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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 1, 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.
Friday, September 1, 2006
An 1889 "Tour" of Pelham Bay and Areas Then Part of the Town of Pelham
In 1889 a man named Joel Cook published a book entitled "An Eastern
Tour At Home". In it he included a brief description of a "tour" of Pelham
Bay and areas that, at the time, were part of the Town of Pelham. Though
the brief "tour" is filled with errors when it attempts to recount the
history of the area (particular when it describes the murder of Anne
Hutchinson), it nonetheless provides an interesting glimpse of the area
shortly before it was annexed to become part of New York City. Today's
posting to the Historic Pelham Blog transcribes the pertinent text from
his book.
"THE GLORIES OF PELHAM BAY.
At the entrance of East River Into Long Island Sound the peninsula of
Throgg's Neck is the northern headland. Beyond this the waters of the
sound have deeply indented the New York shore, and there is thrust out the
green peninsula of Pelham Neck. All this is some distance east of the
Bronx in Westchester county, but it is a region soon to be 'annexed.'
Eastchester Bay is on the southern side of the neck, and Pelham Bay beyond
it, while immediately in front is City Island, reached by a long
drawbridge. To the north is Hunter's Island, to which another bridge gives
access. This Hunter's Island, and more than two square miles of the hills
and meadows adjoining on the mainland, make the park of Pelham Bay. Many
old mansions are scattered over this domain, which belonged to the
Hunters, the Lorillards, Potters, and other families. The island belonged
to many generations of the Hunters, and near the bridge a large gateway
keeps out intruders, having on one of the marble gate-posts 'Hunter's
Island' carved in plain characters. Years ago another wealthy man bought
this island, and, these words offending him, he brought up a marble-cutter
from New York who chiselled them off, and carved instead the words
'Higgins's Island.' But Higgins was ultimately gathered unto his fathers,
and the next owner, revering him less than the antiquity of the place, had
'Higgins' eliminated, and 'Hunter's Island' again stands our in bold
relief. The gate-post has become very thin under this treatment, but the
city of New York will probably now spare it. The western edge of Pelham
Bay Park is Hutchinson's river, which flows down into Eastchester Bay and
recalls the days of the Salem witchcraft. Poor Anne Hutchinson fled here
to escape burning as a witch, and on City Island built a hut on a little
cape known to this day as Anne Hook. She lived there peacefully for a
year, harming nobody and declining every invitation of the islanders to
stir from her home. One morning a young girl went to visit Anne, but found
the hut in ashes, and before the door lay the poor woman where she had
been tomahawked and scalped by the Indians. No one has dared to build a
house on Anne Hook since, for many are the tales of how on bleak and rainy
nights the phantom Indians sneak through the underbrush and shriek a
ghostly requiem as they dance around the site of the burning hovel.
Just beyond this park is the famous Glen Island, where John H. Starin on
his excursion-steamers takes nearly a million people every summer, showing
the popularity of all the resorts on these pleasant shores. Fishing,
boating, and bathing are provided on the waters, and the sinuosities of
the shores of islands and mainland provide many cozy nooks, so that villas
are dotted in most favorable localities. From the hills forming the higher
portions of the park the view over the sound for miles in both directions,
and upon the hazy land beyond, is very fine. Magnificent old oaks and elms
adorn the forests that were thrifty young trees before the Dutch came to
New York. Most of the estates have been well kept, so that landscapes have
been preserved and improved for generations. There is every variety of
scenery -- hill and woodland, meadow and plain, and splendid water-views
bordered with the delicious green that clings around the myriad bays and
coves of the sound and its pleasant islands. Thus the metropolis expands,
and having learnt, with growing wealth, the charms and benefits of
bringing the county into the town, it makes these parks before the rows of
city buildings reach them. Such is the grand environment of Nature's
loveliness that is being developed around and in the steadily-expanding
domain of northern New York City."
Source: Cook, Joel, An Eastern Tour At Home, pp. 103-05 (Philadelphia, PA:
David McKay, Publisher 1889 (reprinted from The Philadelphia Public
Ledger).
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 @
5:00 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 1, 2006.
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