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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 6, 2007
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, February 6, 2007
October 14, 1772 Quaker "Marriage Contract" of Bersheba Pell of the
Manor of Pelham and Moses Quinby
During the 1920s, a resident of the Village of North Pelham named
Adolph Fassler purchased a fascinating document from an unidentified "New
York City Collector" at a sale of historical documents. It was a Quaker
"Marriage Contract" dated October 14, 1772 between Bersheba Pell of the
Manor of Pelham and Moses Quinby of Westchester.
Mr. Fassler donated the Marriage Contract to the Town of Pelham. It was
displayed to residents of the Town during the 1954 Tercentennial
celebration of the signing of the Pell-Siwanoy Treaty. An article about
the document appeared in the January 21, 1954 issue of The Pelham Sun.
The text of that article is transcribed below.
"Quinby-Pell Marriage Contract
Among the interesting historical relics to be featured in the observance
of the Tercentennial Anniversary of the signing of the Thomas Pell Treaty
with the Indians, is a marriage contract, made in 1772 by Bersheba Pell, a
descendant of Thomas Pell [sic], first proprietor of the Manor of Pelham,
and Moses Quinby, of Westchester. The certificate, which is remarkably
preserved, although it is 182 years old, was recently presented to the
Town of Pelham by Adolph Fassler purchased it from a New York City
Collector at a sale of historical documents about thirty years ago. The
handsomely engrossed scroll is the Quaker marriage contract entered into
prior to the Revolutionary War, by the granddaughter of Thomas Pell, Third
Lord of the Manor, and her Quaker swain, son of Aron and Elizabeth Quinby
of Westchester Village. Miss Pell was the daughter of Caleb and Mary Pell,
who, at the time of the wedding, 'late of the Manor of Pelham, deceased'.
The marriage took place at the old Quaker meeting house in Purchase Oct.
14, 1772.
The certificate reads as follows: 'Whereas Moses Quinby of Westchester
County and Province of New York, son of Aron and Elizabeth Quinby of
Westchester, and Bersheba Pell, daughter of Caleb and Mary Pell, late of
the Manor of Pelham, deceased, in the County and Province aforesaid,
having signified their intention of Marriage with each other, before
several monthly meetings of the people called Quaker, held at Purchase in
the province of New York, according to the good order amongst them, and
having consent of parents, their said proposals of marriage were allowed
by the said meetings.
Marriage Vows
'Now these are to certify whom it may concern that for the full
accomplishment of their said intensions, this Fourteenth Day of the Tenth
Month called October, in the year of our Lord, one thousand and seven
hundred and seventy-two, they, the said Moses Quinby and Bersheba Pell
appeared in a Public Meeting of the said people at Westchester, and said
Moses Quinby taking the said Bersheba Pell by the hand, did in solemn
manner, openly declare that he took her, the same Bersheba Pell to be his
wife, promising through the Lord's assistance to be unto her a loving and
faithful husband until death do separate them, and then and there to the
same assembly, the said Bersheba Pell did in right manner declare that she
took him, the same Moses Quinby to be her husband, promising through the
Lord's assistance to be unto him a loving and faithful wife, until death
should separate them, or in words to that propose, and Moreover, the said
Moses Quinby and Bersheba Pell, (she according to custom assuming the name
of her husband) as further confirmation thereof did then and there to
these presents set their hands, and we whose names are hereunto also
subscribed, being present at the solemnization of the said marriage and
subscription, have as witnesses hereunto set out [sic] hands, the day and
year above written.'
Appended are the signatures of the 38 witnesses, including a Caleb Pell,
and a Phila Pell. The bride signed her name 'Bersheba Quinby.'
Pelham Manor Village historian Lockwood Barr's Investigation into the
family history of the early Pells, failed to show any record of the
wedding. Bolton's history of Westchester, states that the daughter of
Caleb and Mary Ferris Pell was christened Julia, but it might be assumed
that the name 'Bersheba' could have been prompted by the name of her aunt
Bathesheba Pell, daughter of Thomas Third Lord of the Manor, who married
Theopholis Bartow. Their son John was the builder of the famous Bartow
Mansion, situated close to the site of the original Pell home, in what is
now Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx. The Bartow mansion on the Shore Road is
now the home of the International Garden Club, and during the
administration of the late Fiorello La Guardia, as Mayor of the City of
New York, it was used as the summer city 'White House'.
Thomas Pell Third Lord of the Manor, married an Indian Princess, daughter
of the reigning Indian Chief of Westchester, according to Bolton. They had
ten children, Ann, John, Joshua, Philip, Caleb, Joseph, Mary, Sarah,
Bathsheba and Thomas.
Caleb and Mary Ferris Pell had six children: Caleb, Elija, Julia,
(believed to be the Bersheba of the marriage contract) Ann, Mary and
Euphemia.
The late Stephen H. P. Pell, of Ticonderoga, N. Y. who was the historian
of the modern Pell family, the breaking up of the Manor of Pelham, was
done by Thomas, third Lord, who, instead of leaving the Manor intact to
his eldest son, and giving the other sons a few hundred dollars, divided
it among them all, with the result that none of them had enough to be of
any importance. In 'Ancient Town of Pelham, N. Y.,' Lockwood Barr states
'Tradition in the Pell family relates that during the Revolution, members
of the family being Loyalist, fled to New York City [f]or British
protection, and that the original Manor House, erected close to the site
of the present Bartow mansion, being empty was burned to the ground, as
were so many mansions in the 'Neutral Ground'."
Source: Quinby-Pell Marriage Contract, Pelham Sun, Jan. 21, 1954,
p. 3.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:42 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
February 6, 2007.
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