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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 5, 2007
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
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BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
More About the Opening of the Harlem and Portchester Railroad Line
Through Pelham in 1873
Yesterday I published to the Historic Pelham Blog a brief item regarding
construction of the railroad line in 1873 that came to be known as the New
Haven Branch Line. See Tuesday, September 4, 2007:
Construction of the New Haven Branch Line in 1873.
Although construction of the line never led to the quick development of a
suburban settlement as planned by local residents, there was a great deal
of excitement about the potential for the area at the time. One article
that appeared in 1874 described the opening of the line and the excitement
it generated. That article is transcribed below, followed by a citation to
its source.
"WESTCHESTER COUNTY PROPER.
ALONG THE LINE OF THE HARLEM AND PORTCHESTER AND OTHER RAILROADS.
The south-easterly quarter of Westchester County, embracing the towns of
Portchester, Rye, Harrison, Mamaroneck, and White Plains, bounded on the
west by the Bronx River, and on the east and south by Long Island Sound,
has not yet been opened to popular suburban settlement, and, with the
exception of the few towns on the line of the New-York and New-Haven, the
New-York and Harlem, and the Harlem and Portchester Railroads, is
unavailable to the masses. Throgg's Neck, a small peninsula in the town of
Westchester, is, perhaps, the most desirable location in all this section
of the county because of its comparative proximity to the Metropolis, and
its charming situation and topography. This peninsula is bounded east by
the Sound and Pelham Bay, and on the west by a rivulet known as
Westchester Creek. The land is rich, rolling, and ridgy, and is occupied
chiefly by large estates of from twenty-five to fifty acres, owned by
wealthy New-Yorkers, and held by them as private Summer seats. Among them
are Lorillard Spencer, Geo. T. Adee, the heiress of the estate of John D.
Wolf, Francis Morris, Jacob Lorillard, Claiborne Ferris, Lawrence
Waterbury, John Hunter, Peter Lorillard, and Daniel Coster. With such
families as those in possession it will be many years before the section
is opened for settlement, and they retain it as a sort of exclusive
aristrocatic suburb of their own. It is at present approachable only by
the Portchester Railroad, which has a couple of small local stations here,
and by a local steam-boat ferry. Of course it is at all times accessible
to its present holders by carriage, over the new boulevards in the lower
portions of the Twenty-third Ward, the old Boston Post road, and other
rural thoroughfares. That section lying south of this territory from a
line running east and west from Lydig's Mill, on the Bronx, to the mouth
of the Bronx River, and embracing North New-York and Port Morris, is, as a
rule, low and unfitted for residences. A great portion of it has lately
been laid out and improved by the Port Morris Land Improvement Company,
but as it has good water frontage it will be almost wholly developed to
commercial purposes, contingent upon the completion of the Hell Gate
improvement. In the section lying west of Throgg's Neck and east of the
Bronx, which is traversed by the Harlem Railroad, the old Westchester
Turnpike, Fordham and Pelham avenues, and the Boston road, settlements
have been very general about Olinville, Williamsbridge, now called Jerome,
and Bronxdale. Land hereabouts ranges all the way from $800 to $2,500 per
acre, and is generally held in large parcels by people who have the
capital to wait for appreciation of values. Within the past four years
there have been auction sales held at Mamaroneck and Rye, in which 3,000
lots were sold, but a great deal of the property went off in plots, and
has not been improved in any way, but is 'held for a rise.'
COMMUTATION RATES.
The great trouble with the eastern and southern part of Westchester County
is that it is not sufficiently opened by trunk railroads. Local railroads
lack the amount of traffic which enables the companies to run frequent
trains, and the growth of places along their lines is comparatively slow
in consequence. In order to live in any remote suburb the people must have
frequent facilities of communication. The rates of commutation by the
Harlem Railroad seem scarcely to realize, as yet, the popular estimate of
cheap rapid transit. The tickets are issued in packages of 100, good from
three months, and the limit of the commutation route is Pawling. For all
present or immediately prospective purposes White Plains is the limit of
suburban travel of which commuters may avail themselves. Mott Haven is
about five miles from Forty-second Street Depot, and the tickets are sold
at $8 per 100, which would be equal to twenty-six cents per day to and
from the City Hall. To Melrose, six miles, the commutation fare is nine
cents; to Morrisania Station, One Hundred and Sixty-seventh street, ten
cents; to Tremont Station, seven miles, twelve cents; to Fordham, eight
and a half miles, fifteen cents; to Jerome, ten and one half miles,
sixteen cents; to Woodlawn Heights, fifteen miles from the City Hall, or
eleven and one-half miles from the Grand Central Depot, sixteen cents; to
Mount Vernon, Bronxville, and Tuckahoe, the same fare, sixteen cents,
though they range from one and one-half to five miles further on the
route. These stations have from thirty to sixty trains daily, and are
within from twenty to thirty-two minutes of Forty-second street. As far
north as Woodlawn Heights stations have the advantage of the double
service of trains of the Harlem and the New-Haven roads, as both lines use
the same track to the diverging point of the routes at the latter station.
The Yonkers division of the Hudson River Railroad extends on the west sid,
from the old Thirtieth Street Depot, north, and runs about forty trains
daily, connecting the City with Manhattan, the stations at Carmansville,
Fort Washington (One Hundred and Seventy-sixth street,) Inwood, Spuyten
Duyvil, Riverdale, Yonkers, Hastings, Dobb's Ferry, Irvington and
Tarrytown, which is twenty-five miles distant, and is available as a
suburban residence only for a very select class. The whole of these
stations, up to and including Riverdale, are now within the City
boundaries, the distance to this last place being twelve miles, and the
commutation fare eighteen cents per trip. These rates are reductions of
about twenty to twenty-four per cent. on the regular single fare prices of
tickets."
Source: Westchester County Proper. Along the Line of the Harlem and
Portchester and Other Railroads, N.Y. Times, May 31, 1874, p. 4, col. 3.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:48 AM
Comment
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Posting for September 5, 2007.
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