Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Friday, February 22, 2019

More About The Pelham Manor Tribune (1893 - 1896), One of the Earliest Newspapers Published in Pelham


The Pelham Manor Tribune was one of the earliest newspapers published in the Town of Pelham, second only to The Gazette (published in 1890).  The Pelham Manor Tribune circulated between November 1893 and January 1896 only a couple of years after the founding of the Village of Pelham Manor in 1891.  I have written about The Pelham Manor Tribune on a number of occasions.  See, e.g.:



I also have written about early newspapers published in the Town of Pelham.  See the extensive bibliography with links to such articles at the end of today's Historic Pelham article.

Today’s Historic Pelham article provides a more detailed history of The Pelham Manor Tribune as well as information about its editor and the Pelham Manor family that supported the nearly three-year venture.

Introduction

The Pelham Manor Tribune began in November, 1893.  Indeed, on November 18, 1893, the New Rochelle Pioneer published a brief "welcome" to The Pelham Manor Tribune, stating "We desire to welcome to our exchange list, a new contemporary in the person of the Pelham Manor Tribune. The Tribune is devoted to the local news of the Manor, and is issued bi-weekly."  Source: [Untitled], New Rochelle Pioneer, Nov. 18, 1893, Vol. XXXIIII, No. 33, p. 4, col. 2.   

The fact that the New Rochelle Pioneer welcomed the new Pelham Manor newspaper should come as no surprise.  Though published and circulated in Pelham Manor, the new newspaper was printed in New Rochelle by the presses of the New Rochelle Pioneer.  It should be noted that, perhaps in recognition of the creation of a new newspaper on the "mainland" part of the Town of Pelham, only a few weeks later City Islander Orrin F. Fordham established The City Island Drift, a weekly community newspaper “devoted to the interests of the Town of Pelham and City Island.”

Pelham Manor resident William George Landsman Beecroft founded The Pelham Manor Tribune.  He was, of course, a member of the prominent Beecroft family of the Village of Pelham Manor.  See Fri., Nov. 11, 2016:  John Robert Beecroft and the Beecroft Family of Pelham Manor.    Born in 1874, at the time he founded the paper William G. L. Beecroft was eighteen years old.  The masthead of his newspaper included a slogan that summarized his philosophy as a journalist:  “This paper will be the friend of the Village in morals and truth, independent of party prejudice.” 

Who Was William George Landsman Beecroft?

Information about William George Beecroft:
Photo and basic info:  http://becraft.info/becraft/i6602.htm#2

William George Landsman Beecroft was the second child of John Robert Beecroft and Elizabeth Corbett who were married on January 16, 1872 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois.  William was born there on August 16, 1875.  His father emigrated to the United States from England in the 1860s and became an early and prominent resident of the settlement of Pelham Manor as he and Elizabeth raised William and other young members of the family.  Like his son William would be later, John Robert Beecroft was a journalist.  For a few years following his arrival in the United States he was employed with the publisher A. S. Barnes & Company in Chicago and as a manager of the Scribner Publishing Company of Chicago.  In May, 1879 he joined the Century Company, became an editor of the Century Magazine and thereafter moved his family to New York where the family lived in Flushing Queens.  In about 1881, John Robert Beecroft and his wife moved their family to Pelham Manor.   

John Beecroft was an active member of the community.  In addition to his service as a School Board Trustee and as President of the School Board, he also was an active member of Christ Church in Pelham Manor, located virtually across the street from his home.  He served as a Warden of the Church.  He also was a member of the New York Athletic Club, The Church Club, The Polo Club, and the Congregational Club.  He also was a Free Mason with the Huguenot Lodge, F. and A. M. of New Rochelle.

The couple’s son, William, and his three brothers became known throughout Pelham as the “Beecroft Boys” as they grew up in the little settlement.  By the 1890s the family lived in the home that still stands at 1382 Pelhamdale Avenue.


The Beecroft Family Home that Still Stands at 1382 Pelhamdale
Avenue Where The Pelham Manor Tribune Was Prepared for
Printing.  Portions of the Home Are Believed to Have Been Built
in About 1790.  NOTE:  Click on Images To Enlarge.

The Brief Life of The Pelham Manor Tribune

William G. L. Beecroft founded The Pelham Manor Tribune in November, 1893.  He served as editor while one of his younger brothers, Edgar Beecroft, played the day-to-day operational roles of Advertising Manager (and, later, Manager).  William’s older brother, Fred, served as a “business manager” of the venture during summer vacations when he returned home from college.

Truth be told, as one account has noted, “the entire Beecroft family” was involved in the venture.  The venture operated out of the family home at 1382 Pelhamdale Avenue although the newspaper was physically printed in New Rochelle.  The subscription rate was fifty cents per year.  In addition to revenue derived from at least a hundred subscribers, the newspaper sold advertising bought principally by New Rochelle merchants and, occasionally, by New York City merchants.  Advertisers included Daniel J. Kennedy, a “general contractor of sheet metal and hot air work;” Coutant’s Drug Store in New Rochelle, J. L. Eick, a horse harness and collar maker who also was a carriage trimmer; E. Lamben, a dealer in “fancy groceries;” Kusche’s Ideal Market; William Downing, a horse shoer; Huyler’s Candy Store in New York City; and George T. Davis, an undertaker and embalmer. 

After the short run of only two years and two months, on January 4, 1896, William George Landsman Beecroft announced that the issue would be the newspaper’s last.  In an editorial that appeared in that January 4 issue, Beecroft wrote:

“With this issue we present our last attempt at journalism in Pelham Manor.  We sincerely hope that our subscribers have derived as much pleasure from reading our simple little sheet, as the editor has enjoyed writing it.  We have several reasons for allowing the Tribune to sink into [archives], important among which is the fact that Pelham Manor is not yet a large enough field to make the conducting of a newspaper a financial success.  For, although we have enjoyed almost three years of prosperity, we are obliged to admit that our advertisers have patronized the Tribune more on account of the enterprise than because of the benefits which they might derive from advertising in its columns. Another, and by no means secondary reason that makes a newspaper unprofitable in Pelham Manor, is that some of the people do not seem to appreciate the fact that a newspaper in a small village, is a great enhancement to property value and consequently do not give the paper the support it deserves.  If there are any of our subscribers who feel that their fifty cent investment has not been a profitable one, their money will be returned on application.  It has been the endeavor of the management to present a sheet free from scandal and small talk, and to include within its pages only such material as could be read by our youngest reader to advantage.  How far we have succeeded we leave to you, but we can say that in our three years of existence, we have never had a single complaint, nor has the editor ever been horse-whipped (the fate of many an editor).  Kind reader, au revoir.”

With that, the first newspaper published in the Town of Pelham folded.


William George Landsman Beecroft, Founder and Editor of
The Pelham Manor Tribune, in an Undated Photograph (Ca.
1910).  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

After closing The Pelham Manor Tribune, William G. L. Beecroft continued his work in the field of journalism as dramatic editor of the New York Press.  He interrupted his work to join the United States Naval Reserve on May 14, 1898 to serve a one-year term during the Spanish American War.  He served during the War on the USS Jason, the last of the monitors, though he saw no action.  With the end of the war he received an early honorable discharge September 6, 1898.


Record of Military Service of William George Landsman Beecroft
During the Spanish American War.  Source:  Abstracts of Spanish
American War Military and Naval Service Records, 1898-1902.
Series B0809 (34 Volumes), New York State Adjutant General's
Office, New York State Archives, Albany, New York.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.

On Wednesday, June 24, 1903, Beecroft married Frederika Bette Schmidt.  See A DRAMATIC EPISODE” in The Fourth Estate, No. 487, p. 4, col. 4 (NY, NY:  Jun. 27, 1903).  The couple had at least six children:  William George Landsman Beecroft Jr., Elizabeth Valerie Beecroft, Richard Edgar Beecroft, Barbara Beecroft, Emily West Beecroft, and Mary Jane Beecroft.  

According to an article in The Pelham Sun (quoted in full below), after working as the dramatic critic of the New York Press, Beecroft did syndicate work under Ervin Wardman.  Beecroft was an avid sportsman and outdoorsman.  He became a writer for the leading outdoors magazine at the time, Forest & Stream.  He became the corporation secretary and, then, an editor of Forest & Stream .  (The magazine later was bought by Field & Stream magazine.)  Thereafter he became, for a short time, an advertising agency executive associated with Maclay & Mullally, Inc., a general advertising agency headquartered in New York City.  There he had charge of the department of general advertising.  Source:  “Ad Field Personals” in The Editor & Publisher, Vol. 49, No. 37, p. 25, cols. 1-2 (NY, NY:  Feb. 24, 1917).  

During World War I, Beecroft worked for the Hercules Powder Company.  After the war, Beecroft was appointed editor and general manager of the American Banker.  Source:  “Change on American Banker” in Editor & Publisher, Vol. 52, No. 18, p. 30, col. 2 (NY, NY:  Oct. 2, 1919).  He moved his family to Darien, Connecticut.

Beecroft worked at American Banker until 1920 when he retired.  When Beecroft finally retired from journalism, he became a fruit farmer with a farm on West Chestnut Avenue in Vineland, New Jersey.  According to family tradition, his son Richard Edgar Beecroft was a sickly child.  When doctors told the family that the child needed "country air," Beecroft retired from journalism and moved to the Vineland, New Jersey farm.  

William Beecroft died in January, 1924 as the result of a tragic accident.  His wife taught at the New Jersey State School for the Feeble Minded Woman.  He and his wife were scheduled to attend a fund-raising entertainment at the school.  An acquaintance named Matt Unsworth, a mason by trade, gave the couple a ride in his truck to the school.  Because the mason's truck was so dirty, William stood in the rear of the vehicle to keep his clothing from getting dirty.  On the way to the school, the driver swerved to avoid debris in the roadway.  William was thrown from the truck and badly injured.  He was taken to the hospital in Vineland where he died two days later.  He was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Vineland, Cumberland County, New Jersey.

Role of The Pelham Manor Tribune in an Interesting Legal Dispute Near the Newspaper’s End

In 1896, the tiny four-page newspaper played an interesting role in a legal dispute between a group of Pelham Manor residents, led by the Secor family, who opposed trolley lines in the Village of Pelham Manor and a trolley car company and other Pelham Manor residents who favored such trolley lines.  Indeed, a number of Pelham residents fought bitterly to keep trolley tracks out of Pelham Manor. There were at least two lawsuits that resulted in reported decisions in which Pelham Manor residents sought to block construction of the Toonerville Trolley tracks through Pelham Manor along Pelhamdale Avenue.  One was McLean v. Westchester Electric Ry. Co., et al., 25 Misc. 383, 55 N.Y.S. 556 (Sup. Ct. Kings Co. 1898).  The other was Anna M. Secor v. Board of Trustees of Village of Pelham Manor, et al., 6 A.D. 236, 39 N.Y.S. 993 (App. Div. 2d Dep’t 1896).  The second suit involved arguments concerning publication of notice in The Pelham Manor Tribune.  I have written before about the monumental fight to block trolley lines in the Village of Pelham Manor.  See Tue., Apr. 19, 2005:  Pelham Manor Residents Fight Construction of the Toonerville Trolley Line. 
https://historicpelham.blogspot.com/2005/04/pelham-manor-residents-fight.html  Interestingly, the lawsuit that concerned The Pelham Manor Tribune provided interesting insight regarding both the tiny Village of Pelham Manor and its tiny four-page newspaper. 

In 1895, the Westchester Electric Railway Company submitted an application to the Board of Trustees of the Village of Pelham Manor to permit it to lay trolley tracks through the village along Pelhamdale Avenue.  On December 2, 1895, the Board took the matter under advisement but adopted a resolution setting January 4, 1896 as the date the application would be considered.  To comply with statutory notice requirements, the Board arranged for publication of notice of the hearing on the railroad company's application for four successive weeks in the weekly local newspaper, The Pelham Manor Tribune.  Thereafter, the Board of Trustees approved the application of the Westchester Electric Railroad Company.

Anna M. Secor -- whose family owned a large tract of land in Pelham Manor -- commenced an action and obtained an injunction prohibiting the railroad company from "acting upon the consent granted by" the Board of Trustees and restraining the Board from further acting on the application of the railroad company "until they have published the notice as required by statute."  

The statute at issue required that in the case of a village like Pelham Manor without a daily newspaper, public notice most be provided "for fourteen days" in "a newspaper published therein, if any there shall be, and if none, then daily in two daily newspapers if there be two, if not, one published in the city nearest such village or town."  Anna Secor, through her lawyers, argued among other things that although The Pelham Manor Tribune was distributed in Pelham Manor, it was not published in Pelham Manor since it was printed in New Rochelle.  The Court rejected the argument, holding that "We think that there has not been established any substantial departure from the requirements of the statute, and a case was not made warranting the interference of the court by injunction. The order should be reversed, and the injunction dissolved, with $10 costs and disbursements."

In other words, after the tiny newspaper closed its doors forever, the Appellate Division, Second Department of the State of New York held in a judicial decision that the little publication was, indeed, a newspaper. . . . . . . . 

*          *          *          *          *

Below are transcriptions of some of the items on which today's Historic Pelham article is based.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

Courage and Chivalry Were Attributes of Pelham’s First Newspaper Editor
-----
Examples of The Pelham Manor Tribune, First Newspaper in Pelham, Give Interesting Picture of the Gay Nineties in Residential Suburb.
-----

A courageous and chivalrous journalist was William G. Beecroft, founder and editor of The Pelham Manor Tribune, Pelham’s first newspaper, two issues of which came to The Pelham Sun this week. 

For three years from 1893 to 1896 Pelham Manor had a newspaper of its own, and it did a good job serving the entire community.

In going through papers left by the late Mr. Alfred L. Hammett of Pelham Manor, members of his family found two issues of The Pelham Manor Tribune, dated December 28, 1895 and January 4, 1896, which Mr. Hammett had preserved.  They were given to Building Inspector Clyde F. Howes who is a collector of old Pelham Manor relics, and Mr. Howes permitted The Pelham Sun editor to make a study of them. 

This led to some interesting research.  From Village Attorney Edgar C. Beecroft we learned that the Tribune was founded by his brother, the late William G. Beecroft, who was at the end of his teens when he decided that the small residential community was ripe for a journalistic venture. 

Editor Beecroft nailed to his ‘masthead’ the following ‘This paper will be the friend of the Village in morals and truth, independent of party prejudice.’  Perusal of the copies of the small newspaper gives no evidence that he did not keep faith with this platform.

At times, according to Village Attorney Beecroft, the entire Beecroft family were members of the [venture].  Fred, another brother, also since deceased, became business manager during the Summer vacations from college.

‘In fact I remember that I was named as advertising manager at the time,’ said the Village Attorney.

The subscription rate was fifty cents per year and the circulation [illegible] hundred copies.  The office of the publication was in the Beecroft home, and the four page newspaper was printed in the office of the New Rochelle Pioneer.

Editor Beecroft apparently had a delightful sense of humor.  In his editorial column of the issue of December 28, 1895 we read the following:

‘Now that war with England is imminent shall Pelham Manor shirk its [duty]?  Certainly not!  Let our [illegible] fire department be organized in a company of home guards now.  Nothing could so effectively throw ‘cold water’ on any part of the Britishers to invade an otherwise peaceful domain.  ‘Upwards and at ‘em.’

The same issue contains a reference to the efforts of villagers to organize a skating clb and to flood the courts for their pond.  Editor Beecroft offers the following poetic [vision]:

‘In his overcoat with cushions Willie’s going out to skate,
He will need the yielding softness when he cuts the figure eight.’

The editorial pen was not without another instinct particularly [illegible] of a meeting of a [dancing class] which was ‘so successful that a cotillion is being discussed.’  Editor Beecroft reports that of his visiting friends realize ‘Every woman on the floor [will be lovely] and a good dancer.’

The united [illegible] of Pelham also warmly advises this sentiment, adds the chivalrous editor.

The editor was also an epicure:

‘On Friday night at the close of the dancing class, a party of dancers adjourned to Mr. Beache’s residence to enjoy one of Mrs. Beache’s gourmand Welsh rarebits.  The rarebits [illegible] in Mrs. Beache’s [illegible] and the [illegible] have been good [illegible] hungry appearances.  When the onslaught of the smokers had subsided.  The unanimous vote of the party was that they had spent an exceedingly pleasant evening.’

Civic enterprise on the part of local officials is shown in the five lines of one item:  ‘After a long fight the railroad company has decided to erect a sixty-foot bridge over Pelhamdale avenue.  This is largely due to the efforts of James F. Secor, our road commissioner.’

[Illegible] Began the ‘Toonerville Trolley’

Those were the days before the trolley car came to Pelham Manor.  In fact the big issue of the day was the franchise which was being brought by the Westchester Electric Railroad Co. for the extension of its line in Pelham Heights, through Colonial and Pelhamdale avenues to the Shore Road, the line which later became affectionately known as the original ‘Toonerville Trolley.’

Editor Beecroft had called attention of his readers to the fact that there was nothing in the franchise to prevent the use of horse cars on the line.  To this John M. Tierney, counsel for the railroad company in a very political letter to the editor, called attention to the fact that the railroad company intended to operate by electric rail, and that the officers [illegible] to have incorporated the trolley line would not be operated by horse power.

‘The road in Pelham Manor is intended to be operated in connection with the present system running to Mount Vernon and with the system authorized to be built in New Rochelle and leading down to the City of New York, and it must be self-evident that horses could not be used’ stated the attorney.

The small paper contains a substantial amount of advertising, mainly from New Rochelle merchants.  There’s one from D. J. Kennedy, ‘general contractor of sheet metal and hot air work,’ who gives a New Rochelle office address, but reminds the readers that he is a resident of ‘Pelhamville.’  That’s none other than Dan Kennedy now a village trustee of North Pelham.

Other advertisers that old timers will delight in recalling are Coutant’s Drug Store which advertises ‘Be sure and Call in before purchasing;’ J. L. Eick, harness and collar maker, also a carriage trimmer.  E. Lambden, dealer in fancy groceries; Kusche’s Ideal Market which offers ‘special rates to Yachts, Hotels and Large Consumers;’ William Downing, practical horse shoer, and Huyler’s candy store in New York City.

Wares Department store in New Rochelle advertises a ‘January Skirmish, with Magazines filled with goods and guns loaded with bargains.  Our forces are ready to attack the enemy – stagnation.  Our band plays lively music to the tune of small profits.  You must join the pursuit quickly or you miss getting gowns, drawers, skirts, corset covers, shirts, infants’ slips at the cost of the muslin.  Nothing for work or material, War, War, to the end.  This January Sale is to end all odd lots at Wares.’

George T. Davis, undertaker and embalmer, is another modern advertiser.

A Gay Nineties New Year Eve

We find that James Wilkinson and Mrs. Howard Scribner led the cotillion at the Manor Club New Year’s Eve dance.

From 8.30 until midnight the dancing was informal.  When the hands of the watch indicated five minutes to twelve each dancer was presented with a tin horn, with explicit instructions as to how and when the instrument should be manipulated, but the horns and bazoos [sic] were no sooner ‘floated’ that pandemonium reigned.  When the clock struck twelve all joined in singing Auld Lang Syne, after which the cotillion was begun.

‘The figures were simple but extremely pretty, one figure being the lantern figure.

‘The house was beautifully decorated with evergreens, holly and mistletoe.  Rugs were tastefully arranged in the alcoves.  Half the cardroom was turned into lemonade well, while the other half was so arranged as to make a beautiful place to sit out dances.  The new house committee, Mrs. Roosevelt, Mrs. Gilliland, Mrs. Thornton, Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. Secor, certainly deserve much credit for engineering such an enterprise.’

There was grave concern about education in January 1896.  The chief problem was whether the registration at the old Prospect Hill School which was situated on Jackson avenue, was sufficient to warrant the addition of a second teacher.  We read the following:

‘School Trustee Beach submits to us the following statistics obtained from recent canvass of the village by the School Board:

‘Number of eligible school children, 79; at private schools, 35; at Prospect Hill School, 26; at no school, 18.  Probably 25 more pupils would attend the Prospect Hill School were added facilities given.  The canvass is not complete, as several citizens declined to express an opinion.  The above figures show that another year should not pass without an additional teacher to instruct the higher grades.  The School Board considers the present teacher Miss Cowles entirely competent.  Her time, however, is entirely taken up by the average number of 20 children now attending the school.

There are frequent references in the social notes to the old resident families of the Manor, the Blacks, the Secors, the Roosevelts, the Barnetts, and the Gillilands.

Valedictory

However, Editor Beecroft found that village journalism in the Gay Nineties was an unprofitable task, so after three years, he found it necessary to suspend publication.  The following editorial published on January 4, 1896 is the valedictory of a member of the Fourth Estate, who would have set a pattern for courageous journalism of today had his venture continued through the years:

‘With this issue we present our last attempt at journalism in Pelham Manor.  We sincerely hope that our subscribers have derived as much pleasure from reading our simple little sheet, as the editor has enjoyed writing it.

‘We have several reasons for allowing the Tribune to sink into [archives], important among which is the fact that Pelham Manor is not yet a large enough field to make the conducting of a newspaper a financial success.  For, although we have enjoyed almost three years of prosperity, we are obliged to admit that our advertisers have patronized the Tribune more on account of the enterprise than because of the benefits which they might derive from advertising in its columns.

‘Another, and by no means secondary reason that makes a newspaper unprofitable in Pelham Manor, is that some of the people do not seem to appreciate the fact that a newspaper in a small village, is a great enhancement to property value and consequently do not give the paper the support it deserves.

‘If there are any of our subscribers who feel that their fifty cent investment has not been a profitable one, their money will be returned on application.

‘It has been the endeavor of the management to present a sheet free from scandal and small talk, and to include within its pages only such material as could be read by our youngest reader to advantage.  How far we have succeeded we leave to you, but we can say that in our three years of existence, we have never had a single complaint, nor has the editor ever been horse-whipped (the fate of many an editor).  Kind reader, au revoir.’

‘What became of Editor Beecroft?’ we asked the Village Attorney.  ‘Was the Tribune his only journalistic venture?’

‘No sir,’ said Mr. Beecroft.  ‘Will went on to become the dramatic critic of the New York Press, and later he did syndicate work under the late Ervin Wardman, who was formerly publisher of the Press.  He retired to farming and when he died five years ago, he was a prosperous fruit farmer of Vineland, New Jersey.’

Court Said It Was A Newspaper

There was some who laughed at the little Tribune, said Mr. Beecroft.  ‘But there’s a legal decision which proves that it actually was a newspaper.  There was one group which opposed the trolley.  Line, so they tried to block it on the ground that the legal notices were not properly advertised, charging that the Pelham Manor Tribune was not a newspaper nor was it actually printed in the village, such requirements being necessary.  The Supreme Court in a decision declared that The Pelham Manor Tribune was a newspaper and inasmuch as its office of publication was in Pelham Manor, the publication of the notices complied with the law, so the motion of the opponents was denied.”


SECOR v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES.

(6 App. Div. 236)

SECOR v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF VILLAGE OF PELHAM MANOR et al.

(Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department.  June 23, 1896.)

1.  STREET RAILROADS – CONSENT OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES – PUBLICATION OF NOTICE.

Laws 1890, c. 565, § 92, as amdned by Laws 1892, c. 676, provides that, where application is made to the local authorities for consent to build a street railroad, such authorities shall publish notice thereof daily, if in a city, for at least 14 days, in two of its daily newspapers, and if in a village or town, for at least 14 days in a newspaper published therein, if any there shall be, and, if none, then daily in two daily newspapers, if there be two, -- if not, one, -- published in the city nearest such village or town.  Held, that the statute does not require daily publication of the notice in the village or town where no daily paper is published, but publication for the prescribed length of time in a weekly paper in the village where no daily paper was published is sufficient.

2.  SAME – PLACE OF PUBLICATION OF PAPER.

Where the publishers of a newspaper have their office in a village where they mail and circulate the paper, it is published in the village, though it is printed elsewhere.

3.  SAME – PROCEDURE – DISCRETION OF BOARD.

Laws 1890, c. 565, § 92, as amdned by Laws 1892, c. 676, which provides that public notice shall be given of the time and place when an application for consent of the local authorities to the construction of a street railway will be considered, by failing to provide when and how the hearing shall be had, leaves that matter in the discretion of the board.

Appeal from special term, Westchester county.

Action by Anna M. Secor against the board of trustees of the village of Pelham Manor and others to set aside, as null and void, a certain resolution of defendant board of trustees purporting to grant to defendant railroad company the right to construct a street surface railroad on certain streets in defendant village.  From an order continuing an injunction pendente lite, defendants appeal.

Reversed.

Argued before BROWN, P. J., and CULLEN, BARTLETT, and HATCH, JJ.

Jabish Holmes, Jr., and John M. Tierney, for appellants.
William Vanamee, for respondent.

HATCH, J.  The injunction order herein restrains the board of trustees of said village from acting upon the application of the Westchester Electric Railroad Company for leave to lay its tracks in the village until they have published the notice as required by the statute, and restrained the said railroad company from acting upon the consent granted by said board of trustees.  Upon oral argument the injunction was sought to be sustained upon the ground that the consent which was given by the board to the railroad company was so given without the public hearing, or without sufficient opportunity for such hearing, as contemplated by the statute, and also upon the ground that the publication of the notice of hearing as required by the statute had not been complied with.  It was then practically conceded that the length of time during which said notice was published was sufficient, if it had been made in a paper con- [Page 993 / Page 994] templated by the statute.  Reflection seems to have convinced counsel that he was overhasty in making this concession, as we find the point urged as error upon his brief submitted since the oral presentation was made.  The record discloses that a proper application was made by the railroad company, and that the board of trustees took the matter under advisement on the 2d day of December, 1895, and thereupon adopted a resolution fixing the 4th day of January, 1896, for the first consideration of the application, and directed that public notice be given by publication for at least 14 days in the Pelham Manor Tribune.  It is not disputed but that publication was made in this newspaper for four successive weeks following the adoption of the resolution, or but that the matter thereof was in compliance with law.  The point made is that the paper was not published in the village of Pelham Manor; that publication in such paper was not the publication contemplated by the statute.  The stature which regulates this proceeding is section 92 of the railroad law (Laws 1890, c. 565, as amended by Laws 1892, c. 676).  It reads:

‘The application for the consent of the local authorities shall be in writing, and before acting thereon such authorities shall give public notice thereof and of the time and place when it will first be considered, which notice shall be published daily in any city for at least fourteen days in two of its daily newspapers if there be two, if not, in one, to be designated by the mayor, and in any village or town for at least fourteen days in a newspaper published therein, if any there shall be, and if none, then daily in two daily newspapers if there be two, if not, one published in the city nearest such village or town.’

The first clause of the statute evidently relates to cities, and contemplates that, as they there have daily newspapers, publication shall be made therein for 14 days.  It seems equally clear that daily notice is not required or contemplated in a village or town, for when it speaks of them it omits the word ‘daily,’ and simply requires publication in a newspaper published therein.  If any other construction should obtain, many villages and towns could make no compliance with the statute.  If there existed a weekly newspaper, a notice published therein would be invalid, while, if they proceeded to publish in an adjoining city, they would be met by the provision that this course is only permissible when no newspaper is published in the village or town.  The conditions being so essentially different between village and city, the statute takes cognizance thereof, and provides for daily publication in one, and publication for 14 days in the other.  The notice was published once a week for four consecutive weeks, beginning December 15, 1895.  This was sufficient, so far as length of notice is concerned, as it covered a period in excess of 14 days.  A publication once a week answered all the requirements of the statute.  In re Bassford, 50 N. Y. 509; Wood v. Knapp, 100 N. Y. 109, 2 N. E. 632.  The evidence is abundant to show that the newspaper in which the notice was published was one which answered the requirements of the law.  It was printed in New Rochelle, but the place of business of its publishers, the mailing list, and place where it was mailed and circulated, was t the village of Pelham Manor.  It was not published where it was printed, for it was not there circulated and given out to the public, which [Page 994 / Page 995] is the essential thing necessary to constitute a publication.  Bragdon v. Hatch, 77 Me. 433, 1 Atl. 140; Ricketts v. Village of Hyde Park, 85 Ill. 110.  The statute providing for public notice of the time and place when the application will be considered by the board evidently contemplates that a hearing shall be had, by the board, of the persons interested.  When and how this hearing shall be had is not provided in the statute.  The method of procedure must therefore rest very largely in the discretion of the board, and while the courts would not tolerate an abuse of discretion which arbitrarily excluded a fair and reasonable hearing, by the board, of interested parties; yet when it appears that parties have had a hearing, and reasonable opportunity has been given for the hearing of all, the court ought not to interfere and restrain action by the board unless it be clearly shown that this right has been unnecessarily denied, and that actual prejudice and damage has resulted, or will result, to the party seeking redress.  In the case before us it appears, without dispute, that, when the board met, interested parties were heard for and against granting the application, and the minutes of the board recite that, after hearing many citizens (naming them), no other citizen apparently wishing to be heard, Mr. Roosevelt moved that the public hearing be closed, and that the board proceed with business.  Duly seconded and carried.’  The resolution which the board subsequently adopted recited that the public notice was given and a public hearing had in pursuance thereof, ‘whereat all persons so desiring were given an opportunity to be heard, and were heard.’  These recitals are not essentially disputed.  The affidavits in opposition do not dispute the substantiated fact of the recital, which clearly establishes that the public meeting contemplated by the statute was held, and that fair opportunity for the expression of views was given.  Assuming the fact to be that the public hearing was not formally closed at the first meeting, but was adjourned from time to time, and at such times interested parties were further heard, does not at all militate against our conclusion.  There was no obligation resting upon the board, nor was there command of the statute, that they should continue to adjourn for the purpose of hearing interested parties, or that interested parties acquired the right to be heard because the board adjourned without taking formal action upon the application.  We do not say that there may not be circumstances which would require interference by the court even though hearing had been once had, but they do not exist here.  There is nothing which appears in these papers to show that any one has been prejudiced or damaged by the action which the board took, or that any one was prejudiced because the board did not further hear them.  All that is asserted of damage to any one is that, by tearing up the street and laying the tracks, plaintiff will be injured.  This injury she will even though no infirmity attends upon the grant.  It is not occasioned by failure to further hear interested parties, for it is not made to appear that this failure, if failure it be, has changed or affected in the slightest the action of the board, or would have done so.  When the board granted the application, all the trustees were present; and they were authorized then to perform [Page 995 / Page 996] any proper official act, and consequently authorized to pass the resolution which they did.  1 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) §§ 263, 264; 1 Beach, Pub. Corp. §§ 265-271.  We think that there has not been established any substantial departure from the requirements of the statute, and a case was not made warranting the interference of the court by injunction.

The order should be reversed, and the injunction dissolved, with $10 costs and disbursements.  All concur.”


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I have written extensively about early newspapers published in the Town of Pelham.  Below are citations and links to various such Historic Pelham articles published in the last few years.  





Fri., Sep. 29, 2017:  Professor David A. Van Buskirk's Scandalous Musicale in North Pelham in 1897 (transcribing "PELHAM 30 YEARS AGO" that reproduced news from the Pelham Press published Jan. 23, 1897).







Fri., Apr. 01, 2005:  The Earliest Newspaper in Pelham?

Archive of the Historic Pelham Web Site.
Home Page of the Historic Pelham Blog.
Order a Copy of "The Haunted History of Pelham, New York"
Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak."

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Monday, October 29, 2018

The Ghost of the Insane Pelham Lover Banished to His Attic Cell


The young man from Pelham was madly in love.  He was in the midst of an affair with a young and beautiful Pelham woman.  The pair were residents of the tiny settlement of Bartow that once stood on Shore Road in the Town of Pelham in the last half of the 19th century not far from today's Pelham Bit Stables (the Bronx Equestrian Center) in Pelham Bay Park.  

Yes, the young man was madly, madly, madly in love.  All he could ponder was his beautiful belle.  He spent every waking hour thinking of her and planning his next opportunity to be with her.  He spent every sleeping hour dreaming of his lovely coquette.  It seems, however, that the object of his adoration was interested only in a flirtatious fling.  She was, indeed, quite a coquette who flirted lightheartedly with the young man precisely to encourage his admiration and affection.  She did not, however, share his insanely-intense devotion.  

When the beautiful Pelham belle tired of the young man's attentions, she simply ended all contact with him.  The young beau was crushed.  For weeks he made every attempt to recapture the flirtatious attentions of his beautiful belle.  With each passing week of failure, the young man grew ever-more despondent.  As the object of his mad love began seeing others, ever flirtatiously, his despondency sank into a gloomy sadness that could not be shaken.

The young man's family grew ever more concerned as he began wandering the halls of the family's dark home at night.  He muttered as he shuffled up and down hallways and stairs, though muttering the family could understand was the name of his young belle.  

Concerned for the young man's safety, members of the family stayed with him day and night.  They sat with him as he rocked back and forth, muttering as tears streamed down his face.  The weeks turned to months and it became clear that the young man's mind had departed him.  He had descended into madness.

Soon exhaustion set in.  At night, the young man's family simply could not handle him.  His mind may have left him, but his youth and strength had not.  When his mutterings seemed to turn suicidal, the family began locking him inside the unfinished attic of their Bartow home with nothing but a mattress on the floor each night.

The walls of the attic were unfinished.  Its rafters hung heavily above.  There was a single window at one end.  At night the room was exceedingly dark since the family was unwilling to leave a burning lantern with the young man overnight.  Even worse, the home stood in an infinitely lonely and silent spot on the outskirts of the tiny Bartow settlement that consisted of only a handful of homes and commercial buildings near the old Bartow Station on the New Haven Branch Line railroad tracks.  The family put a strong bolt on the outside of the door that led to the attic room to keep the young man locked inside.  They also put strong iron bars on the attic window to prevent his escape.  Soon, the young man had to be kept in the room around the clock rather than only at night.  

Thankfully, the young madman was not violent.  He was fed, clothed, and cared for tenderly, but his madness worsened.  

His mental illness seemed intensely worse during each thunderous storm that swept over Pelham.  When torrents of rain beat upon his roof, lightning crackled above, and thunder shook the house, the young man became uncontrollable.  With each thunderbolt he wailed in despondency and even pounded his fists on the floor and walls of his attic cell.  It was as if each thunderous blast drove him deeper into the dark depths of insanity.  

During one terrible storm on All Hallows' Eve, lightning pierced the skies all over Pelham.  Thunder blasted the region and shook the home.  After one nearby lightning strike that was followed instantaneously by an ear-splitting blast of thunder, the young man wailed and pounded so violently that his family feared for him.  They scrambled up the stairs and unbolted the attic door hoping to do something -- anything -- to settle and console him.

As the door opened, the young man bolted through it and bounded down the dark stairs as his family gave chase.  Down the stairs and through the house he ran.  He threw open the front door and plunged into the curtains of rain.  As the family ran into the torrential downpour behind the young man, he began outdistancing them until the family could no longer see through the rain far enough ahead to see him clearly.  Only because occasional flashes of lightning illuminated the entire region were they able to follow the fleeing madman from a distance as he ran toward Long Island Sound.

The howling wind drove the rain into wet needles that felt as though they would pierce the skin.  The family was not certain if the howling they heard that night was only that of the wind as they ran after the young man.

He ran with insane purpose straight to Flat Rock.  He looked directly into the howling wind over the frenzied waters whipped to a froth by the storm.  He squinted for a moment as the driving rain blinded him.  Just as members of his family arrived at Flat Rock, the young man turned and stared at them wild-eyed, then leaped into the churning waves, drowning himself.  His body was never recovered.

His body was never seen again, but soon his spirit was.  Each night, after darkness descended, the ghost of the anguished young man wandered the rooms and halls of the old house in which he had been held captive during life.  All in Bartow soon knew that the home was haunted by the ghost of the insane Pelham lover.  

Soon no one in the settlement of Bartow would go near the house.  As one published account noted, "no villager can be found who will venture near the spot at night."

The family moved out of the sad haunted house and left it to the spirit of the mad lover.  The isolated house sat forlornly on a hill at the edge of the settlement for a number of years until a New York City charity named the "Little Mothers Aid Association" decided to use the home and its grounds as a summer camp for "Little Mothers."  These "Little Mothers" were young girls whose family circumstances required them at a tender young age to serve as substitute mothers to care for even younger siblings.  See:

Fri., Apr. 15, 2016:  The Little Mothers Aid Association and its Use of Hunter's Mansion on Hunters Island in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries.

Thu., Jun. 28, 2018:  More on the Little Mothers Aid Association and its Use of Hunter's Mansion on Hunter's Island.  

Though the haunted house at Bartow sat empty throughout the fall and winter each year, it became a cheery summer camp center for happy "Little Mothers" from New York City during the spring and summer.  Despite the happy occupants of the home, the anguished mad specter of the insane Pelham lover continued to stalk the hallways and rooms of the home after dark frightening all who saw him.

Wise camp counselors and experienced campers made certain to warn new campers of the ghost of the insane Pelham lover as each new wave of campers arrived.  Each new wave of little campers who arrived, after hearing the terrible story, ventured to the top of the attic stairs, pulled back the heavy bolt on the outside of the door, and peered timidly into the dark attic room where they could see the heavy iron bars at the window of the room that once housed the captive.  Of course, the little campers only ventured to the top of those stairs during bright, sunny days. . . . 

During about the mid-1890s, on a dark and cold winter day when, of course, the Little Mothers camp was not in session and the haunted house sat empty, a New York City Policeman patrolling in Pelham Bay Park stopped by the house to check on it.  

The first thing Officer Gilmartin noticed as he approached the house was an outside cellar door that had been broken in leaving the basement open.  The officer climbed into the cellar and groped about in the semi-darkness.  When he reached a rear corner of the dark room, he felt an odd, irregularly-shaped bundle that "rattled as if in protest as he dragged it out into the air."

Tied up in what evidently had been a bed sheet was a human skeleton.  The policeman recoiled in horror, tucked the bundle under his arm, and raced on foot to the nearby police station that once stood near the Bartow Station on the New Haven Branch Line.  There officers at the station contacted the local coroner and wired a report to New York City.

Word in the little settlement spread quickly regarding the skeletal remains at the police station.  Nearby residents began crowding into the tiny police station to view the skeleton.  According to one account:  "much alarm was felt. . . . [t]hat a horrible crime had been committed."  Had the ghost of the insane Pelham lover turned violent in the afterlife?  

Thankfully, the skeleton was not that of a little camper.  Rather, it "was evidently that of a full grown man of large stature."  

It took a reporter for the New York Herald to solve the gruesome mystery.  According to a newspaper account, the ghost of the insane Pelham lover had not turned to murder.  The reporter visited an official of the Little Mothers Aid Association, told her about the alarm in the settlement of Bartow, and inquired about the origins of the skeletal remains.

After the official finished laughing, she explained that the skeleton was a medical specimen that belonged to Dr. William Percy who had practiced for many years in New York City but since had moved his practice to Elmira, New York.  According to the official, Dr. Percy became fascinated with the many accounts of the ghost of the insane Pelham lover and decided the previous summer to try to frighten the ladies who ran the Little Mothers Aid Association.  

He sneaked up to the attic, known to all as the "Haunted Room" and strung up the skeleton like a marionette puppet, rigged for motion when anyone entered the room.  One night he enticed the ladies who ran the camp up to the Haunted Room, expecting to frighten them out of their wits.  Instead, according to the New York Herald, "His effort failed ignominiously."  The women were neither frightened nor amused by the amateurish efforts to scare them.  

Dr. Percy bashfully wrapped up the skeleton and hid it in a corner of the basement so as not to frighten the little campers.  He forgot, however, to remove it when he departed and, despite numerous requests from the staff that he remove it, he never did before the camp ended for the summer.  Only a short time later, the Little Mothers Aid Association seemingly could take the ghost no more and moved its camp to the Hunter Mansion on nearby Hunter's Island off the shores of Pelham.

Thus, the ghost of the insane Pelham lover murdered no one of which we know (at least no one whose remains have been found).  The settlement of Bartow is now simply a ghost town with all structures except the stone remnants of the Bartow train station long gone.  In this case, the Bartow area is a true ghost town as the "Ghost of the Insane Pelham Lover" who once was banished to an attic cell can still be seen running from the area to the Long Island Sound where he leaps from Flat Rock and disappears beneath the inky waters. . . . 

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"SPOILED A FINE GHOST STORY.
-----
Accounting for the Mysterious Skeleton Found in Bartow's Haunted House.
-----
IT BELONGED TO A PHYSICIAN.
-----
Neighborhood Residents Feared That It Might Be Evidence of a Dreadful Crime.
-----
MERELY PART OF A JOKE.
-----

The residents of the village of Bartow, two miles above West Chester, were greatly agitated yesterday over the finding of a nearly perfect skeleton in the empty, rambling old Holcomb House, known in town tradition as the 'haunted building.'

The house is perched on a high hill, overlooking Long Island Sound, on the southern side of Pelham Bay Park.  It is nearly a mile from any human habitation, and was purchased by New York when the city acquired the 1,700 acres around the village for a public playground several years ago.

An infinitely lonely and silent spot it is in winter, but in summer troops of merry children transform the house and grounds into a place of life and laughter.  Mrs. John H. Johnston makes semi-weekly trips there with half a hundred New York children, under the auspices of the United Charities.  They are known as the 'Little Mothers,' because as far as possible they are girls of tender age on whom devolves the care of their younger brothers and sisters.

The half dozen park policemen visit the premises at irregular intervals during the winter months to see that nothing has been disturbed or stolen.  Numerous tramps haunt the wooden slopes, and frequently signs are found to show that they have used the house as a lodging place.

SHUNNED BY VILLAGERS.

It is no chamber of horrors to the uninformed itinerant vagabond, but no villager can be found who will venture near the spot at night.  It is generally accredited in town lore that a ghost stalks abroad throughout the rooms of the old structure after darkness has descended. 

The villagers say it is the shade of the young man who went crazy over a love affair and was confined in an attic room for many years.  He escaped from custody one stormy night and drowned himself from Flat Rock, in the waters of the Sound.  The iron barred windows and heavy bolted door of the room are still to be seen.

Policeman Gilmartin set out to inspect the premises late Monday afternoon.  It was so late, in fact, and so well aware was he of the house's grewsome [sic] reputation, that he wished before he started that his errand was completed.  As he climbed the steep heights to his destination, he perceived that the outside cellar door had been broken in.  Entering and groping about in the semi-darkness his hands touched an irregular shaped bundle in a rear corner which rattled as if in protest as he dragged it out into the air.

Tied up in what had evidently been a sheet, the light disclosed the nearly perfect skeleton of a human body.  Without continuing his search the policeman, greatly excited at his find, hurried with his burden to the police station, near the little railroad station.

Resident Policeman Hodgins and the chief of the Pelham Bay Park force sent immediate notice to Coroner Banning, of Mount Vernon, and a report was despatched [sic] to the Central Park Arsenal.

The news spread rapidly throughout the village and numbers came to view the bones at the police station.  Many wealthy New York people spend the entire year in handsome cottages outside the town, and not far from the scene of the ghastly find, and much alarm was felt.  That a horrible crime had been committed in the neighborhood at some distant date and that its discovery had just been made was the only explanation.  The tramps infesting the wide, open territory were at once suspicioned as the authors of the deed.

THE MYSTERY EXPLAINED.

The skeleton was evidently that of full grown man of large stature, and the oldest inhabitant cogitated in vain to identify the remains.  

Bartow was in a state of nervous excitement yesterday afternoon when I departed, and went at once to the residence of Mrs. Johnston, at No. 305 East Seventeenth street.  The mystery was soon solved.

'Why, I can very easily account for the presence of the skeleton,' said she, after her laughter at the alarm of the village had subsided.  'It is the property of Dr. William Percy, formerly of this city, but now, I think, practising [sic] in Elmira.  You see, he visited us at our summer quarters last summer, and was much amused over the ghost story associated with the old house.

'He placed the skeleton in the 'haunted' room and attempted to give some of the ladies a fright.  His effort failed ignominiously, however, and I suppose he concealed his improvised puppet in the cellar afterward and forgot to remove it.

'We were afraid some of the girls would find the skeleton and become really excited, and enjoined the physician to effectually dispose of it.'

Coroner Manning has sent notice that he will view the sheet of bones to-day.  His services are not in as urgent demand as Bartow has led itself to believe."

Source:  SPOILED A FINE GHOST STORY -- Accounting for the Mysterious Skeleton Found in Bartow's Haunted House -- IT BELONGED TO A PHYSICIAN -- Neighborhood Residents Feared That It Might Be Evidence of a Dreadful Crime -- MERELY PART OF A JOKE, N.Y. Herald, Mar. 21, 1894, No. 21,030, p. 13, col. 6.




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I have collected ghost stories and legends relating to the Town of Pelham for more than fifteen years.  To read more examples that now total in the several dozens, see



Bell, Blake A., Pelham's Ghosts, Goblins and Legends, The Pelham Weekly, Oct. 25, 2002, p. 1, col. 1. 



Bell, Blake A., More Ghosts, Goblins of Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 43, Oct. 29, 2004, p. 12, col. 1. 

Bell, Blake A., More Ghosts & Goblins of Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XV, Issue 40, Oct. 13, 2006, p. 10, col. 1.



Bell, Blake A., Archive of HistoricPelham.com Web Site:  Pelham's Ghosts, Goblins and Legends (Oct. 2002). 






Thu., Oct. 26, 2017:  The Cow Rustler Ghosts of Pelham Road.



Tue., Oct. 25, 2016:  The Suicidal Specter of Manger Circle.

Mon., Sep. 08, 2014:  In 1888, The "Ghost of City Island" Upset the Town of Pelham.





Wed., May 03, 2006:  Another Pelham, New York Ghost Story.



Thu., Oct. 13, 2005:  Two More Pelham Ghost Stories.  




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