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.

Monday, March 13, 2017

Another Account of The Great Blizzard of 1888 that Raged in Pelham 129 Years Ago Yesterday and Today


As Pelham awaits Stella, the Nor'easter threatening to overrun the region tonight and tomorrow, it seems appropriate to remember that one hundred twenty nine years ago yesterday and today, Pelham was overrun by "The Great White Hurricane," also known as the "Blizzard of 1888."  As one Pelham resident wrote more than fifty years later, it "became one of the times from which things were dated.'  The blizzard's fury reached its height on March 12, 1888.

One of the most colorful stories about Pelham residents during The Blizzard of 1888 is one that could have ended in tragedy but, happily, did not.  Like thousands of other working men and women who awoke to nearly 10 inches of snow early in the morning on Monday, March 12, two Pelham residents failed to grasp the magnitude of the massive storm and tried to reach the City for work early that day.  

The two residents, Henry W. Taft and Alfred L. Hammett, clambered aboard the tiny little Harlem River Branch Line train that left Pelham Manor Depot at 7:37 a.m. Monday morning.  Little did they know the life-threatening risk they were taking. 

The tiny little train on which they traveled was so small it was called “the little peanut train”.  It consisted of a steam locomotive, a fire tender and two passenger cars.  At that early date there reportedly was no steam heating system for the passenger cars, so “the cars were heated by a stove at the end of each car.” 

After leaving Pelham Manor, the little train passed Bartow Station and Baychester Station (and its bridge) and made it to Westchester Station.  Just past Westchester Station, however, the tracks passed through a “cut” that had filled with drifting snow.  The train plowed into the deep snow drift until it began "to labor" and after a few "convulsive" thrusts, stopped dead in its tracks, unable to proceed.  Shovels were quickly deployed to attempt to remove snow from the front of the train, but the effort was futile.  The train was hopelessly stuck just as the storm entered its most furious phase, stranding the crew and the few passengers on board like those of so many other trains in the region. 

The furious winds blew tiny particles of through every crack around every window where the snow melted inside and dampened everything.  Soon the passengers and crew had depleted all available fuel for the little stoves that heated the cars.  Next they began to break up and burn the seats of the cars for additional warmth. 

The poor engineer of the train began to suffer "an agony of rheumatic pain" as the terrible hours slowly passed.  According to one account, his groans of pain began to mingle with the whistling of the wind.  As the day wore on and it became devastatingly clear that the storm was not subsiding and no help was coming, the passengers and crew were faced with a terrible conundrum.  Should the exit the train and head into the storm on foot to find shelter, or should they remain on board the little peanut train?  Either choice risked freezing to death.

Late in the day on Monday, March 12, it became apparent that they were on their own.   Messrs. Taft and Hammett of Pelham Manor decided to take matters into their own hands, concluding that “their only escape lay in an attempt to get back on foot through the drifts.”  They decided to exit the train and attempt to make their way in the blinding snow and high snow drifts back to Pelham Manor.  



Only Known Image of The Little Peanut Train on the Branch
Line Stuck in the Snow Near Westchester Station.  Photograph
Taken Several Days After the March 12-13, 1888 Blizzard.
Photo Courtesy of The Office of The Historian of The Town of
Pelham.  Note:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

At about 4:00 in the afternoon, Taft and Hammett pried open the door of the train car and climbed into the snow.  The pair began trying to follow the train tracks hidden beneath snow and drifts that stood face-high in some places.  They had to push through banks of snow and, occasionally, could not make out where the train tracks were, so they found the barb wire fences that stood along the tracks and used the wire to guide themselves along.  

After hours of effort, the pair reached the railroad bridge over Eastchester Bay at the mouth of the Hutchinson River.  There the railroad tracks rested on short pilings across the waters of the Bay.  Completely exposed to the elements, the howling wind and piercing pellets of ice and snow had the "impact of shot from a gun."  The high winds risked blowing the pair into the water below to certain death.  All the men could do was to hold onto the planking and the railroad cross-ties and crawl across the trestle, holding on for dear life.  During any lull in the wind, the men would spring to their feet and try to sprint along the cross-ties to "make the best use of that always short interval."

After exhausting efforts, the pair made it across Eastchester Bay and bulled their way along the tracks through the snow to Bartow Station.  Night had fallen and an ink-black darkness descended.  

At Bartow residents helped the men warm up and offered a horse to help.  Recognizing that a horse would be useless in the high snow banks and drifts, Taft and Hammett declined.  The two men were anxious to return to their families to allay worries and to help them pass through the remainder of the storm safely.  The two never even removed their outer garments at Bartow.  They simply warmed themselves, then plunged back outside along the railroad tracks to return to Pelham Manor.  

According to one account, as the men made their way between Bartow Station and Pelham Manor:

"The snow was deep all along and the drifts frequent and formidable.  The darkness was so nearly utter and total that these would not be discovered until all of a sudden a white wall, apparently sheer and insurmountable, would rise within a few inches of their faces.  How best to flank or surmount them was then the question.  Sometimes there was resort to the fence, and a hand over hand progress was made through them despite the wounding of the iron barbs.  Again those constantly recurring barriers were overcome by lying down and rolling over them!"

Late that evening, Taft and Hammett noticed a light in the distance.  That guiding light came from within the Pelham Manor Station along the railroad tracks near their homes.  They quickened their pace and stumbled to the station, onto the station platform, and toward their homes near the station.  Taft left Hammett in front of Hammett's home and, luckily, did not depart immediately.  Hammett stumbled and fell in the snow in front of his home and did not get up.  Taft helped him up and into the home before continuing to his house.  Hammett insisted for years thereafter that had Taft not helped him at that moment, he would have frozen to death in front of his own home after nearly completing his ordeal.

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I have written about The Great White Hurricane of 1888 and its effects on Pelham.  See:

Tues., Apr. 22, 2014:  Another Story of the "Great White Hurricane" that Struck Pelham and Surrounding Regions in 1888.

Thu., Mar. 13, 2014:  The Great Blizzard of 1888 in Pelham: 126 Years Ago Yesterday and Today.

Tue., Feb. 14, 2006:  An Account of the Blizzard of 1888 by Pelham Manor Resident Henry W. Taft

Thu., February 20, 2014:  Pelham Manor in 1883 and in its Early Years - Recollections of An Early Pelham Manor Resident.

Bell, Blake A., The Blizzard of 1888: Pelham in the Midst Of the "Great White Hurricane," The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 34, Aug. 27, 2004, p. 9, col. 1.

Below is yet another account of the travails of Messrs. Taft and Hammett as they fled the little peanut train for their homes at the height of the Blizzard of 1888.  The account is reprinted from The New York Evangelist.  This strongly suggests that the account was written by John Henry Dey, a Pelham Manor resident and close friend of Messrs. Taft and Hammett, who served as Associate Editor of The New York Evangelist at the time.  The text appears immediately below, followed by a citation and link to its source.

"A TALE OF THE BLIZZARD.
-----
A Graphic Account of the New York Snow Storm.

The following is taken from the New York Evangelist concerning the snow storm.  In speaking of being caught out the writer says:  

The writer only escaped a similar or worse experience by missing a train on the branch road extending from New Rochelle to the Harlem river, and which was quite out of time on that furious morning.  Three of his neighbors were at the station, however, and as in the case of the early bird, caught the passing worm.  And this was a subject of much felicitati on, as we are assured, for the next fifteen minutes or so.  But just on the hither, side of the Westchester station, their train and themselves encountered 'the unkindest cut of all.'  They left that station on time and cheerful, but ere they were fairly under way the locomotive began to labor, and presently after a convulsive effort or two, there was no more progress.  Shovels were used for a little, thereby enacting Mrs. Partington's broom against the tide; but even the track made in coming, was quickly obliterated, and the snow banked behind as well as before the train.  There were only a few passengers, but several of these spent two nights just there.  And miserable nights just there.  And miserable nights they were -- as miserable nights they were -- as miserable as deficient warmth and covering and food and a temperature without close to zero, could make them.  The fine snow particles sifted in at every window, so that at last there was not a dry seat in the single car to which they were confined in order to economize the fuel.  The engineer of the train was of the number, and poor fellow, he was in an agony of rheumatic pain all those terrible hours.  His groans mingled constantly the last night with the whistling of the wind.

Several soon became impatient to learn how their wives and little ones were faring in the waxing storm.  With such preparation as they could make, which was but little, they crowed open the door of their car, and sallied forth a little after four o'clock, resolved to make the four or five miles they had traversed so speedily and gaily in the morning, and over the same route, as on the whole, the best and safest.  It was a struggle from the start.  A hat blew off, and was secured with difficulty.  Their course was nearly in the teeth of the storm, and they could only average about a mile an hour.  They were not very long in coming to a stage of their journey entirely exposed to the force of the wind, and it seemed to come down upon them at times with a full fifty-mile an hour sweep and momentum.  We refer to the salt meadows section between Timberson's and Bay Chester stations, the level reach of which extends well toward Mount Vernon on the west, and on the east to the Sound, which it finds between the uplands of Westchester on the south and Fort Schuyler on the north.  This great level area is, at intervals of perhaps two or three years, and under pressure of a long prevalent and powerful wind in the right quarter, quite overflowed from the piled-up waters of the Sound, and turbulent as an arm of the sea.  The railroad track hence rests upon short piles, and one needs to walk with some circumspection upon it at any time.  On this terrible day the wind and snow played upon this bare scaffolding with something of the impact of shot from a gun, and there was nothing for it but for our two friends to seize the planking or crossties [sic] and cling for dear life until the lull came, and then to spring to their feet and make the best use of that always short interval.  Had it not been that nature herself seemed to require a moment to recover her spent breath, their case would have been hopeless.

Arrived at Bartow a short halt was made, and there were offers of a horse or any other assistance of avail.  But the only progress possible was by foot and so the last half of the journey was begun, with a little rest, but without removing outer garments.  Fairly on the rails again, or rather over them, this was found to be the most 'laborious and dangerous' part of the adventure.  The stations here are far apart and the grade steadily rises, so that the charged wind -- as sometimes the engineers on this best stretch of the road -- rejoiced to run a race.  Toiling on for an hour, the situation grew forlorn and desperate.  The cold increased, also the wind and snow, and it became very dark.  There was not a star or friendly light to guide, and but for the wire fencing on either hand, and the driving snow which impinged constantly on the ice-laded [sic] face and ear, when progress was being made in the right direction, our friends would inevitably have lost their way.  

The snow was deep all along and the drifts frequent and formidable.  The darkness was so nearly utter and total that these would not be discovered until all of a sudden a white wall, apparently sheer and insurmountable, would rise within a few inches of their faces.  How best to flank or surmount them was then the question.  Sometimes there was resort to the fence, and a hand over hand progress was made through them despite the wounding of the iron barbs.  Again those constantly recurring barriers were overcome by lying down and rolling over them!  A blessed suggestion from the contrasted sunny days of youth coming to the rescue!  Finally, after long hours of this work, and when strength and resolution were sorely tried, if not quite spent, the welcome, thrice welcome light of the Pelham Manor station was discerned at only a little distance off!  

That such a genuine Dakotan adventure as we have here sketched could have occurred on the afternoon and evening of Monday week and within the bounds for the most part of one of our projected city parks, who would have believed possible."

Source:  A TALE OF THE BLIZZARD -- A Graphic Account of the New York Snow Storm, Randolph Register [Randolph, NY], Mar. 29, 1888, Vol. XXIII, No. 45, p. 8, cols. 1-2.  

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Thursday, September 03, 2015

Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Celebrated its 60th Anniversary in 1936


On October 5, 1936, the congregants of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of the church located at today's Four Corners.  The celebration was lavish and festive with many notable addresses by speakers who described the history of the little church.  The festivities paid tribute to several long-time members including Mr. and Mrs. Alfred L. Hammett who had been members of the church for 54 years and John M. Shinn, the only living charter member of church.  Ten days later, Mr. Shinn died of a heart attack in his daughter's home at the age of 87.

Periodically I have posted items to the Historic Pelham Blog regarding the fascinating history of the church known today as Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor.  For a few of many such examples, see

Thu., Dec. 18, 2014:  Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Celebrated Its 25th Anniversary In 1901.  

Fri., Nov. 07, 2014:  Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Migrated to a "Free Pew" Seating System in 1919.

Fri., Aug. 22, 2014:  Brief History of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor Published in 1963.

Thu., Mar. 06, 2014:  An Account of the Dedication of the Little Red Church at Four Corners on July 9, 1876.

Fri., Feb. 28, 2014:  Brief History of the Role Churches Played in the Growth of the Pelhams Published in 1926

Tue., Sep. 18, 2007:  Installation of the First Full-Time Pastor ofHuguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor in 1877

Fri., Aug. 31, 2007:  Announcement of the First Services Held in the Little Red Church of the Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church on July 9, 1876

Thu., Aug. 16, 2007:  Biographical Data About Rev. Charles EliphaletLord Who Served as Acting Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church,1874-79

Tue., Jun. 19, 2007:  A Brazen Burglary at The Little Red Church in 1904

Mon., Jan. 1, 2007:  Dating an Undated Glass Lantern Slide Showing the Little Red Church (Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church)

Wed., Oct. 25, 2006:  A Biography of the Rev. Henry Randall Waite, Ph. D., a 19th Century Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church

Thur., Jun. 29, 2006:  A Biography of Lewis Gaston Leary, Early 20th Century Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham

Thu., Mar. 2, 2006:  A Lecture in 1877 to Raise Money for the New Huguenot Memorial Church in Pelham Manor

Fri., Jan. 27, 2006:  Lectures to Raise Money to Build the"Huguenot Memorial Forest Church" Building in Pelham Manor

Mon., Jul. 25, 2005: The Columbarium at Huguenot Memorial Church in Pelham Manor.




A Glass Lantern Slide Created by Pelham Town Historian
William Montgomery Between December 10, 1916 and June 10,
1917. It Depicts the "Little Red Church," the Predecessor
Building to Today's Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian
Church Sanctuary. The Little Red Church was a "Centenary
Church" Opened in July 1876 in Part to Commemorate the
Centennial of the Signing of the Declaration of Independence.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

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Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog transcribes the text of two brief articles that appeared in The Pelham Sun concerning the celebration.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"Huguenot Church Observes 60th Anniversary
-----
Old Members of Huguenot Memorial Church Honored At 60th Anniversary Fete
-----
John M. Shinn, Charter Member and Alfred L. Hammett Who Has Been a Member of the Church for 54 Years Are Guests of Honor.  Rev. Dr. Lewis Gaston Leary is Speaker.
-----

More than 150 members and guests of the Huguenot Memorial Church attended a reception held in observance of the 60th anniversary of the church, held in the church house on Monday night [October 5, 1936].  Mr. Alfred L. Hammett, who has been a member of the church for 54 years and Mr. John M. Shinn, the only living charter member of the church, were the guests of honor.  Mrs. Hammett, who was also to be honored, was unable to attend.  

The Rev. Dr. Lewis Gaston Leary, who was Pastor of the church from 1907 to 1927, was the guest speaker on the program which began with three solos by Miss Margaret Romaine, formerly of the Metropolitan Opera Company.  Dr. Leary commended Mr. and Mrs. Hammett and Mr. Shinn on their long period of faithful service to the church.  'They were able to do this work, and their brows are unfurrowed by the cares and strife of life because they have lived with Him for whom we built this church.' said Dr. Leary.

Dr. Leary's address was followed by amusing reminiscenses given by Mr. Hammett and Mr. Shinn.

Following the guest speakers, the Rev. Willard P. Soper, Pastor of the church, read letters from the Rev. Harris E. Adriance, minister of the church, 1890-1895; Rev. Joseph H. Robinson, Minister 1896-1902; Mrs. George William Knox, whose husband was stated supply 1904-1907; Dr. Charles R. Gillett, Mrs. Alfred L. Hammett and a telegram from Rev. and Mrs. William L. Huntsman.  Dr. Soper then presented scrolls to Mr. Shinn, only living charter member of the church, and to Mr. and Mrs. Hammett.  During the reception, organ selections were played by Mr. Geo. C. Crook, organist of the West Park Presbyterian Church in New York City.

Mr. Shinn, Mr. Hammett and others who had been members of the church more than 15 years, cut into a large, 60-candle birthday cake.

The general committee for the reception included three members of the church session:  Mr. Robert M. Morgan, Mrs. Robert I. Dodge and Mr. J. C. Peck; three trustees, Mr. George R. Lord, Mr. William A. Moore and Mr. William O. Ragin; and three members of the Women's Society, Mrs. Arthur Witte, Miss Sophie Elder and Mrs. J. C. Peck.

Those on the receiving line included:  Mr. Hammett and his daughter, Miss Anne Hammett, Mr. Shinn, Mrs. L. Brewster Smith, Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Gaston Leary and Dr. and Mrs. Soper.

The decorations were arranged by Mrs. J. D. Currie and Mrs. Lockwood Barr.  Mrs. Arthue Witte and Miss Sophie Elder were in charge of refreshments, assisted by Mrs. Forrest M. Anderson, Mrs. Joseph C. Brown, Mrs. David G. Flynn and Mrs. Clarence J. Hicks, who presided over the refreshment table.

The following aided the committee in serving:  the Misses Virginia Karl, Marion Moberg, Harriet Maney, Dorothy and Eleanor Wheelock, Ann Ray Smith, Lorraine Gregg, Katherine Roberts, Margaret Prentice, Gladys Kurtzman, Betty Ann Batcheller, Elizabeth Pfodenhaver, Eleanor Soper and Agnes McAliley."

Source:  Huguenot Church Observes 60th Anniversary -- Old Members of Huguenot Memorial Church Honored At 60th Anniversary Fete -- John M. Shinn, Charter Member and Alfred L. Hammett Who Has Been a Member of the Church for 54 Years Are Guests of Honor.  Rev. Dr. Lewis Gaston Leary is Speaker, The Pelham Sun, Oct. 9, 1936, Vol. 27, No. 27, p. 1, cols. 1-8

"DEEP IN THE TOWN'S HISTORY.
-----

In the news of the week comes the interesting announcement of the celebration of the 99th anniversary of the consecration of Christ's Church of Pelham Manor, and a similar announcement of the 60th anniversary of Huguenot Memorial Church.

Both churches have seen the village of Pelham Manor grow from sparsely settled community into a thriving suburban town.  Both of these institutions are closely associated with the village history.  The men of affairs who conducted village business, came from these churches, and it was because of them and their service that the village of Pelham Manor has read its present high standing.

The 60th anniversary of the Huguenot Memorial Church will pay tribute to two of its members who have been steadfast in their loyalty to the church ever since its founding.  To them has been given sixty years of opportunity to serve, as they have rendered signal service through the succession of decades.  It is a most happy and unusual thing.  A world of memories will crowd into their minds as they tend the commemorative service.  Above it all will shine their consideration and loyalty to churchly activities and the nobility of character that has welded them to the church.

One is tempted to indulge in platitudes to express an opinion of such long and devoted service, while knowing them, and the simplicity of their loyalty and devotion, shall join with the members of the congregation in paying homage to their service, knowing that it has been rendered through the year with sincerity of purpose.

John M. Shinn and Alfred L. Hammett, for sixty years members of Huguenot Memorial Church."

Source:  DEEP IN THE TOWN'S HISTORY, The Pelham Sun, Oct. 2, 1936, Vol. 27, No. 26, p. 2, cols. 1-2.  


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Thursday, December 18, 2014

Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Celebrated its 25th Anniversary in 1901


On October 13 and October 14, 1901, the congregants of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church celebrated the silver anniversary of the "Little Red Church" located at today's Four Corners.  The celebration was lavish and festive with many notable addresses by speakers who described the history of the little church.

Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog transcribes the text of a brief article that appeared in The New Rochelle Pioneer and described the festivities.  It is followed by a citation to its source.  


A Glass Lantern Slide Created by Pelham Town Historian
William Montgomery Between December 10, 1916 and June 10, 1917.
It Depicts the "Little Red Church," the Predecessor Building to
Today's Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Sanctuary.
The Little Red Church was a "Centenary Church" Opened in
July 1876 in Part to Commemorate the Centennial of the
Signing of the Declaration of Independence.

"ANNIVERSARY OF HUGUENOT MEMORIAL CHURCH, PELHAM MANOR.
-----

The congregation of the Huguenot Memorial Church, at Pelham Manor, celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of the church on Sunday and Monday last [Oct. 13-14, 1901].  The church and parlors were handsomely bedecked with branches of trees, the autumn coloring of which made a novel and entrancing effect.  

The religious services on Sunday morning and evening were well attended.  The Sunday school services at 10 a.m., consisted of choir and congregational singing, prayers, a historical narrative by Mr. A. L. Hammett; reminiscent addresses by Rev. Henry R. Waite, Ph.D., Wm. P. Stephenson, Miss H. M. Mitchell, and Mr. E. B. Dumond, of Fishkill.

The memorial services at 11.15 o'clock included anthems, scriptural reading, an anniversary hymn and the memorial sermon delivered by the pastor, Rev. Harris Adriance.  'The Church History,' ably presented by Mr. John H. Dey, was followed by prayer and benediction.  A memorial communion service was held at 4 o'clock in the afternoon.

The anniversary reception in the chapel on Monday evening was a scene which will not be forgotten by any one fortunate enough to face the severe storm to be present.  Festivity, gaiety and good nature went hand in hand,, every one feeling that they must be merry in honor of the joyous occasion.  The evening was one of general rejoicing, intermingled with able addresses, excellent music and bounteous refreshments.

The committees in charge of the affair consisted of the following:

Reception Committee -- Messrs. John H. Dey, Wm. K. Gillett and James Herbert Ferris.

Refreshment Committee -- The Woman's Association, of which Mrs. G. H. Ferris is the honored president."

Source:  ANNIVERSARY OF HUGUENOT MEMORIAL CHURCH, PELHAM MANOR, The New Rochelle Pioneer, Oct. 19, 1901, p. 8, col. 2.  

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Periodically I have posted items to the Historic Pelham Blog regarding the fascinating history of the church known today as Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor.  For a few of many such examples, see

Fri., Nov. 07, 2014:  Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church Migrated to a "Free Pew" Seating System in 1919.

Fri., Aug. 22, 2014:  Brief History of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor Published in 1963.

Thu., Mar. 06, 2014:  An Account of the Dedication of the Little Red Church at Four Corners on July 9, 1876.

Fri., Feb. 28, 2014:  Brief History of the Role Churches Played in the Growth of the Pelhams Published in 1926

Tue., Sep. 18, 2007:  Installation of the First Full-Time Pastor ofHuguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham Manor in 1877

Fri., Aug. 31, 2007:  Announcement of the First Services Held in the Little Red Church of the Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church on July 9, 1876

Thu., Aug. 16, 2007:  Biographical Data About Rev. Charles EliphaletLord Who Served as Acting Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church,1874-79

Tue., Jun. 19, 2007:  A Brazen Burglary at The Little Red Church in 1904

Mon., Jan. 1, 2007:  Dating an Undated Glass Lantern Slide Showing the Little Red Church (Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church)

Wed., Oct. 25, 2006:  A Biography of the Rev. Henry Randall Waite, Ph. D., a 19th Century Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church

Thur., Jun. 29, 2006:  A Biography of Lewis Gaston Leary, Early 20th Century Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in Pelham

Thu., Mar. 2, 2006:  A Lecture in 1877 to Raise Money for the New Huguenot Memorial Church in Pelham Manor

Fri., Jan. 27, 2006:  Lectures to Raise Money to Build the"Huguenot Memorial Forest Church" Building in Pelham Manor

Mon., Jul. 25, 2005: The Columbarium at Huguenot Memorial Church in Pelham Manor.

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Thursday, March 13, 2014

The Great Blizzard of 1888 in Pelham: 126 Years Ago Yesterday and Today



It was “The Perfect Storm” of the 19th Century – one of the Great Nor’easters of recorded weather history.  Many called it “The Great White Hurricane”.  It was the Blizzard of 1888.  As one Pelham resident wrote more than fifty years later, it “became one of the times from which things were dated.”   The blizzard’s fury reached its height on March 12, 1888.  Pelham was in its midst.

One hundred and twenty six years ago today, Pelham – like much of the northeast – awoke to the waning storm and the subsequent aftermath of the “The Great White Hurricane.”   The nor’easter had struck the region with a vengeance.  Temperatures were mild on Sunday, March 11, but plunged to four degrees below zero with winds exceeding 80 miles per hour.  Records indicate that some parts of the region near Pelham received up to 32 inches of snow. 

Once the storm’s fury subsided, life in Pelham ground to a halt.  The Rev. Charles R. Gillett, retired Dean of Union Theological Seminary, lived in Pelham Manor at the time of The Blizzard of 1888.  He recorded his recollections in a manuscript now in the collection of The Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham.  Much of the manuscript was published in 1991 in the book entitled THE PELHAM MANOR STORY.

Gillett recalled that townspeople were marooned in their homes for a week and that “[t]hey were entirely cut off from places in the neighborhood, and after the second day no one attempted to reach any of the nearby towns.”    Rev. Gillett further recalled that over the course of the week his family had only one visitor and that visitor, Henry E. Dey, had to use snowshoes to make his way over the massive snow drifts.

The Little Red Church at Four Corners, the tiny wooden predecessor to today’s Huguenot Memorial Church, showed evidence of the forcefulness of the massive storm.  During the gale, the fierce winds blew open the church doors.  The interior of the lovely little church was coated with snow, later described by one Pelham resident as “a beautiful layer of pure white snow, a very wonderful sight”.

In 1888, local government as we know it was non-existent in Pelham.  Villages had not yet been incorporated and the “Town” was entirely incapable of dealing with a storm of the magnitude of The Blizzard of 1888.  Pelham neighbors had to help one another through the ordeal, and they did.

Food, particularly meat and vegetables, was a concern.  According to one account, it was not until later in the week that Joseph English was able to make the rounds through parts of the Village of Pelham Manor to take orders from homeowners for the things they needed.   English was known as “Uncle Joe” English.  He has been described as a “lame man [who] presided for a good many years selling tickets and caring for the mail, the freight and such express matter” at the Pelham Manor Train Station on the branch line.

English and his men made a “toilsome” trip to New Rochelle to fill the orders for local residents and then delivered the supplies back to local homeowners “to the great relief of the housekeepers” who were still snowbound.

Coal for warmth was another concern.  There was no way to deliver coal on the snow-laden streets.  Thus, “those whose supply of coal was low, suffered severely”.

One of the most colorful stories about Pelham residents during The Blizzard of 1888 is one that could have ended in tragedy but, happily, did not.  Like thousands of other working men and women who awoke to nearly 10 inches of snow on Monday, March 12, two Pelham residents failed to grasp the magnitude of the massive storm and tried to reach the City early that day.

The two residents, Henry W. Taft and Alfred L. Hammett, clambered aboard the tiny little Harlem River Branch Line train that left Pelham Manor Depot at 7:37 a.m. Monday morning.   Little did they know the life-threatening risk they were taking.

The tiny little train on which they traveled was so small it was called “the little peanut train”.  It consisted of a steam locomotive, a fire tender and two passenger cars.  At that early date there reportedly was no steam heating system for the passenger cars, so “the cars were heated by a stove at the end of each car.”

After leaving Pelham Manor, the little train passed Bartow Station and Baychester Station (and its bridge) and made it to Westchester Station.  Just past Westchester Station, however, the tracks passed through a “cut” that had filled with drifting snow.  The train plowed into the deep snow drift and there it stuck, stranding its passengers like those of so many other trains in the region.

Soon the passengers had depleted all available fuel for the little stoves that heated the cars.  Next they began to break up and burn the seats of the cars for additional warmth.  Later it became apparent that they were on their own.  Messrs. Taft and Hammett decided to take matters into their own hands, concluding that “their only escape lay in an attempt to get back on foot through the drifts”.

Today’s posting to the Historic Pelham Blog transcribes yet another account by Henry W. Taft of his travails aboard the little peanut train and his and Alfred L. Hammett’s efforts to battle through the Great White Hurricane to get home that day.  Additionally, below is an actual photograph of the little peanut train, still stuck on the tracks in the giant drifts, several days after the storm.


Only Known Photograph of The Little Peanut Train on the Branch Line.
Photograph Taken Several Days After the March 12, 1888 Storm.
Photo Courtesy of The Office of The Historian of The Town of Pelham.

"Chapter II

THE BLIZZARD OF MARCH 12, 1888

If I were essaying to write an autobiography, my experience in the great blizzard of ’88 would occupy an important chapter; but my memory of such a freak of nature, fifty years after it had occurred, might be as vague as Irving’s when he confessed that he was ‘always at a loss to know how much to believe’ of his own stories.  Then too, to revive the controversies of fifty years ago as to (1) what individual had the most perilous experience, and (2) whether the storm of March 12, 1888, was a real blizzard comparable to those which frequently rage on the plains and in the mountainous regions of the great West, would be quite aside from my present purpose.  It is enough to accept the cautious statement of the weatherman of the day (Elias B. Dunn – ‘Farmer Dunn’) that two storms from opposite directions focused at New York and covered a few hundred miles radius, and that ‘the wind reached 84 miles an hour and the temperature touched 4 degrees below zero.’

With that background I may briefly summarize my own experience:  At 7:00 A.M. on March 12, 1888, I started from my home in Pelham Manor, Westchester County.  I took a train – already an hour late – which with ever-slowing pace, finally ran into a snowbank at Westchester, five miles distant, and there impotently reposed for about a week.  After eight hours of anxious [Page 16 / Page 17] waiting, with no information as to what was happening elsewhere, a neighbor and I, in the hope of receiving assistance, started for home.  We staggered through sleet and gales and mountains of snow, which obscured the roads and landmarks, and over long railroad trestles, creeping over the ties on hands and knees in the long stretches from station to station.  No human being was abroad.  No assistance was at hand and there was ‘darkness there and nothing more.’  The sense of desolation and the consciousness of impending peril marked every step.  Finally, after five hours of strenuous effort, we descried the lights of our homes and relieved our families from their natural anxiety.  I escaped any lasting physical results except that four fingers and an ear were frost bitten.

Relieved from danger and ignorant of what proved to be the enforced suspension of every business and professional activity, I was faced with the specter of a default in the case I was to try that morning, and the damage which my client would suffer and the reflex upon my own fidelity.  Telegraph and telephone communications, as well as the delivery of newspapers, were interrupted for a week.  Striving to believe that ‘They also serve who only stand and wait,’ I shoveled snow drifts ten feet high until, three days later, through favor of the railroad company, I was taken to the city on a work train. 

Reaching my office the next day (I have forgotten how), I was relieved from the anxiety suffered by everybody on account of their business obligations; for it proved that the disturbance of business and professional work was so general that there was a virtual moratorium for a week.  In none of the courts could a complete jury be impaneled.  Neither court officers nor witnesses were [Page 17 / Page 18] present.  Only one judge of several dozen of any of the courts succeeded in reaching the courthouse and in a few rooms he went through the form of announcing to empty seats an adjournment for a week.  The happenings in the courts, however, did not appeal to the reporters seeking more exciting news.  But they did gather together the news which centered around ex-Senator Roscoe Conkling.  The experiences of that conspicuous statesman had interest for everyone, and perhaps naturally, the accounts widely differed.  That generally current was that the day after the blizzard he was delirious, that an abscess on the brain followed and that he soon died.  But another account published in a weekly newspaper purporting to be from the Senator’s own lips, was to the effect that on Tuesday, March 13th, when the blizzard was still raging, he appeared in the Surrogates’ Court, and there in the presence of a group of lawyers recounted his experience of the preceding day.  But whatever the fact, the Surrogate adjourned the hearing in the Stewart will case, in which Senator Conklin and Elihu Root were among the trial counsel.  While the Senator was undoubtedly subjected to an unusual strain, he resumed his professional activities for some weeks, and it was not until April 4th that he took to his bed.  The eminent physician, Dr. Fordyce Barker, was in attendance.  There developed an ear abscess, perhaps caused by over-exertion in the month previous.  The first public alarm, however, as to the Senator’s condition, was not aroused until April 9th, when an operation was performed to free an outlet for the discharge from the abscess; but complications ensued and he died at 2 o’clock on the morning of April 17th or 18th, more than a month after his experience in the blizzard.

Excepting for what I have said, there was very little notice taken of the adventures of lawyers or the disloca- [Page 18 / Page 19] tion of the administration of justice.  This chapter may be closed, however, with one episode not heretofore noticed, which gives specific judicial confirmation to the severity of the storm.

At six o’clock on the morning of March 13, 1888, the car float of a railroad company which I represented, moored in one of the slips not far above the Battery broke her bow fastenings and swinging down collided with the boat of the plaintiff who filed a libel for damages, claiming that the fastenings were improper and insufficient.  The case was tried before Judge Addison Brown, an eminent admiralty judge.  After describing the occurrence, the judge referred to the ‘fierceness of the storm’ and the ‘immense floe of ice’ coming up the East River, causing a swinging of the car float so as to break all the lines that fastened her to a schooner lying alongside.  There had been no ice in the East River up to that time but ‘it came in in such quantities that people passed across the river, an extraordinary occurrence that happens only once in many years.’  Dismissing all of the cases of somewhat similar occurrences as presenting nothing which could have been anticipated, the judge closed his opinion with these words:

‘It was an extraordinary occurrence, not reasonably to be anticipated.  There was no previous ice to suggest the necessity of taking precautions against it, certainly none as respects such an immense floe as came in with the morning flood.  This distinguishes the present case from all those cited.  There was no time to provide any additional securities after this floe was seen coming; and the accident should, therefore be, in my opinion, ascribed, not to the omission of any reasonable precautions in fastening, but wholly to the extraordinary occasion, and to this almost unexampled storm and cold.’ 1
1 This case, Wishing v. The Transfer No. 2 and Car Float No. 12, is reported in The Federal Reporter, Vol. 56, at page 313.”

Source:  Taft, Henry W., Legal Miscellanies:  Six Decades of Changes and Progress, pp. 16-19 (NY, NY:  The MacMillan Company, 1941). 


Photograph of the Streets of New York City in the Aftermath of the
Blizzard of 1888.  There Were So Many Downed Lines within New York City
That the Storm Prompted the City to Move Utility Lines Underground.
Source of Photograph:  Wikimedia Commons.

For other accounts of the aftermath of The Great White Hurricane in Pelham, see:

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