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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 6, 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.
Monday, November 6, 2006
The Source of Confusion Over the Date Thomas Pell Acquired the Lands
That Became the Manor of Pelham
For generations many authors and historians have mistakenly asserted
that Thomas Pell acquired the lands that became the Manor of Pelham from
local Native Americans on November 14, 1654. As indicated below, the
mistake seems to have first been made by Robert Bolton, Jr. in his History
of Westchester County first published in 1848. It has been replicated many
times since, even in recent publications. That assertion is wrong. As
Thomas Pell's copy of the treaty makes clear, he acquired the lands on
June 27, 1654 (old style; Julian Calendar).
It is clear that at the time the first edition of Bolton's History of
Westchester County was published in 1848 and even by the time of the
second edition of the publication in 1881, Robert Bolton, Jr. had never
seen a copy of Thomas Pell's Treaty. Both editions of his book provide
erroneous information about the contents of the treaty and state the
following:
"This grant was seen some years since by Mr. John Soulice of New Rochelle,
To his kindness we are indebted for the above particulars. The original is
supposed to be in the possession of the Pell family."
Source: Bolton, Jr., Robert, A History of the County of Westchester From
Its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I, p. 516 & n.a (NY, NY:
Alexander S. Gould 1848) (hereinafter "Bolton 1848"). See also
Bolton, Jr., Robert, The History of the Several Towns, Manors and Patents
of the County of Westchester, From Its First Settlement to the Present
Time Carefully Revised by Its Author Vol. II, p. 35 & n.a (C.W. Bolton,
ed., NY, NY: Chas. F. Roper pub. 1881) (hereinafter "Bolton 1881").
Despite not having the treaty before him, Bolton repeatedly asserts that
Thomas Pell acquired the lands on November 14, 1654. See,
e.g., Bolton 1848, Vol. I, p. 515; Bolton 1881, Vol. II, p. 34.
For a number of years I have wondered "where did Bolton get that date?" It
seems I may have come up with an answer.
Bolton located two interesting items in the 17th century records of the
Town of Westchester. He seems to have misinterpreted the first record as
suggesting that Pell acquired the lands from local Native Americans on
November 14, 1654. The record, however, seems to indicate that on June 15,
1664, the parties to the agreement (all inhabitants Westchester) confirmed
in writing that they (not Native Americans as
Bolton erroneously assumed) had reached an agreement with Thomas Pell
nearly ten years earlier on November 14, 1654.
I have transcribed the two records below and provide additional commentary
on the matter following the transcriptions. Bolton wrote in 1881:
"Upon the 16th of June, 1664, we find the inhabitants of Westchester
surrendering all their rights to Thomas Pell, in the following manner: --
'Know all men by these presents, that whereas there was an agreement made
on the fourteenth of November, 1654, between Thomas Pell and divers
persons, about a tract of land called Westchester, which was and
is Thomas Pell's, bounded as appears by an instrument bearing date as
above expressed, wherein the undertakers engaged the payment of a certaine
summe of money, present pay, for the said land expressed in the covenant,
by reason of some troubles which hindered the underwriters possession, the
agreement was not attended, the present inhabitants considering the
justnesse and right of the above said title of Thomas Pell, doe surrender
all their rights, titles, and claimes, to all the tract of land aforesaid,
to bee at the disposal of the said Thomas Pell, as being the true and
proper owner thereof.
Witness our hande, this 15th day of June in the yeere of Lord one thousand
six hundred and sixty four.
JOHN QUIMBIE
CONSIDER WOOD,
NICKOLAS BALLE,
JOHN WINTER,
RICHARD PONTON, his [sideways "X"] mark. [Page 286 / Page 287]
JOHN BARKER,
ROBERT HUESTIS,
EDWARD JESSOP,
WILL BEET,
JOHN LARENS,
SAMUEL BARRET, his B mark
THOMAS VAILLE, his [sideways "X"] mark.
WILLIAM JONES, his [sideways "V"] mark.
JOHN ACER,
JOHN WILLIAMS, his [sideways "Y"] mark.
SAMUEL PITCHER, his [sideways "T"] mark.
THOMAS MILLENER.
The same day Thomas Pell issued the following order to the inhabitants of
Westchester: --
'The major part of the inhabitants of West Chester having surrendered up
all their rightes, titles and claimes, of ye land, wch they pr tended, to
possesse, to Thomas Pell, the owner thereof (as appeareth by writing under
their hande, in the foregoing page), That the inhabitants might enjoy the
present improvements of Their labors, Their home Lotts, and planting
grounds with what meadowes were in times past laid out to each man's
particular to mow for this yeere I have desired Mr. Jessop, with the
Townsmen and freemen, That it may bee orderly attended. And in case men
want meadow to supply their pr esent necessity, they make Their addresses
to the aforesaid persons, for Their order, where to mow, to supply Their
present occasions.
Witness my hande This sixteenth day of June, in the yeer of our Lord one
thousand, six hundred, sixty-four."
p. me, THOMAS PELL."
Source: Bolton 1881, Vol. II, pp. 286-87 (citing "Westchester Town Court
Rec. Conn., A.D. 1665, p. 17." for the first record and "Westchester Town
Court Rec. Commg. A.D. 1665, p. 12." for the second record).
These two records suggest that on November 14, 1654 (old style; Julian
calendar), Thomas Pell entered into some form of agreement selling the
portion of his lands that became the little settlement of West Chester to
English settlers. Before the settlers paid (or completed payment) for the
lands, there arose "some troubles which hindered the underwriters
possession". That trouble, of course, was the intervention of Dutch
authorities who arrested and imprisoned many of the settlers claiming that
they had settled on land owned by the Dutch.
Ten years later, Pell seems to have "settled" this longstanding matter by
obtaining written confirmation from the inhabitants of the Town of West
Chester that he remained the owner of the land because they (or their
predecessors) had not paid Pell for the land. At the same time, Pell
affirmed in writing that the inhabitants could continue to "enjoy the
present improvements of Their labors, Their home Lotts, and planting
grounds with what meadowes were in times past laid out to each man's
particular". In short, he affirmed that he would not evict them from the
land.
Bolton seems to have confused the following reference in the first record:
"Know all men by these presents, that whereas there was an agreement made
on the fourteenth of November, 1654, between Thomas Pell and divers
persons, about a tract of land called Westchester, which was and is Thomas
Pell's, bounded as appears by an instrument bearing date as above
expressed". He seems to have assumed, erroneously, that the November 14,
1654 agreement "between Thomas Pell and divers persons" was an agreement
between Thomas Pell and Native Americans. It seems plain from
consideration of both records that the reference is actually to an
agreement among Thomas Pell and the original settlers of the area that
became the Town of West Chester.
Such an error must explain how Bolton reached the mistaken conclusion that
Thomas Pell acquired his lands from local Native Americans on November 14,
1654 -- an error perpetuated by many, many authors and local historians
even up to this day.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:55 AM
Comment
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November 6, 2006.
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