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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 25, 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!
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Monday, September 25, 2006
As the Hutchinson River Grew More Fetid, James F. Secor Jr. of Pelham
Manor Raised a Stink in 1901
By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Hutchinson River that
borders parts of Pelham had grown fetid from the discharge of raw sewage
by Mount Vernon, the Village of Pelham (now known as the Heights), and the
Village of Pelham Manor. In about early 1901, the representative of the
estate of one large landowner in Pelham Manor joined with others to submit
a formal complaint to the Secretary of the State Board of Health in
Albany. The petition of complaint as well as the report of the health
inspector who investigated the situation appear immediately below.
"STATE BOARD OF HEALTH
MOUNT VERNON SEWAGE
-----
The Honorable State Board of Health, Albany, N. Y.:
Gentlemen -- The undersigned, residents and property holders on and
near the Hutchinson river and canal, partly in the city of New York and
partly in the city of Mount Vernon and town of Pelham, Westchester county,
New York, protest most urgently against the emptying of sewage into said
river and canal by the city of Mount Vernon, the villages of Pelham and
Pelham Manor, as the current is so sluggish that the sewage never reaches
the sound, but remains in said river and canal, and has become a terrible
nuisance and a great danger to the health of the inhabitants of the valley
in which said river and canal are located, and your petitioners request
that your Board take prompt action, in having pollution of said river and
canal stopped at once.
John Scharff
John Ebling, Sr.
George B. Heitzman
George Ploner
Edward Maloy
Chas. Dempster
Andrew Mortz
Cassimir Ploner
Tije Ploner
Thomas H. Hodge
Wm. F. Johnston
W. V. Thompson
Joseph Merkel
John Welsh
John Ruser
Jacob Sohl
Wm. H. Holley
Samuel G. Brundge
Richard J. McGowan
P. Garvey
David Foley
John Hanson
Thomas Beattie
Paul Kohn
John Burke
Willard Clendenin
Frank Waker
C. Langenstein
Lea Raynor
W. J. Elliott
H. Doyle
E P. Miller
Charles H. Zorn
Fritz Rumpf
A. S. Wildey
John Corrigan
Joseph E. Nosworthy
Stephen D. Hunt
Stephen P. Hunt
John W. Maloy
J. H. Bryant
R. Willims
J. McMullen
Thomas Manning
William Kenney
Thomas Matthews
Anton Kammerer
James F. Secor, Jr., for estate of Anna M. Secor
SCHENECTADY, N. Y., January 17, 1901
BAXTER T. SMELZER, Secretary State Board of Health, Albany, N. Y.:
Dear Sir -- I have to submit the following report on the examination into
the matter of the alleged discharge of sewage into the Hutchinson river by
the municipalities of Mount Vernon, Pelham and Pelham Manor, made in
accordance with your instructions of January 4th, transmitting the
complaint signed by John Scharff and numerous other residents of Mount
Vernon, Pelham and Pelham Manor.
I visited the locality on January 8th and called on James F. Secor Jr. one
of the gentlemen who had submitted the complaint referred to, and with him
inspected the Hutchinson river and canal from the river to the sound. I
found the facts to be as stated, viz., that the sewage from the city of
Mount Vernon and the villages of Pelham and Pelham Manor is being
discharged directly, and without purification, into the river and upper
end of the U. S. government canal recently opened to the sound. Although
at the time of my visit the weather was quite cold and the ground frozen
solidly, there was a decidedly perceptible odor from the stream, which was
reeking with sewage in all stages of decomposition. The natural flow of
Hutchinson river, or East Chester creek as it has been called in the past,
has been nearly all appropriated for the water supplies of New Rochelle
and Mount Vernon leaving only the slight amount of drainage occurring
below the intake of the Mount Vernon water supplies above mentioned as the
present flow in the stream. On the day of my visit the flow of the stream
was about 30 cubic feet of water per minute, and this was stated to me to
be considerably above the summer flow and not far from the ordinary flow.
The present work of the U. S. government canal has been extended to a
point just above the principal sewer outlet of the Mount Vernon system,
but below the outlets of the Pelham and the Pelham Manor systems.
Although the volume of standing water into which the Mount Vernon sewage
discharges is much greater than before the excavation of the canal, the
amount of water flowing out to the sound is no greater and, in fact, the
linear velocity of movement toward the sound is very much less than when
the stream occupied its natural bed, so that less sewage actually reaches
the sound and more is deposited in the reach of the canal near the sewer
outlet than before the canal improvement was made. The flow and ebb of the
tide in the canal from the sound simply causes the sewage-laden water to
swing back and forth above and below the sewer outlet, and but little if
it gets out to the sound.
From the conditions which I found to exist in the water of the canal both
above and below the main sewer outlet of the Mount Vernon sewer system and
in the natural stream itself below the sewer outlets from both Pelham and
Pelham Manor, I do not see how it could be otherwise than as the
complainants in their petition describe it during the summer season. One
of the citizens residing near the stream above the end of the canal has
brought an action against the city of Mount Vernon asking an injunction
against the continuation of the discharge of sewage into the stream on the
ground that it has been the cause of sickness in his family. I endeavored
to see the health officer of Pelham Manor to ascertain the condition of
the health of citizens along the stream, from an official source, but
found him away from home for the day, and have written him for this
information, but have received no reply.
An examination of the reports of the State Board of Health shows that
plans for a sewer system for the city, then village, of Mount Vernon were
approved by the State Board on December 16, 1887, and that plans for a
system of chemical precipitation disposal works were approved by the State
Board of Health on November 17, 1893. Subsequently a number of changes in
the sewer lines, particularly in the location of the outlet sewers, have
been approved by the State Board without reference to the plans for sewage
disposal.
Plans for a system of sewers and chemical precipitation disposal works for
the village of Pelham Manor were approved by the State Board of Health on
June 29, 1894, and plans for a change in the location of the disposal
works were approved by the State Board on September 17, 1896, and on
November 12, 1896. Neither of these disposal works for Mount Vernon nor
Pelham Manor have been constructed, nor any steps taken toward their
construction, and the present complaint is but one of a series of similar
ones that have been before the State Board on previous occasions.
In view of this fact and the fact that plans for the disposal of the
sewage from both these municipalities have been approved for several
years, and no steps have yet been taken to build the works, it would
appear clearly within the province of the State Board to direct the two
municipalities to carry out the execution of the plans for the disposal
system or, as an alternative, to procure and execute without further delay
an efficient system or means of disposal by some other plan. This
alternative is suggested in view of the fact that the plans for chemical
disposal works would not be considered antiquated, and no engineer of
standing would now recommend chemical treatment in this situation, and in
view of the further fact that effects have been made during the past year
or two to procure construction of a trunk sewer through the valley of the
Hutchinson river to and through the Borough of the Bronx, at the partial
expense of the city of New York.
I am, dear sir, very truly yours
OLIN H. LANDRETH
Consulting engineer"
Source: State of New York In Assembly No. 65, Twenty-First Annual
Report of the State Board of Health - State of New York, pp. 305 - 08
(Albany, NY: State of New York 1901).
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:58 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 25, 2006.
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