Embree on May 6, 1795) and
John Bartow, Jr. Bartow was a brother of Theodosia Bartow Prevost Burr.
The Lewis Morris family took all of the tolls from the new bridge over the
Harlem River at their Manor of Morrisania.
Burr began speculating in land of Rebels caught in the no man's land
between the armies in Westchester County. These poor farmers had been
unable to sustain a living on their land because of constant predation by
both sides during the War of Independence and after the war were unable to
sustain the vast land holdings without slave labor. They were forced to
sell their land at bargain prices. Burr was only too glad to oblige. With
the new road Burr and Browne would have convenient access to their newly
acquired lands from Manhattan making them more valuable to break up into
smaller farms for new immigrants. The enterprise was unpopular with the
local population because it required taking thir land for the new road.
Since Burr had been appointed Attorney General of the State of New York by
Governor Clinton in March, 1790, he was forced to sell the Shrubbery Manor
house, situated on the toll road, to his stepson Augustine Prevost, to
prevent discovery of his connection to the tolls."
Source: Clark, Alan J., Cipher / Code of Dishonor - Aaron Burr, an
American Enigma -- Trinity The Burrs Versus Alexander Hamilton and the
United States of America, p. 48 (Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse 2005).
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 @
4:59 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
July 18, 2006.
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