Historic Pelham Blog Archive
August 2, 2006
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Wednesday, August 2, 2006
The 19th Century Grenzebach Homestead in Pelham
There once stood just off today's Boston Post Road near its
intersection with Fowler Avenue an old farmhouse known as the Grenzebach
Homestead. The photograph immediately below shows that farmhouse (with
steps leading to it) in 1889.

The house stood on the hill where the chapel of today's Our Lady of
Perpetual Help now stands. The homestead belonged to Henry Grenzebach. The
main house commanded a large farm with rolling meadows that extended from
today's Boston Post Road beyond today's Colonial Avenue, all the way to
the new Haven Main Line tracks.
According to former Town of Pelham Historian William R. Montgomery:
"The property was . . . transferred to Robert Mitchill and by him to David
L. Carson. . . . Afterward it was transferred to Dr. Fowler and . . .
[later] became the property of Mr. Wm. T. Grant."
Robert Mitchill served as "Superintendent" of the failed real estate
development planned by the Pelham Manor & Huguenot Heights Association.
Portions of the Grenzebach estate were intended for development as part of
that failed venture in the 1870s.
Dr. Edward P. Fowler of New York City bought the land for use as a summer
estate. While he owned the land, he allowed the first Pelham Country Club
(the predecessor to today's Wykagyl Country Club) to lease large parts of
the estate for use as a golf course. According to a book published in
celebration of the 1991 centennial of the Village of Pelham Manor:
"It was a sporty little course on the rolling meadows known as the 'Carson
Place.' The Carson house, originally the Henry Grenzebach home, was on the
hill where the Chapel of Our Lady of Perpetual Help now stands. It was
more than one hundred years old, and there was also a red hay barn, such
as we now find in the back country.
Dr. Edward P. Fowler of New York City bought the Carson place as a summer
home. He lived in the farmhouse and rented the grounds to the Pelham
Country Club for a golf course. There was a tiny clubhouse, for the keeper
and the clubs. It had originally been a carriage house on the farm.
After some time Dr. Fowler decided to divide his property into building
lots, and the Pelham Country Club had to look for a new home."
Source: Saunders, James B., ed., The Pelham Manor Story, p. 122 (Pelham,
NY: Village of Pelham Manor 1991).
Today's Fowler Avenue in Pelham Manor was named for Dr. Edward P. Fowler
who once owned the estate. Likewise Mitchill Place in Pelham Manor was
named for Robert Mitchill who also once owned the estate.
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 @
4:56 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
August 2, 2006.
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