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, May 21, 2018

The Story of Mary Blizzard, a Pelham Squatter on an Island in Eastchester Creek


In about 1867, Mary A. Blizzard took over a tiny little island in Eastchester Creek.  She didn't own the one-acre island and made no pretense to try to gain title to the land.  She simply began building on the island adjacent to Pelham Bridge.  No one seemed to object.  She built several buildings including a hotel and connected buildings on the southern end of the island and a boat-house on the northern end.

The little hotel and boathouse became a destination for anglers and sporting types who came to Pelham, usually from New York City, to fish and hunt.  As the years passed, Mary Blizzard continued to improve the island, the hotel, and the boathouse.  

Members of the Blizzard family owned a good deal of land in the region from today's Westchester Square through much of the Pelham Bay area.  Indeed, David Blizzard operated a hotel built on pilings adjacent to Pelham Bridge during the 1870s.  Known colloquially as "Blizzard's," the establishment became known as the Grand View Hotel.  It seems likely that the hotel Mary A. Blizzard and Blizzard's (aka the Grand View Hotel) were one and the same, but extensive research efforts have not yet resolved this issue which remains confused because there were a surprisingly large number of hotels situated at the Pelham Bridge during the late 19th century.

Another important clue that suggests the two may have been one and the same is the following.  Mary A. Blizzard was an aunt of a man well known to readers of the Historic Pelham Blog:  William John "Jack" Elliott.  Jack Elliott managed the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge for a time.  To learn more about Jack Elliott and the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge, see:

Tue., Aug. 02, 2016:  More Research Regarding the 19th Century Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge.

Thu., Jan. 21, 2016:  Research Regarding David Blizzard's 19th Century Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge

Fri., Jul. 29, 2016: Shooting Death at the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge in 1892.

In the 1880s, of course, New York City began assembling the lands necessary to form Pelham Bay Park.  Among those lands was the tiny little island on which Mary Blizzard's hotel and boathouse stood.

Because Mary Blizzard could not establish title to the island, the Commissioner of Estimate charged with valuing such properties and awarding the fair value for the properties taken by New York City to the properties' owners valued the island and its buildings but awarded the estimated amount to "unknown persons."  The Commissioner of Estimate valued the land of the island at $5,000 and the buildings that stood on the island at $8,350 for a total of $13,350 (about $450,000 in today's dollars).  Mary A. Blizzard immediately filed a petition seeking an award of the $13,350.

A referee heard the matter and concluded that Mary's possession of the property for more than twenty years constituted sufficient evidence that she was the rightful owner for purposes of receiving the money.  Mary Blizzard then petitioned the New York Supreme Court, General Term in the First Department seeking a confirmation of the referee's report in her favor.

The Court denied the petition, thereby ruling in favor of New York City.  The Court found that Mary Blizzard was a mere "squatter" whose use of the island failed to rise to the level necessary to establish the requirements of "adverse possession" under New York law -- a doctrine whereby someone who takes possession of another's real estate and claims title to the real estate exclusive of the right of any other actually takes title to the property after the passage of a sufficient period of time.  The Court ruled "It appears from the evidence taken in this proceeding that the taking of possession by the petitioner was not, in its commencement, hostile to the true title, and it does not appear when the petitioner commenced to claim title to the premium exclusive of any other right, if she ever did so; and as under no circumstances can possession be deemed adverse until this condition of affairs is made to appear, it is not in proof that there was any adverse possession of the petitioner for 20 years."

Mary Blizzard and her lawyer immediately turned to the State of New York where they were able to obtain special legislation entitled "AN ACT for the relief of Mary A. Blizzard" passed by the State Legislature and signed into law by the Governor on May 2, 1892.  The act required the Comptroller of the City of New York to advertise for seven weeks seeking to have anyone else who claimed and could prove title to the little island to come forward and so prove or the money would be paid to Mary Blizzard.

Eventually Mary Blizzard received substantial compensation not only for her little island and hotel, but also for other properties she owned that were taken by New York City as part of the creation of Pelham Bay Park.  Mary Blizzard became a wealthy woman with an estate worth $110,000 at the time of her death in July, 1912 (about $2.84 million in today's dollars).

Mary's story did not end with her death.  Mary left her entire estate to her "favorite nephew," Jack Elliott.  Jack went on one of the greatest benders ever seen in the history of Pelham -- indeed, a bender that may have killed him!  

Despite his past, by 1912 Jack Elliott was known as a responsible family man -- married with two sons.  When he received the fruits of his aunt's estate he took off, leaving his wife and sons behind.  He spent profligately.  He moved from roadhouse to roadhouse buying drinks for all and leaving tips of hundreds of dollars for barkeeps, cabbies, and others everywhere he went.  In only two months, Jack Elliott spent $75,000 (about $1.93 million in today's dollars).  Within a short time thereafter, Elliott spent $90,000 of the money left to him by his aunt.  Elliott was known to pick up a $150 bar tab for his pals, toss a $500 bill at the bar tender, then walk out without waiting for change.

Elliott's wife and sons, of course, were aghast and resorted to the courts.  They filed every conceivable claim they could muster against Jack Elliott.  They charged him with "abandonment, non-support, insanity, and everything else they could think of."  However, first they had to serve Jack Elliott with process.

Eventually, they used an army of process servers to present Jack Elliott with legal papers.  Elliott slipped out the back doors of many roadhouses avoiding such process servers.  By attaching various bank accounts, the family was able to slow Elliott's spending, but he maintained so many accounts that they could not stop his reckless ways.  


Finally, the army of process servers closed in on William John "Jack" Elliott.  According to one account, the process servers "established a line across Westchester County, particularly over the Pelham Parkway.  Guards were doubled and the party began to close in."  

The process servers, however, never got to Jack Elliott.  One fine morning they tracked the happy fellow to a roadhouse known as Bradley's only to learn that Jack Elliott had dropped dead of "apoplexy" (i.e., a stroke) at the age of 50.  Jack Elliott's days of profligate spending were over.  
     



Detail from Engraving Published in 1884 Showing Pelham Bridge. Structures
in the Background May Possibly Include Blizzard's Grand View Hotel, But This
Is Not Known With Certainty. Source: "PELHAM PARK, NEW YORK. --
DRAWN BY CHARLES GRAHAM.", Harper's Weekly, Vol. XXVIII, No. 1442,
1884, pp. 514 & 521. NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.


*          *          *          *          *

"In re MAYOR, ETC., OF CITY OF NEW YORK.
In re BLIZZARD.
(Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.  February 18, 1892.)

ADVERSE POSSESSION -- RIGHTS OF SQUATTER.

A woman, finding a small island in Westchester creek [sic], near New York city, unoccupied, entered thereon without claim or color of title, record or otherwise, erected buildings thereon, and remained in possession for 20 years.  Held that, being a mere squatter, she could not obtain title by adverse possession.

Proceedings by the mayor, alderman, and commonalty of the city of New York to acquire lands under Laws N. Y. 1884, c. 512.  Mary A. Blizzard filed a petition therein, claiming a portion of moneys awarded by the commissioner of estimate to unknown persons.  Petitioner moves to confirm the report of a referee in her favor.  Denied.

Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and BARRETT, J.

W. R. Lambertson, for petitioner.  C. D. Allendorf, for the city.

VAN BRUNT, P. J.  The commissioners of estimate, by their report in this proceeding, awarded the sum of $13,350 to unknown owners for parcel 691, in Pelham Bay park.  Of this, $5,000 was made for the land, and the balance, $8,350, for the buildings.  The petitioner claims to have been the owner of parcel 691 at the time of the confirmation, and of the report of the commissioners in said proceedings, and the referee has so found.  Her claim of ownership is not based upon any record title to said premises, but is founded wholly upon possession and occupancy of said property for a period of more than 20 years.  The parcel stands in an island in Westchester creek [sic], and is divided into two parts, which may be described as the northerly and southerly parts of the island, the dividing line being a public highway extending the whole length of the island, upon each side of which highway there is and was at the time the claimant went into possession a substantial stone wall or fence.  The petitioner went into possession of the southerly portion of the island more than 20 years prior to the confirmation of the report, and erected an hotel and buildings connected therewith, and has ever since remained in possession thereof.  Her entry does not seem to have been under any claim of title, and her occupation has been that of a squatter.  It is true that upon her examination she stated that she took possession of this property, claiming title thereto.  But it is apparent from her cross-examination that she made no claim of title at the time of her entry; but, to use her own language, she 'just squatted there, as it were.'  It further appeared that she had no record title to said premises, either by way of deed, grant, devise, or writing of any kind.  Her only acts of ownership in respect to the northerly portion of the island consisted in building a boat-house, and planting oysters and clams in the waters adjacent to the island.  Upon these facts the referee reported that the petitioner was entitled to the award made for the island in question.  In this, we think, he clearly erred.  It is plain that whatever the possession of the petitioner was, it was not under any claim of title, nor does it appear that she ever asserted ownership except by being in possession.  Under the definition of adverse possession, such possession, to be adverse, must be under claim of title; and naked possession, unaccompanied by such claim, can never ripen into a good title.  It necessarily follows that, where possession is under a claim of title, it must be made under some distinct claim of title, and not by a mere general assertion of ownership, without reference to any source from which such ownership can arise.  In other words, a mere squatter can never obtain title by adverse possession.  In order that possession of land shall be adverse, it must be shown that the land is held in hostility to the true owner's claim of title thereto.  It appears from the evidence taken in this proceeding that the taking of possession by the petitioner was not, in its commencement, hostile to the true title, and it does not appear when the petitioner commenced to claim title to the premium exclusive of any other right, if she ever did so; and as under no circumstances can possession be deemed adverse until this condition of affairs is made to appear, it is not in proof that there was any adverse possession of the petitioner for 20 years.  In view of the conclusion at which we have arrived in regard to the main question involved, it is not necessary to discuss the distinction between the nature of the possession of the northerly and southerly half of the island.  Upon the whole case we think that the claim of the petitioner is defective in establishing a right to the moneys which have been awarded for the taking of the premises in question."

Source:  In re Blizzard, 18 N.Y. Supp. 82-84 (Gen. Term, 1st Dep't, Feb. 18, 1892).  

"CHAP. 430.

AN ACT for the relief of Mary A. Blizzard.

APPROVED by the Governor May 2, 1892.  Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Advertising for claimants to awards.

SECTION 1.  The comptroller of the city of New York is hereby directed to advertise once in each week for seven successive weeks, as soon as practicable after the passage of this act, in a daily newspaper published in the said city for claimants to the awards now in his custody made for the parcel known as parcel number six hundred and ninety-one, Pelham Bay Park, made to 'unknown owners,' by the commissioners of estimated appointed under and pursuant to the provisions of chapter five hundred and twenty-two of the laws of eighteen hundred and eighty-four.

Payment of amount to M. A. Blizzard

[SECTION] 2.  If no other claimant shall appeal and prove title to the said awards to the satisfaction of the said comptroller within three months after the first publication of said notice, then the said comptroller is hereby authorized and directed to pay over the amount of said awards to Mary A. Blizzard of the town of Pelham, the present occupant of the said premises.

Release of city from liability.  Suits, etc., against city barred

[SECTION] 3.  Upon the completion of the advertising, as herein provided for, and upon the expiration of the said limitation, and upon the payment of the said awards to Mary A. Blizzard, the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of New York shall be forever released and discharged from any liability to any person or persons whomsoever for the said award or any part thereof, and any suit, action or special proceeding which may thereafter be brought against the said mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York to recover the said awards or any part thereof shall be deemed to be barred by the limitations of this act.

[Section] 4.  This act shall take effect immediately."

Source:  CHAP. 430 -- AN ACT for the relief of Mary A. Blizzard, The General Statutes of the State of New York for the Year 1892, p. 1035 (Albany, NY:  Weed, Parsons and Co., 1892).  

"A WOMAN SQUATTER.
-----
She Occupies an Island, Builds a Hotel and Tries to Sell the Property.

Mrs. Mary A. Blizzard is in a fair way to acquire property rather easily obtained.  More than twenty-five years ago she squatted on an island in Eastchester Creek, about an acre in area.  This land is now in Pelham Bay Park.  She built a hotel there valued at $8,350, the surrounding land being set down as worth $5,000.  When the city took possession of the Pelham Bay Park property Mrs. Blizzard put in a claim for payment of $13,350, but as she could give no title, the city refused to settle with her.  She brought suit in the courts, relying on her undisputed possession of over twenty years, but the general term decided against her.  A bill was passed by the last Legislature for Mrs. Blizzard's relief.  Under it the comptroller will advertise for owners.  If no one but Mrs. Blizzard appears her claim will be paid."

Source:  A WOMAN SQUATTER -- She Occupies an Island, Builds a Hotel and Tries to Sell the Property, The Hartford Courant [Hartford, CT], May 6, 1892, p. 7, cols. 1-2

"SUDDENLY RICH, SPENT $75,000 IN 2 MONTHS
-----
Widow Appointed Executrix of $25,000 Estate 'Jack' Elliott Left.
-----

In an effort to save for his family the remainder of the estate of William J. Elliott, better known as 'Jack' Elliott, who spent $75,000 in two months, his widow was appointed executrix yesterday.  Elliott reduced a fortune of $100,000 to $25,000 by lavish spending.  

Elliott died suddenly of apoplexy on Friday last in a roadhouse in Port Chester just before a warrant was to be served on him for abandonment.  He was buried the Sunday following in the Blizzard homestead, Pelham Bay.  Other legal proceedings having failed to check Elliott in his mania for throwing away money, his wife had decided to have him arrested for abandonment in hope of having him removed to a sanatorium.

Until last July, when Elliott's aunt, Mary Blizzard, died, he was a model as a family man.  He, his wife and two sons lived happily in the Pelham Bay homestead.  By the death of his aunt he inherited the greater part of her fortune.  Then came a whirlwind change in Elliott's life.

Frequented by Astor.

Six or seven years ago 'Jack' Elliott owned and conducted the Pelham Bay Park Hotel, a roadhouse frequented by Colonel John Jacob Astor and others who figured in finance and society.  He made hundreds of friends.

About April, 1912, Elliott's aunt was awarded $75,000 from the city for Pelham Bay property.  She died in July.

On August 1 Elliott got $40,000 in cash, part being the city's award money and part from his aunt.  In less than fifteen days this money was nearly all gone.  He is said to have spent $500 a night, his wine bill for a week running over $1,000.  At different times he drew on his inheritance liberally.

Elliott's relatives and friends became alarmed.  Bennett E. Siegelstein, attorney, in No. 90 Nassau street, formerly Assemblyman from the old Eighth district, was engaged by Mrs. Elliott to see what could be done.  Three writs of attachment failed of their purpose.

Entertained the 'Boys.'

Elliott disappeared from his home, but his sons found he was living in the Colonial Hotel, Eighth avenue and 125th street.  Automobile trips from the hotel to roadhouses were features of entertainment for the boys as he called his friends.

In September, Siegelstein got a writ for the appointment of a receiver and an injunction to tie up the property Elliott kept him busy trying to find him.

Elliott deposited in the Nassau Trust Company on August 9 $26,000, but by the time the lawyer could get an attachment against the bank $14,000 had been drawn and spent by Elliott.

Elliott's widow was Sarah E. Doherty.  She was wealthy in her own right."

Source:  SUDDENLY RICH, SPENT $75,000 IN 2 MONTHS -- Widow Appointed Executrix of $25,000 Estate "Jack" Elliott Left, N.Y. Press, Sep. 25, 1912, p. 7, col. 5.  

"SPENT $90,000 IN TEN MONTHS, THEN HE DIED.
-----
Jack Elliott Didn't Go Near White Light District With His Roll.  --  Windfall From His Aunt.
-----

How to spend $90,000 in New York City in ten months and not go near Broadway and Forty-second street was told in detail last Tuesday about the time letters of administration in the estate of William J. Elliott were awarded to Sarah E. Elliott, the widow.

Elliott, universally known as Jack, was the man who did the spending.  He dropped dead at Bradley's roadhouse, Port Chester, September 20.

Bennett E. Siegelstein, attorney for the estate, told the story after the letters had been awarded.  He undid a large bundle of papers and pointed to about five check books which had been reduced almost to the covers.

'Those check books and the balanced bank books tell the story of how Jack Elliott spent $90,000 in this short space of time,' he said, 'and they show that out of $110,000 cash a year ago not more than $15,000 remains.  It also shows that at the moment he dropped dead he was just drawing another check for $500, which had become his average daily expenditure.'

Then Mr. Siegelstein illuminated his subject, Jack Elliott, about 50 years of age, was a member of the Blizzard family, which owned much of Pelham Bay  conjointly with the Doherty family.  He married Sarah E. Doherty nearly thirty years ago.  Elliott for years ran the Pelham Bay roadhouse, known to automobilists and drivers.  He was a steady family man.

Elliott had two sons, David, now 25, and Julian J., 20 years old.  The sole living representative of the old Blizzard family up to April of this year was Miss Mary A. Blizzard, and Jack Elliott was her favorite nephew.

When the city took part of the property for Westchester Square and then took some more for the bridge she got about $110,000 in cash, leaving more to come.

Miss Blizzard turned this money over to Jack, and when she died in April her will left everything to him.  At the time he got the money Elliott was living with his family in the old Doherty homestead up on the bay.  He started out to drink wine and to have all his friends and neighbors drink with him.

The family remonstrated and Elliott left home.  They complained, and he got a revolver threatening to use it on anyone who tried to stop him.  Inside of three months he was going strong and at the end of six months he was the most popular man from Port Chester to 125th street.  He had wine before he got up for breakfast, between meals and at all meals.  Also every one who came near him had it.

One night he went into the Colonial, according to Mr. Siegelstein, and ordered wine for everybody.  The bill ws $150.  He tossed over a $500 bill and walked out without waiting for change.  He had a regular arrangement with the taxicab men, who would charge him $25 for going from the Colonial to a Pelham Bay roadhouse.  His usual procedure was to tell the chauffeur to keep the change out of a $100 bill.

Elliott, it is said, met some Italian labors one day working on a new building.  He got their dinner buckets and filled them with champagne by permission of the owners.  The Contractor had his bricks laid to grand opera the rest of the day, and the inspector condemned the job at that.

His family got after the man in real earnest about the end of July.  They went to court and Mr. Siegelstein got an order to show cause why he should not be restrained from spending his money.  They wanted him locked up for observation.  A process server could not get within half a mile of him.  A process server would come in the front door and Elliott would take a taxicab from the back door to go whizzing to the next roadhouse.

The sons who led in the search came upon their father one day and tried to get him to go with them.  They were holding him by conversation until an officer could arrive.  He gave them $1,500 and told them to buy a motorboat, then vanished.  A process server chased the man down to a house in East Eighty-fourth street owned by the estate, but not yet turned into money.  The process server was greeted by a dog which bit him.  While the process server was attending to the dog, Elliott was flying uptown in a convenient taxi.

Then the family got real busy.  They got a summons, a warrant, an injunction, a mandamus and a few other writs in the hope of getting the man on something.  They charged him with abandonment, non-support, insanity, and everything else they could think of.  The company of process servers did not fare any better than the original scouts.  They were always close on the trail, but the man was ahead of them.

Finally they established a line across Westchester County, particularly over the Pelham Parkway.  Guards were doubled and the party began to close in.  They arrived at Bradley's that morning of the 20th to find the search ended.  The doctors said that apoplexy had ended the man's career.

Nobody seems to have been particularly hurt by the man's weird career of prodigality.  The estate is still large in property.  The city still owes $15,000 and Mrs. Elliott has the Doherty estate in addition."

Source:  SPENT $90,000 IN TEN MONTHS, THEN HE DIED -- Jack Elliott Didn't Go Near White Light District With His Roll  --  Windfall From His Aunt, Dobbs Ferry Register [Dobbs Ferry, NY], Sep. 27, 1912, Vol. XXX, No. 39, p. 5, col. 3.  

"Spent $75,000 In Two Months.

New York, Oct. 15.  --  In an effort to save for his family the remainder of the estate of William J. Elliott, better known as 'Jack' Elliott, who spent $75,000 in two months, his widow was appointed executrix.  Elliott reduced a fortune of $100,000 to $25,000 by lavish spending.

Elliott died suddenly of apoplexy in a roadhouse in Port Chester just before a warrant was to be served on him for abandonment.  He was buried the Sunday following in the Blizzard homestead, Pelham Bay.  Other legal proceedings having failed to check Elliott in his mania for throwing away money, his wife had decided to have him arrested for abandonment in hope of having him removed to a sanatorium.

Until last July, when Elliott's aunt, Mary Blizzard, died, he was a model as a family man.  He, his wife, and two sons lived happily in the Pelham Bay homestead.  By the death of his aunt, he inherited the greater part of her fortune.  Then came a whirlwind change in Elliott's life."

Source:  Spent $75,000 In Two Months, Journal and Republican and Lowville Times [Lowville, NY], Oct. 17, 1912, Vol. 53, No. 49, Sec. 2, p. 9, col. 2.

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Tuesday, August 02, 2016

More Research Regarding the 19th Century Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge


The Grand View Hotel once was located near the northeasterly end of the Pelham Bridge overlooking Eastchester Bay.  Although there is some confusion today regarding exactly where the hotel stood, according to an account published in 1882:  "the yellow roadhouse . . . rests on piles over the Pelham river at the north end of Pelham bridge."  POLITICS LEADS TO MURDER -- John Elliott Shoots John Hiney in the Pelham Bridge HotelThe World [NY, NY], Nov. 8, 1892, Vol. XXXIII, No. 11403, p. 1, cols. 6-8.

David Blizzard was the proprietor of the Grand View Hotel during most of the 1870s.  Known for many years, informally, as "Blizzard's," the hotel was extremely popular with excursionists and fishermen.  During the early 1880s, a man named John Elliott (also known as Johnny and Jack) became the proprietor of the hotel.  

I have written before about the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge.  See, e.g.:

Thu., Jan. 21, 2016:  Research Regarding David Blizzard's 19th Century Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge.  

 Fri., Jul. 29, 2016:  Shooting Death at the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge in 1892.



Detail from Engraving Published in 1884 Showing Pelham
Bridge.  Structures in the Background Likely Include
Blizzard's Grand View Hotel, But This Is Not Known With
Certainty. Source: "PELHAM PARK, NEW YORK. -- DRAWN
BY CHARLES GRAHAM.", Harper's Weekly, Vol. XXVIII, No.
1442, 1884, pp. 514 & 521.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Clearly the Grand View Hotel was a grand and beautiful location that was the scene of many grand and lavish parties.  For example, a party held at the hotel on September 26, 1872 and hosted by Griffith Thomas was among "the most brilliant . . . ever witnessed in Westchester County."  According to one account:   "140 variegated lanterns illuminated the arched platform of the hotel, on which the guests assembled, and while the New Rochelle Brass Band filled the air with delightful music, magnificent fireworks were set off in front of the balcony, where his lovely wife and her lady friends were seated.  The supper was delicious, the table was splendidly arranged and elegantly decorated with choice flowers."  (See complete account quoted in full below.)

In 1890, the Park Board of New York City announced that although they would raze a number of structures in Pelham Bay Park and other city parks, they planned to spare the Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge.  According to one report, the Board believed "[m]any of the buildings are badly cared for, and [it was] recommended the removal of many of them and an increase in the rental of those that are to remain.  The latter include the Grand View Hotel at the northerly end of the Pelham Bridge. . ."  (See complete account quoted in full below.)

In 1899, proprietorship of the Grand View Hotel passed to Fritz Rumpf, who succeeded John Elliott.  Rumpf took opened his hotel on April 1, 1899.  It was described at the time as a "new hotel and summer resort at Pelham Bridge . . . [that] is one of the best equipped hotels along the shore road and was formerly conducted by 'Jack' Elliott."  (See complete account quoted in full below.) 

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Below is the text of various articles that form the research documented in today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"ON LAST THURSDAY EVENING A SUMPTUOUS Entertainment was given by Mr. Griffith Thomas, at the Grand View Hotel, Pelham Bridge, kept by Blizzard & Mahony, and on this occasion, as on all others, his generosity was boundless, and the whole affair was the most brilliant we ever witnessed in Westchester county; 140 variegated lanterns illuminated the arched platform of the hotel, on which the guests assembled, and while the New Rochelle Brass Band filled the air with delightful music, magnificent fireworks were set off in front of the balcony, where his lovely wife and her lady friends were seated.  The supper was delicious, the table was splendidly arranged and elegantly decorated with choice flowers.  But its chief ornament ws Mrs. Thomas, in her surpassing beauty, void of that haughty consciousness that is so painfully perceptible in Nature's favorites, reminding us of Raphael's Madonna.  Mr. Thomas is a very wealthy gentleman, and, being one of Nature's noblemen, the wealth could not have fallen into better hands.  His sole happiness appears to be centred in making others happy, and his kind deeds will be remembered long after he has joined his loved ones, gone before him to a happier land than this."

Source:  [Untitled "Special Notice" Advertisement], N.Y. Herald, Oct. 2, 1872, No. 13191, p. 1, col. 2 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via this link).   

"WEST CHESTER. . . 

The Grand View Hotel at the bridge, under the management of John Elliott, appears to be popular and prosperous.  It appears to be a favorite resort for politicians of New York, and last week was favored with a visit from the Park Commissioners, and several of the Aldermen, while Alderman Duffy and a large party of friends engaged the attention of the host another day.  On Wednesday another large party in a six horse stage, visited the house, and went away late in the day, after having had a very pleasant time, greatly pleased and promising another visit."

Source:  WEST CHESTERNew Rochelle Pioneer, Jun. 9, 1883, Vol. XXIV, No. 11, p. 2, cols. 3-4.  



"BUILDINGS IN THE NEW PARKS.

President Gallup made a report at yesterday's meeting of the Park Board on the various buildings in the new parks.  It set forth that the annual income of the department for rentals of the buildings is $12,000, about one-half the amount expended in keeping the roads in repair.  Many of the buildings are badly cared for, and he recommended the removal of many of them and an increase in the rental of those that are to remain.  

The latter include the Grand View Hotel at the northerly end of the Pelham Bridge, the Schuyler house, Steers's house, Jones's place, and Marshall's place in Pelham Park, the Old Country Club house at Bartow Station, stone houses on Hunter's and Twin Islands, the Lorillard mansion in Bronx Park, and the Van Cortlandt mansion, Disbrow house, and Tremper house in Van Cortlandt Park.  No action was taken on the report."

Source:  BUILDINGS IN THE NEW PARKS, N.Y. Times, Jul. 17, 1890, p. 3, col. 4 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via this link).  

"--Fritz Rumpf, formerly proprietor of Music Hall, will open his new hotel and summer resort at Pelham Bridge to-day.  The Pelham Bridge Hotel is one of the best equipped hotels along the shore road and was formerly conducted by 'Jack' Elliott."

Source:  [Untitled], The New Rochelle Pioneer, Apr. 1, 1899, p. 5, col. 4.  

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Thursday, January 21, 2016

Research Regarding David Blizzard's 19th Century Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge


Introduction

Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog collects, and tries to make some sense of, research regarding David Blizzard's Grand View Hotel at Pelham Bridge that was taken over by George P. Arcularius in 1880.  As students of Pelham history might suspect, any history of Blizzard's Hotel necessarily overlaps with that of the famous Arcularius Hotel.  

The purpose of this posting is not to present the story of the Grand View Hotel.  Instead, it is intended to collect many of the incomplete and disparate references to the hotel and its history and to assemble such references to encourage debate regarding how the hotel (and the Articularius Hotel) evolved at Pelham Bridge over time given their importance to Pelham history.  

The Grand View Hotel:  Early Years

The Grand View Hotel once was located near the northeasterly end of the Pelham Bridge overlooking Eastchester Bay.  David Blizzard was the proprietor of the Grand View Hotel during most of the 1870s.  Known for many years, informally, as "Blizzard's," the hotel was extremely popular with excursionists and fishermen while Blizzard was its proprietor.  David Blizzard was a resident of the settlement located only a few hundred yards away known as Bartow.  Cf. Grand View Hotel [Advertisement], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 26, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 462, p. 3, col. 2 (stating "Address D. BLIZZARD, Bartow Station, Westchester Co., N.Y.").  

The precise location of the hotel remains somewhat of a mystery.  Beers Atlas maps of the area published in 1867 and 1868 do not seem to show the hotel (although the 1868 map shows another early hotel marked as the "J. Davis Hotel" located on the mainland near the southwesterly end of Pelham Bridge.  Likewise the Bromley Atlas map of the area published in 1881 makes no reference to the hotel, although there is a cryptic reference to a "BOAT HO." on the mainland near the northeasterly end of the bridge.  

There is some evidence to suggest that the hotel was accessible by boat or by walking to it at low tide, but that still does not resolve its precise location.  Jorge Santiago of the Northeast Bronx History Forum has hypothesized that the hotel may have been built on an outcropping near the center of Pelham Bridge, but warns that we cannot be sure of this.  



1896 NOOA Nautical Chart Detail Depicting the Area of Pelham Bridge
And Suggesting a Possible Location of Blizzard's Grand View Hotel.
Image Courtesy of Jorge Santiago of the Northeast Bronx History
Forum, Used with Permission.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Suffice it to say that, for now, the best we can settle on from newspaper accounts of the day was that Blizzard's Grand View Hotel was located somewhere near the northeasterly end of Pelham Bridge.



Detail from Engraving Published in 1884 Showing Pelham Bridge.
Structures in the Background May Possibly Include Blizzard's
Grand View Hotel, But This Is Not Known With Certainty.
 Source: "PELHAM PARK, NEW YORK. -- DRAWN BY CHARLES
GRAHAM.", Harper's Weekly, Vol. XXVIII, No. 1442, 1884, pp. 514 & 521.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

The Grand View Hotel was a seasonal hotel open principally during the summer months.  See New Advertisements, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon], Aug. 16, 1878, p. 3, col. 3.  Early advertisements indicate that the hotel offered "facilities for Boating, Fishing, Yachting and Riding" with "Boats kept constantly on hand."  See, e.g., id.  Additionally, the hotel boasted that "PIC-NIC PARTIES and EXCURSIONISTS accommodated at the shortest notice."  Id.

The earliest newspaper reference yet located to the Grand View Hotel is reflected in a brief article published in October, 1872.  The article indicates that as of that early date, the Grand View Hotel was operated by two men:  "Blizzard & Mahony."  The brief reference reads as follows:

"ON LAST THURSDAY EVENING A SUMPTUOUS EN-tertainment was given by Mr. Griffith Thomas, at the Grand View Hotel, Pelham Bridge, kept by Blizzard & Mahony, and on this occasion, as on all others, his generosity was boundless, and the whole affair was the most brilliant we ever witnessed in Westchester county; 140 variegated lanterns illuminated the arched platform of the hotel, on which the guests assembled, and while the New Rochelle Brass Band filled the air with delightful music, magnificent fireworks were set off in front of the balcony, where his lovely wife and her lady friends were seated. The supper was delicious, the table was splendidly arranged and elegantly decorated with choice flowers. But its chief ornament was Mrs. Thomas, in her surpassing beauty, void of that haughty consciousness that is so painfully perceptible in Nature's favorites, reminding us of Raphael's Madonna. Mr. Thomas is a very wealthy gentleman, and, being one of Nature's noblemen, the wealth could not have fallen into better hands. His sole happiness appears to be centered in making others happy, and his kind deeds will be remembered long after he has joined his loved ones, gone before him to a happier land than this."

Source:  [Untitled], N.Y. Herald, Oct. 2, 1872, p. 1, col. 2 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via link.).

Advertisements during the time that David Blizzard served as proprietor of the Grand View Hotel indicate that in addition to overnight guests, the hotel accepted "Regular Boarders" under "very moderate" terms.  See, e.g.Grand View Hotel [Advertisement], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 26, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 462, p. 3, col. 2 ("Terms for Regular Boarders very moderate.").  

George P. Arcularius and the Arcularius Hotel in the Old Lorillard "Cottage"

During the 1870s, a man named George P. Arcularius also operated a nearby competing Pelham Bridge hotel named the "Arcularius Hotel."  While Blizzard's Grand View Hotel was advertising its services in July, 1878, a local newspaper reported that Arcularius was improving his own Arcularius Hotel at Pelham Bridge that same month.  See WestchesterThe Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 19, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 461, p. 1, col. 6

During the mid-1870s, the Arcularius Hotel became, for a short time, the destination of the famed "Pelham Coach" operated by Col. Delancey Kane.  As the destination for the famous "Tally-Ho" driven by Col. Kane, the Arcularius Hotel became well-known in its own right.  See, e.g.COL. DELANCEY KANE'S COACH -- The Trip to be Made To-Morrow to Pelham Bridge and Back -- The First PassengersThe Sun [NY, NY], Apr. 30, 1876, p. 5, col. 3

The Arcularius Hotel appears to have been established in a rather notable structure.  It was the old Lorillard "Cottage" (as distinct from the main Lorillard mansion once located in today's Bronx Park).  A number of sources of the day indicate that the Arcularius Hotel was established in the old "Pierre Lorillard mansion."  See, e.g.The New Coach Line. Charming Ride to Pelham Bridge, N.Y. Times, May 2, 1876, p. 10 ("Arcularius Hotel is the old Pierre Lorillard mansion, situated on the shore of the Sound, surrounded with beautiful lawns and shade trees, and affording excellent opportunity for boating, fishing, and bathing. There could not be a pleasanter place in which to while away an afternoon.").  

References to the "Lorillard mansion" at Pelham Bridge would seem to be references to the "neat cottage" of "Mr. Pierre Lorillard Jr." that stood on the on the "north side of the neck at Pelham Bridge" referred to in Thomas Scharf's History of Westchester County published in 1886  See Scharf, J. Thomas, History of Westchester County New York, Including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, Which Have Been Annexed to New York City, Vol. I, p. 816 (Philadelphia, PA:  L. E. Preston & Co., 1886).   

There seems to be a great deal of confusion over the concept of a "Lorillard Mansion" in our Pelham region prompted by many 19th century references to the "Lorillard Mansion" without regard to the location of multiple family-associated structures.  For example, there are many references to an important and well-known structure in today's Bronx Park that was, at the time, known as the "Lorillard Mansion."  Yet, there were also many references to another Lorillard property at Pelham Bridge usually referenced as the "Lorillard Mansion" but, more accurately, as the Lorillard family "cottage."  



"ARCULARIUS HOTEL"
This is a Tiny Detail, Difficult to Reproduce,
From Armstrong, W.A. & Pratt, Charles E.,
Coaching To Pelham Song And Chorus [Music
Sheets], Pg. 1 [Cover] (NY, NY:  American Music
Publishing Co. 1876).  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.   


Image Depicting the Articularius Hotel.
This is a Tiny Detail, Difficult to Reproduce,
From Speck, Samuel H., New Rochelle and
Pelham Coach Galop [sic], [Music Sheets],
Pg. 1 [Cover] (Boston, MA:  Oliver Ditson & Co., 1876).
NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

The view from the Lorillard "cottage" during its years as the Articularius Hotel clearly was splendid.  See "PUBLIC PARKS IN NEW YORK CITY" in Fifteenth Annual Report, 1910, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society To the Legislature of the State of New York Transmitted to the Legislature April 19, 1910, p. 65 (Albany, NY:  J. B. Lyon Co., 1910) ("Lorillard Mansion:  Now known as the Tallapoosa Club House, this once splendid mansion was erected by Pierre Lorillard, Jr., and is a typical example of the grand array of country residences that once were the pride of lower Westchester county.  Its location just this side of Pelham bridge, commanding a glorious view of the waters of the sound, whose waves break almost at its very doors, cannot be excelled for romantic beauty.").  

George P. Arcularius Becomes Proprietor of the Grand View Hotel

It appears that in early 1880, George P. Arcularius "obtained a lease" of the Grand View Hotel property with the intent to renovate and reopen the hotel in the coming season.  It appears that the Blizzard family continued to own the property until, eventually, it was sold to New York City as Pelham Bay Park lots were assembled before annexation.  References to the sale seem unusual until one tries to imagine exactly what David Blizzard owned

It is not known if Arcularius added these facilities to his own hotel to form a complex or if Arcularius gave up his proprietorship of the Arcularius Hotel to become the Proprietor of the Grand View Hotel.  In any event, Arcularius took over the Grand View Hotel and, interestingly, apparently retained the services of the former proprietor, David Blizzard, to manage the leasing of boats and, perhaps, other such accoutrements to excursionists on his behalf.  As one article noted, "The house has been largely refurnished and put in complete order for the approaching season's business.  Boats etc. will be to let, as heretofore, and will be under the management of Mr. Dave Blizzard."  See City Island and Pelham, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Mar. 5, 1880, Vol. XI, No. 546, p. 2, col. 5.  At least by this time the Grand View Hotel included a dance platform and ballroom.  See id.

George P. Arcularius was born in about 1824 and, as a young man, served as Commissioner of Deeds in New York City until resigning that post in 1866.  Thereafter he became an owner or operator of several small hotels in the New York region.  He died on September 14, 1936.  

The End of the Grand View Hotel

By the early 1890s, it appears that the Grand View Hotel building was no longer used as a hotel.  In fact, it was among a number of Pelham Bay Park properties noted in a report as "badly cared for," although the same report listed it as among a number of park properties that "are to remaain" rather than to be "removed."  See BUILDINGS IN THE NEW PARKSN.Y. Times, Jul. 17, 1890, p. 3, col. 4 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via link.). 

Athough nothing is left today of the Grand View Hotel building, there is a location that serves as a remembrance of the hotel that once stood nearby and its hotelier.  It is a very small, rocky prominence that once was an island but is now connected at low tide to the northeasterly shore line.  It is known as "Blizzard Island," once used by bthers and fishermen who visited Blizzard's Hotel during summer months and rented boats, fishing equipment and the like from David Blizzard.  



View Looking South Show Tip of Blizzard Island with
the Pelham Landfill in the Distance.  Photograph Taken
by, and Provided Courtesy of, Jorge Santiago of the East
Bronx History Forum and Used with Permission.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.

For a number of years after his time as proprietor of the Grand View Hotel, David Blizzard served as the appointed "Keeper of Pelham Bridge," appointed to that position annually by the members of the Town Board of the Town of Pelham.  

*          *          *          *          *

Clearly much of the histories of the Grand View Hotel and the Arcularius Hotel need to be developed.  Nevertheless, below are excerpts from articles and transcriptions of advertisements that tell a little of the story of Grand View Hotel and form the research that is the basis of this article.

"ON LAST THURSDAY EVENING A SUMPTUOUS EN-tertainment was given by Mr. Griffith Thomas, at the Grand View Hotel, Pelham Bridge, kept by Blizzard & Mahony, and on this occasion, as on all others, his generosity was boundless, and the whole affair was the most brilliant we ever witnessed in Westchester county; 140 variegated lanterns illuminated the arched platform of the hotel, on which the guests assembled, and while the New Rochelle Brass Band filled the air with delightful music, magnificent fireworks were set off in front of the balcony, where his lovely wife and her lady friends were seated. The supper was delicious, the table was splendidly arranged and elegantly decorated with choice flowers. But its chief ornament was Mrs. Thomas, in her surpassing beauty, void of that haughty consciousness that is so painfully perceptible in Nature's favorites, reminding us of Raphael's Madonna. Mr. Thomas is a very wealthy gentleman, and, being one of Nature's noblemen, the wealth could not have fallen into better hands. His sole happiness appears to be centered in making others happy, and his kind deeds will be remembered long after he has joined his loved ones, gone before him to a happier land than this."

Source:  [Untitled], N.Y. Herald, Oct. 2, 1872, p. 1, col. 2 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via link.).

"COL. DELANCEY KANE'S COACH.
-----
The Trip to be Made To-Morrow to Pelham Bridge and Back -- The First Passengers.

At half past 10 o'clock to-morrow morning Col. Delancey Kane will start with hhis four-in-hand from the Hotel Brunswick for Pelham Bridge.  He expects to arrive in Harlem thirty-four minutes after leaving Twenty-seventh street, and will be in Mott Haven at 11 o'clock.  Fox Corners will be reached at 11:26, and the coach will start from Union Port at 11:40, from Westchester at 11:43, from Middletown at 11:50, and the passengers are to be at Arcularius's Hotel, at Pelham Bridge, at noon.  Returning, the coach will start at 4, mmaking the homeward trip as follows:  Middletown, 4:11; Fox Corners, 4:35; Mott Haven, 4:50; Harlem, 4:53; and the Hotel Brunswick will be reached at 5:00.  The fare for the trip will be $1.50 each way, or fifty cents to Harlem, seventy-five cents to Fox Corners, a dollar to Union Port, and a dollar and a quarter to Middletown -- returning, twenty-five cents to Middletown, fifty cents to Westchester, seventy-five cents to Fox Corners, and a dollar to Harlem.  The coach will stop anywhere on the route to take or relinquish paassengers, but for a long time to come all the seats, inside and outside, will be occupied by the same persons going and returning.  Each passenger will be permitted to carry 85 pounds of baggage free, but it is not anticipated that many will avail themselves of this privilege, unless for hampers of edibles.

The distance from the Hotel Brunswick to Pelham Bridge is about fifteen miles and there will be three relays of horses on the road.  The coach can carry fifteen passengers, exclusive of the coachman and guard -- eleven outside and four inside.  To-morrow Mr. Van Allen will occupy the box seat, paying fifty cents extra for the privilege of sitting beside the driver.  Mr. and Mrs. Bronson have taken the two front seats to the left, and Mrs. Kane and Mrs. Van Allen will occupy the two to the left.  Mr. B. R. Winthroop and Mr. H. Hunnewell have each engaged two middle seats.  Mr. J. Sherman, and Mr. W. Jay will have the rear seats beside the guard, and the four seaats inside will probably be taken by members of the press."

Source:  COL. DELANCEY KANE'S COACH -- The Trip to be Made To-Morrow to Pelham Bridge and Back -- The First Passengers, The Sun [NY, NY], Apr. 30, 1876, p. 5, col. 3.  

http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%209/New%20York%20NY%20Sun/New%20York%20NY%20Sun%201875%20Sep-%201876%20Apr%20%20Grayscale/New%20York%20NY%20Sun%201875%20Sep-%201876%20Apr%20%20Grayscale%20-%201039.pdf

"Westchester. . . . 

Mr. Arcularius, proprietor of the hotel at Pelham Bridge, now called Arcularius Hotel, has removed his bar across the road in the building built by L. G. Fowler, for that purpose.  It has been very neatly fitted up and many changes for the better have been made. . . ."

Source:  Westchester, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 19, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 461, p. 1, col. 6.  



Source:  Grand View Hotel [Advertisement], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 26, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 462, p. 3, col. 2 (stating "Address D. BLIZZARD, Bartow Station, Westchester Co., N.Y.").  

The above advertisement reads as follows:

"Grand View Hotel,
PELHAM BRIDGE.
-----
THIS comfortable and delightfully located SUMMER HOTEL IS NOW OPEN for the season.  The view of the Sound and Pelham Bay is unsurpassed and the facilities for Boating, Fishing, Yachting and Riding are unequaled.

PIC-NIC PARTIES and EXCURSIONISTS accommodated at the shortest notice.  Boats kept constantly on hand.

Terms for Regular Boarders very moderate.

Address D. BLIZZARD, Bartow Station, Westchester Co., N.Y."




Source:  New Advertisements, The Chronicle
[Mount Vernon], Aug. 16, 1878, p. 3, col. 3.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

The above advertisement reads as follows:

"New Advertisements.
-----
Grand View Hotel, 
PELHAM BRIDGE.
-----

THIS comfortable and delightfully located SUMMER HOTEL IS NOW OPEN for the season. The view of the Sound and Pelham Bay is unsurpassed and the facilities for Boating, Fishing, Yachting and Riding are unequaled.

PICNIC PARTIES and EXCURSIONISTS accommodated at the shortest notice.  Boats kept constantly on hand.

Terms for Regular Boarders very moderate.

Adress D. BLIZZARD, Bartow Station, Westchester Co., N.Y."

"City Island and Pelham.

Mr. George P. Arcularius, of Pelham Bridge, has obtained a lease of the Grand View Hotel, formerly Blizzard's, and has reopened the same.  The house has been largely refurnished and put in complete order for the approaching season's business.  Boats etc. will be to let, as heretofore, and will be under the management of Mr. Dave Blizzard. . . ."

Source:  City Island and PelhamThe Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Mar. 5, 1880, Vol. XI, No. 546, p. 2, col. 5



The above advertisement reads as follows:

"Grand View Hotel.
(FORMERLY BLIZZARD'S)
Pelham Bridge,

THE above House has changed hands and will hereafter be under the management of the undersigned.

THE HOUSE HAS BEEN REFITTED AND THE BAR RESTOCKED WITH THE BEST.
-----
FISHING AND BOATS, as formerly, under that veteran Fisherman, DAVE BLIZZARD.
-----
EXCURSIONS, PIC-NIC AND FAMILY PARTIES INVITED.
PLATFORM AND BALL-ROOM ON PREMISES.

Geo. P. Arcularius, 
Manager."

Source: GRAND VIEW HOTEL [Advertisement], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Mar. 5, 1880, Vol. XI, No. 546, p. 3, col. 1.

"BUILDINGS IN THE NEW PARKS.

President Gallup made a report at yesterday's meeting of the Park Board on the various buildings in the new parks.  It set forth that the annual income of the department for rentals of the buildings is $12,000, about one-half the amount expended in keeping the roads in repair.  Many of the buildings are badly cared for, and he recommended the removal of many of them and an  increase in the rental of those that are to remain.

The latter include the Grand View Hotel at the northerly end of the Pelham Bridge, the Schuyler house, Steer's house, Jones's place, and Marshall's place in Pelham Park, the Old Country Club house at Bartow Station, stone houses on Hunter's and Twin Islands, the Lorillard mansion in Bronx Park, and the Van Cortlandt mansion, Disbrow house, and Tremper house in Van Cortlandt Park.  No action was taken on the report."

Source:  BUILDINGS IN THE NEW PARKS, N.Y. Times, Jul. 17, 1890, p. 3, col. 4 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via link.).  


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