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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 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.
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Evidence Sheds Light on Location of An Early Home of John Pell, 2d Lord
of the Manor of Pelham
John Pell, often referenced as the "Second Lord of the Manor of
Pelham", was the nephew and principal legatee of Thomas Pell, First Lord
of the Manor of Pelham. Born in England in 1643, John Pell traveled to
America in 1670 following his uncle's death to claim his inheritance that
included the lands that formed the Manor of Pelham.
Pell lived in the Manor of Pelham. It is believed that he built a Manor
Home worthy of his vast land holdings. Its location has long been lost in
the mists of time. Some authorities have suggested two possible locations
for Pell's Manor House: (1) near today's Bartow-Pell Mansion; and (2) on
Rodman's Neck, also known as Pell's Point and Anhooke's Neck. See,
e.g., City History Club of New York, Historical Guide to the City
of New York, p. 210 (NY, NY: 1909) ("Not far away [from the Bartow-Pell
Mansion] is the site of the original Pell Manor House, though some say
that it was on the extreme end of Pelham Neck.").
Although it cannot be known with certainty, an analysis of the available
evidence suggests that John Pell may have lived in two homes in the area.
He may have lived for a time in the early 1670s in a home built by his
uncle, Thomas Pell (First Lord) located on Rodman's Neck. It seems
possible that John Pell later built a Manor House near today's Bartow Pell
Mansion.
Some Evidence John Pell Lived in a Manor House Near Today's
Bartow-Pell Mansion
There is at least some evidence that John Pell built a manor house within
the boundaries of today’s Bartow-Pell Estate. Its precise location,
however, has never been established with certainty.
The area certainly would have been suitable for such a manor house. As
Lockwood Barr noted in his History of the Ancient Town of Pelham published
in 1946:
“[a]ccess to the water was essential in those days, since the principal
mode of travel was by boat, there being no roads through the virgin
forests – only Indian trails. When he selected this site, Sir John must
also have been influenced by the magnificent view of the Sound – an
unbroken sweep of water between Hunter’s Island to the north, and Ann
Hook’s Neck on the south. Nearby his mansion Sir John built a small family
burying ground, where still rest many of the Pells.” Barr, Lockwood, A
Brief, But Most Complete & True Account of The Settlement of the Ancient
Town of Pelham Westchester County, State of New York Known One Time Well &
Favourably as the Lordshipp & Mannour of Pelham Also the Story of the
Three Modern Villages Called The Pelhams, p. 38 (Richmond, VA: The Dietz
Press, Inc. 1946) (hereinafter “Barr”).
Robert Bolton’s History of the County of Westchester, first published in
1848, is one of the few published works to record a location for the manor
house. Bolton wrote that it “stood south-west of the present residence”
known today as the Bartow-Pell Mansion. See Bolton, Jr., Robert,
A History of the County of Westchester From Its First Settlement to the
Present Time, Vol. I, p. 552 (NY: Alexander S. Gould 1848) (hereinafter
"Bolton, 1848").
Based on information including Bolton’s reference, a later author
concluded “the old manor house is believed to have stood closer to the
shore near the site of the Bartow-Pell Mansion.” See Kestenbaum,
Joy, The Bartow-Pell Expanded Landmark Site: A Historic Landscape Report,
pp. 4-5 (1991) (copy in the collections of The Bartow-Pell Mansion Museum
and The Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham; hereinafter “Kestenbaum”).
The same author noted that a “map of . . . 1708 which shows land in
Eastchester granted to a William Peartree and associates by Queen Anne
includes the area of Pelham Manor, New Rochelle, Eastchester; a mark which
would seem to connote the general location of the Pell Manor house is
roughly in this vicinity.” Id., p. 5.
It turns out that at least two early maps seem to show one or more
structures located in essentially the same place – a location only a few
yards to the southwest of the location of today’s Bartow-Pell Mansion. The
earliest map, created in 1708, is entitled “A Draft of the Lands In
Controversy between the Inhabitants of East Chester joined with William
Pear Tree & Surveyed & Laid Downe 7th August Graham Pell”. The map shows a
structure located in an area that would be slightly southwest of today’s
Bartow-Pell Mansion. (A copy of the map transcribed by hand may be found
in Hufeland, Otto, Anne Hutchinson’s Refuge in the Wilderness – The Second
Settler in Westchester County – Where She Settled in 1642 and Died in the
Following Year in Publications of the Westchester County Historical
Society, Vol. VII, pp. 18-19 (1929) (one of two maps between pp. 18 and
19; it has the caption “Copy of map of land in Eastchester granted to
William Peartree and Associates by Queen Anne in 1708. Original in
Secretary of State’s Office, Albany, N.Y.”)).
In addition, a very famous map created by an English engineer and
cartographer named Charles Blaskowitz in 1776 also contains an interesting
reference. The map is entitled “A Survey of Frog’s Neck and the Rout [sic]
of the British Army to the 24th of October 1776, under the Command of His
Excellency The Honorable William Howe, General and Commander in Chief of
His Majesty’s Forces”. The map is maintained in the Map Division of the
Library of Congress although a very high resolution image of the map is
available via the American Memory Collection of the Library of Congress.
Go to
http://memory.loc.gov/ and search for Frog’s Neck to access the
bibliographic data about, and images of, the map. It was intended to show
troop movements leading up to the Battle of White Plains and is considered
by historians to be a particularly accurate map of the area for the time.
The Blaskowitz Map seems to show a structure with at least two additional
outbuildings located in the same place – southwest of the area where
today’s Bartow-Pell Mansion is located.
Even without considering the Blaskowitz Map, historian Joy Kestenbaum
concluded in 1991 in a report she prepared for the City of New York Parks
& Recreation as follows:
“Thus, the old manor house is believed to have stood closer to the shore
near the site of the Bartow-Pell Mansion and within the boundaries of the
Expanded Landmark Site.” Kestenbaum, pp. 4-5.
Some Evidence that John Pell Lived on Rodman's Neck
The evidence cited above seems compelling. There is interesting evidence,
however, that shortly after his arrival in the Manor of Pelham John Pell,
2d Lord of the Manor of Pelham lived on what is known today as Rodman's
Neck -- an area long called "Pell's Point", a description quite revealing.
The Records of the Town of Eastchester contain a document dated May 17,
1671 that references "Mr John Pell of ye manor of Annhocks neck". The
document reads, in its entirety
"Whereas there is a new road laid out for the common highway into New
England neare Eastchester the which is sayd to be much more conveniant
than ye former as well for strangers and travelers as ye inhabitants But
yet by some persons hath been objected against and a right understanding
may be had hereupon in having ye sayd wayes viewed by knowing and
indifferent persons Mr John Pell of ye manor of Annhocks neck and Mr. John
Richbell of Momoroneck are hereby appointed and desired either by
themselves or some understanding persons in such affairs who they shall
employe to take a view of ye said roads or highways within three weeks
after ye date hereof and to make reports unto me which of them they shall
judge most conveniant to be maintained the which thereupon shall be
confirmed and allowed of accordingly Given thereupon shall be confirmed
and allowed of accordingly Given nder [sic] my hand at Forte Jeames in New
York this 17th Day of May 1671
Fran Lovelace
This presenc testifieth Moses Hoit Snr have several parcels of upland as
herein certified which their butts and bounds one pec [piece] of land by
the second meado"
Source: Records of the Town of Eastchester, Book Two, p. 24 1/2
(Typewritten manuscript of records transcribed by Eastchester Historical
Society 1964) (copy in author's collection).
There seems little doubt that Anhooke's Neck (referenced as "Annhock's
neck" in the document quoted above) encompassed the area now known as
Rodman's Neck. The area around today's Bartow-Pell has never been recorded
as part of Annhooke's neck. Rather, that label has long been applied to
what is known today as Rodman's Neck but has also been called Pell's
Point.
Interesting, there is evidence that Thomas Pell, First Lord of the
Manor of Pelham, built a house on Annhooke's Neck before his death in the
fall of 1669. On October 13, 1669, the Court of Assize issued an order
appointing John Richbell, William Leyden and Samuel Drake to take an
inventory of the estate of Thomas Pell. The order referenced Thomas Pell
as being of "Ann Hook's Neck". It contained the following reference:
"Whereas, Mr. Thomas Pell of Ann Hook's Neck, is lately deceased, and left
a considerable estate in this government, of which no inventory is as yet
returned." See Bolton 1848, Vol. I, p. 524 (citing Assize Rec.
Albany, vol. ii. 78).
The reference to Thomas Pell as being "of Ann Hook's Neck" seems to
take on more significance upon review of the inventory of the Pell's
estate at the time of his death. That inventory includes a reference to
Pell's "House and land in Westchester". Id., p. 527.
Considered in its entirety, this evidence suggests that Thomas Pell,
First Lord of the Manor, built a home that stood on Annhooke's Neck at the
time of his death in the fall of 1669. John Pell, his nephew, is
referenced in the records of the Town of Eastchester as being "of ye manor
of Annhocks neck" less than two years later. This suggests that when he
arrived in the Manor of Pelham to claim his inheritance after his uncle's
death, he lived -- at least briefly -- in the house his uncle had built.
Yet, tradition says that John Pell had a manor house near today's
Bartow-Pell Mansion. Moreover, there is some evidence to support that a
structure stood in that area on lands owned by John Pell near the turn of
the eighteenth century. A reasonable conclusion, it seems, would be that
John Pell lived in his uncle's home on Annhooke's Neck until he built his
manor house near today's Bartow-Pell Mansion.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:00 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 11, 2006.
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