Historic Pelham

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

Friday, July 27, 2018

The Businesses that Operated in Pelham in 1868, Shortly After the Civil War Ended


Fewer than 1,800 people lived in the Town of Pelham in 1868.  There were four principal population centers in the little settlement at the time:  (1) City Island; (2) Pelham Neck and the mainland around Pelham Bay opposite City Island; (3) Prospect Hill; and Pelhamville.

By 1868, the population of Pelham had grown sufficiently to support a number of small businesses.  It is possible to identify a number of those businesses, although today's listing is, by no means, exhaustive.  

Many residents of Pelham conducted what would be thought of today as "sole proprietorships."  For example, many on the mainland (and even a few on City Island) farmed their lands and maintained orchards.  In addition to the food they raised for themselves and their families, local farmers often sold surplus fruit and vegetables to the New York City market.  Such was also the case with oystermen and fishermen on City Island.  

There were a few local businesses.  Indeed, a map published in 1868 by F. W. Beers included a short "BUSINESS DIRICTORY" [sic] that listed a handful of Pelham businesses including a grocery, a meat market, an oyster dealer, two hotels, and a lumberyard that also sold building supplies, coal, and firewood.  Close inspection of the same map, however, reveals that there were other businesses besides those listed in the "BUSINESS DIRICTORY" which reads as follows:

"BUSINESS DIRICTORY [sic]
Billar W & S. Groceries, Flour Feed & Ships Stores
Benedict S. J. Prop r. of Bay View House
Hyatt James Prop r. of Meat Market & Dealer in all kinds of Fresh & Salt Meats
Horton J. B. Oyster Dealer & Collector
Leviness Cap t J. Prop r of City Isl d Hotel
Disbrow, Hudson & Lockwood Dealers in Lumber, Building Materials Coal & Wood Echo Bay"

Below is what little we know of these few businesses (plus a few more indicated on the map and otherwise) that existed in the little Town of Pelham shortly after the Civil War ended.

W & S Billar Groceries

The tiny "BUSINESS DIRICTORY" [sic] quoted above references this business as "Billar W & S. Groceries, Flour Feed & Ship Stores."  It is a little difficult to identify the proprietors of this little grocery store with certainty.

From the 1850s through at least the early 1880s, members of the Billar family of City Island were notable residents of the Town of Pelham.  Most of the men in the family appear to have been oystermen.  Among the residents by that name were Wilson Drake Billar, William Billar, and Samuel P. Billar.  

Drake Wilson Billar (who appears to have been known as "Wilson Billar") had a son named Samuel P. Billar (who was 22 years old in 1868).  Thus, it is possible that this business may have been operated by Wilson and Samuel Billar as a father and son "family grocery."  However, the 1870 Federal census lists both D. W. Billar and Samuel P. Billar as oystermen.  To make matters more intriguing, William Billar of City Island is listed in the 1870 Federal census as a retired "Merchant."   

According to the 1868 Beers map (see detail immediately below), the store was located on the eastern shore of City island on the northern side of a narrow roadway that ran parallel to, on the north side of, Prospect Street (today's Carroll Street).  The narrow lane was known as Banta Lane (shown, but not labeled on the 1868 Beers map).  Banta Lane ran parallel to Prospect Street for a block or so to Minnieford Avenue (originally Billar Place, also shown but not labeled on the 1868 Beers Map).  The entire area is shown on the 1868 Beers map as part of, or adjacent to, the old Fordham estate.  The grocery establishment apparently served as the local post-office in 1868.  As the map detail shows, the structure is shown adjacent to a reference that reads:  "W. & S Billar Store & PO."



Detail from 1868 Beers Map Showing "W. & S. Billar Store & PO" on
Far Right Near End of "PROSPECT ST." (Today's Carroll Street).
New York and Vicinity, p. 35 (NY, NY:  Beers, Ellis & Soule, 1868).
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

S. J. Benedict's Bay View House Hotel

The same business directory on the 1868 Beers Map contains the following reference:  "Benedict S. J. Prop r. of Bay View House."  This, of course, is a hotel known as the "Bay View House," proprietor S. J. Benedict.  The hotel should not be confused with the Bay View Hotel that later overlooked City Island Bridge.  This "Bay View House" in the same general area as the W. & S. Billar Grocery near the foot of Prospect Street (today's Carroll Street), on the southern side of the roadway.  

James Hyatt's Meat Market and Dealership

During the 1860s, James Hyatt served as Town Clerk of the Town of Pelham.  In 1873 he was elected Town Supervisor and was re-elected eleven times successively.  He also served as a Town Constable for one year and had service as Collector of School Taxes in Pelham.  According to one biography, Hyatt:

"first entered as a clerk the shop of James Kent, in Tompkins' Market, at the corner of Sixth Street and the Bowery, New York. Here he remained during four years, at the expiration of which he removed to Mott Haven, and was engaged in the business with his uncle there for five years. He then left Mott Haven for the town of Westchester, and entered the butcher store of William Cooper, which he left after five years to open a market for himself in the same town. One year afterward he removed the concern to City Island, where he still remains [i.e., as of 1886]"

See Mon., Jan. 05, 2009:  Brief Biography of James Hyatt, Town Clerk and Town Supervisor of Pelham in 19th Century (quoting Scharf, J. Thomas, ed., History of Westchester County, New York Including Morrisania, Kings Bridge and West Farms Which Have Been Annexed to New York City, Vol. 1, Part 2, Chapter XX. Westchester Town by Fordham Morris, p. 714 (Philadelphia, PA: L.E. Preston & Co. 1886).

The 1868 Beers map business directory references Hyatt's meat business as follows:  "Hyatt James Prop r. of Meat Market & Dealer in all kinds of Fresh & Salt Meats."  It is somewhat unclear, but it appears that Hyatt's meat market and dealership was located on the southern side of Banta Lane (shown, but not labeled on the 1868 Beers map) between  Banta Lane and Prospect Street which ran parallel to Banta Lane.  The map simply references a "Meat Market" at that location (see map detail above) without specifying whether it was Hyatt's business.  There is, however, no other reference to Hyatt (or another meat market) on the map.  (There is a property referenced as that of "J.R.H." but Hyatt's middle initial was "H.")  

J. B. Horton's, Oyster Dealer & Collector

The business directory included in the 1868 Beers Atlas references one Pelham business as "Horton J. B. Oyster Dealer & Collector."  Clearly J. B. Horton was an oysterman -- as were dozens and dozens of other City Island men.  This reference suggests that he had developed a business that was more than that of a mere "collector" of oysters but, indeed, a "dealer" -- likely wholesale.  

City Island Hotel and Leviness Hall, Joshua Leviness, Proprietor

There are suggestions in local newspapers that the City Island Hotel had existed at least since 1856 and was operated, for a time in the 1850s and early 1860s, by Charles McClennon.  For example, Charles McClennon of City Island Hotel placed an advertisement for a sailing regatta off the shores of City Island in 1856.


1856 City Island Regatta Advertisement Placed by "CHAS.
McCLENNON, City Island Hotel."  Source:  REGATTA
[Advertisement], N.Y. Herald, Jul. 17, 1856, No. 7261, p. 8,
col. 6.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.  Transcription:
"REGATTA. -- A GRAND REGATTA WILL TAKE PLACE at
City Island, on Monday, July 21.  Said regatta to consist of
three classes of boats.  First class, 26 feet to 24 feet; second
class, under 24 feet to 20 feet; third class, under 20 feet,
for which a splendid silver cup will be awarded to the winning
boat of each class.  The usual allowance of two minutes to
the foot.  All entries to be made before 12 o'clock on the day
of the race.  The race to be twenty miles.  Entrance fee, first
class, $5; second class, $3; third class $2.  CHAS. McCLENNON,
City Island Hotel."

McClennon was still affiliated with the City Island Hotel in the late 1850s and early 1860s.  See The Great Oyster Placer, New-York Daily Tribune, Oct. 1, 1859, p. 5, col. 2 (stating "And Duffy, too, discovered the oysters.  He told Charley McClennon, of the City Island Hotel, that he had found a bed of oysters, which seemed to him five miles long, off Eaton's Neck. . .").

By 1868, Captain Joshua Leviness (a rough character, but a leading oysterman and hotelier of City Island for several decades during the nineteenth century) operated the hotel.  By that date, there had been built an adjacent events hall called "Leviness Hall" located on the northwest corner of the intersection of Main Street and Prospect Street (the intersection of today's City Island Avenue and Carroll Street).  The location can be seen in the first map detail presented earlier in this article.  

The City Island Hotel had a bar that apparently could be a rather rough place.  Indeed, Leviness himself had his share of altercations in the bar of his hotel.  One such unusual altercation was described in 1874 by a local newspaper as follows:

"One of the Coroners We Have Annexed.

On the night of the 5th inst. Mr. Joshua Levinis [sic], of the City Island Hotel, and Mr. Valentine Reinhardt had a little skirmish in the hotel barroom, wherein Reinhardt was worsted.  The next day some of the injured man's friends sent for Coroner Miller of Morrisania to take Reinhardt's ante-mortem deposition.  When the Coroner arrived the man who had been injured was walking around with his jaw tied up, and apparently in no more danger of death than the Coroner was.  Coroner Miller was not to be trifled with.  He impaneled a jury and took testimony regarding the fight, just as a court does when a prisoner is on trial, with the exception that there was no prisoner present.  Levinis had not been arrested.  After the testimony was all in the Coroner charged the jury, and they rendered the verdict that 'Mr. Reinhardt received his wound at the hands of Joshua Levinis.'  The wound consisted of a small lump on Reinhardt's jaw, which only interfered with his chewing hard bread or tough steak.  The Coroner received the verdict, discharged the jury, arrested Levinis and sent him to the county jail without bail, on charge of 'feloniously wounding.' &c. The proceeding was so extraordinary that Judge Gilford discharged the prisoner as soon as his attention was called to it."

Source:  One of the Coroners We Have Annexed, The Sun [NY, NY], Feb. 14, 1874, Vol. XLI, No. 143, p. 3, col. 5.  

In early 1877, Leviness sold the City Island hotel to James M. Liming & Co. of City Island.  According to a local news account at the time:

"The business of the City Island Hotel, formerly conducted by Joshua Leviness, has been sold out to James M. Liming & Co., of City Island, and a formal opening was held last Thursday.  The premises are undergoing extensive repairs and improvements, and when completed will, no doubt, present a very fine appearance."

Source:  [Untitled], The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Mar. 23, 1877, Vol. VIII, No. 392, p. 3, col. 1.   

Although Leviness sold the hotel in early 1877, he kept control of Leviness Hall located behind the hotel.  Apparently, shortly after James M. Liming & Co. began operating the City Island Hotel, Leviness threatened that he was going to retrofit Leviness Hall with a room beneath the hall to serve as a "restaurant and dining-saloon," the main hall as a billiard parlor with a half dozen billiard tables, and the upper story as a hotel that would compete with City Island Hotel next door.  A local newspaper reported:

"Capt. Josh Leviness is gong to engage in active business again.  Messrs. Vail and Liming have the City Island Hotel, but Capt. Josh has not relinquished command of what was known as the hall, situated about 100 feet to the rear of the hotel, on the side street.  Mechanics are busy fitting up the room underneath the hall as a restaurant and dining saloon, with all the modern conveniences.  The hall is to be furnished with half a dozen billiard tables, settees, etc. for the accommodation of billiard players, and the upper story is to be fitted up with hotel accommodations."

Source:  Pelham and City Island, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Aug. 2, 1878, Vol. IX, No. 463, p. 2, col. 6.  

In late 1881, the City Island Hotel reportedly was leased to a member of the Barstow family (B. Barstow) for a period of twenty years.  See City Island, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Dec. 16, 1881, Vol. XIII, No. 639, p. 2, col. 4 (stating "Mr. B. Barstow has leased the City Island Hotel, for twenty years.").  About a year later, in December, 1882, Leviness opened a popular restaurant "under" Leviness Hall behind the City Island Hotel in a bid to attract some of the hotel guests, suggesting he had not so as he threatened in 1878, although that is not known with certainty.  See CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Dec. 8, 1882, Vol. XIV, No. 690, p. 3, col. 4 (stating "Capt. Joshua Leviness has opened a restaurant under the hall, in the rear of the City Island Hotel.").

The City Island Hotel operated for many years.  Indeed, long after Joshua Leviness first sold the hotel, George Leviness, a son of Joshua Leviness, served as proprietor of the establishment and was serving in that capacity when he was sued in 1885 by a beautiful young woman named Mary Amelia Ross, also of City Island, for breach of promise to marry.  See Tue., Jul. 11, 2017:  A Pelham Scandal and Resultant Lawsuit Set Pelham Tongues Wagging in 1885.  

Disbrow, Hudson & Lockwood

The 1868 Beers map "DIRICTORY" lists Disbrow, Hudson & Lockwood as "Dealers in Lumber, Building Materials Coal & Wood Echo Bay."  The "Lockwood" in the firm name appears to reference John M. Lockwood who is listed in the 1870 Federal census of Pelham as a 41-year-old "Merchant" of some means who, according to the census, owned $10,000 worth or real estate and $30,000 worth of personal property.  

The reference to Disbrow in the firm name is somewhat murky.  Civil War draft registration records covering Pelham and New Rochelle reference two men with the last name of Disbrow:  Thomas Disbrow and Livingston Disbrow, both of whom apparently lived in New Rochelle rather than Pelham.  Likewise, there seems to have been a "John Hudson" who lived in New Rochelle -- not Pelham -- at about the same time, though there is no indication whether these were the men who worked with John M. Lockwood in the firm of Disbrow, Hudson & Lockwood.  



Detail from 1868 Beers Map Showing "Disbrow, Hudson & Lockwood"
on Far Left on North Side of Boston Post Road Near the Hutchinson
River (Where it Likely Unloaded Supplies from Barges and Boats Brought up
the River).  Source:  F. W. Beers, "City Island, Pelham Township, Westchester
New York and Vicinity, p. 35 (NY, NY:  Beers, Ellis & Soule, 1868).
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Other Pelham Businesses

Earlier research as well as careful review of the 1870 Federal census for the Town of Pelham demonstrates (in some cases) and suggests (in others) that there were a number of other local businesses in the Town of Pelham in about 1868.  For example, it is well-established that David Carll's shipyard was in operation on City Island at the time.  Consequently, below are examples of additional businesses and a few instances referenced in the census that suggest other additional local Pelham businesses existed in the late 1860s (or, at a minimum, in 1870).

     Carll's Shipyard

One of the largest businesses in the Town of Pelham in 1868 likely was Carll's Shipyard located on City Island.  The business has been well researched and has been the subject of a number of previous Historic Pelham Blog articles.  See, e.g.:

Fri., Jun. 16, 2017:  Origins of Ship Repair and Shipbuilding on City Island in the Town of Pelham.

Mon., Nov. 16, 2015:  David Carll's Shipyard in the Town of Pelham on City Island.

     New York & New Haven Railroad Station in Pelhamville

Remember, of course, that the New York & New Haven Railroad maintained a station, ticket office, and freight station in the little settlement of Pelhamville in 1868.  The station and its station agent represented the railroad to its customers in Pelham by, among other things, selling tickets, arranging freight transfers and deliveries, etc.  

     New York Lock Company

The New York Lock Company maintained a facility across the railroad tracks from the New York & New Haven Railroad Station in Pelhamville in 1868.  The New York Lock Company, as the name implies, sold locks.  One of its sales agents, Joseph Seth Hoard, invented the famed "Hoard & Spencer Burglar-Proof Door Lock."  It seems likely that the facility was a freight facility for offloading the company's products for sales in the region, but no record yet has been located to indicate the precise purpose(s) of the facility.  



Detail from 1868 Beers Map Showing "N.Y. Lock Co" on Lower Right Across
the Railroad Tracks from the "Depot" of the New York and New Haven Railroad.  
Pelhamville" in Atlas of New York and Vicinity, p. 36 (NY, NY:  Beers, Ellis
& Soule, 1868).  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

     Commercial Dock (at Foot of Main Street, Today's City Island Avenue)

As recently noted in an article posted to the Historic Pelham Blog, it appears that members of the Horton family of City Island established a commercial dock at the southern tip of City Island in 1855.  See Mon., Jul. 23, 2018:  Horton Family Application for Underwater Land Grant in 1855 to Build a Dock in Pelham.  The dock appears to have been in operation in 1868.  (See map detail immediately below.)



Detail of Map Published in 1868 Showing Dock Extending from
Stephen D. Horton's Land at Southern Tip of City Island in the
Town of Pelham. Source: Beers, F. W., "City Island, Pelham
Co., N. Y." in Atlas of New York and Vicinity, pg. 35 (NY, NY: Beers,
Ellis & Soule, 1868). NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.

     Charles Sholtz Shoe Store

Near the W. & S. Billar Grocery located on Banta Lane (see supra including first map detail), there was a business reflected on the 1868 Beers Map as "Chas Stoltz Shoe Store."  The last name "Stoltz" is a little difficult to read and may be something else, but browsing the 1860 and 1870 federal censuses for Pelham do not shed any light on the individual who is referenced on the map.  It appears that a shoe store existed in 1868, but so far nothing is known of it.

     Bar Room & Bowling Alley

In essentially the same area in 1868 there was a business described as "Bar Room & Bowling Alley" on the Beers map, shown between, and at the ends of, Banta Lane and Prospect Street.  The map reference is very confusing.  It appears as though there was a single structure consisting of two wings with a long, narrow connector between them (presumably the bowling alley).  The reference "Meat Market" (presumably Hyatt's Meat Market discussed above) appears adjacent to the northern wing of the structure.  "A. Browning" appears adjacent to the southern wing of the structure.  Taken together, the references suggest that "A. Browning" may have operated the "Bar Room & Bowling Alley" at that location.  

     Vickery Grocery Store

In the 1870 Federal census for the Town of Pelham, William Vickery is listed as a 35-year-old "Merchant" who owned about $1,000 worth of real estate and personal property valued at $500.  It is known from other sources that shortly after Vickery and his wife, Jane, moved to City Island in the 1850s, William Vickery purchased land from City Island oysterman Joshua Leviness and built a home on City Island's Main Street (now City Island Avenue).  According to one account, "Soon after locating there Mrs. Vickery engaged in storekeeping, and two years later purchased the lot and store adjacent to the old house" and conducted the business there for nine additional years after her husband's death on October 27, 1871.  See Tue., Jan. 27, 2009:  Biography of William Vickery, a 19th Century Resident of City Island in the Town of Pelham (citing Pelletreau, William S., Historic Homes and Institutions and Genealogical and Family History of New York, Vol. IV, pp. 249-51 (NY and Chicago:  The Lewis Publishing Co., 1907).

     Rapalyea Blacksmith

The census lists 40-year-old William Rapelyea as a "Blacksmith."  Perhaps even more significantly, it lists 17-year-old James Coleman, living in the William Rapelyea household, as a "Blacksmith Apprentice," suggesting that the two likely worked together in a nearby business, perhaps in Pelham.  

     "Fancy Store"

The 1870 Federal census for Pelham also suggests that there may have been a "Fancy Store" operated on City Island by a 26-year-old woman whose name is somewhat unclear.  The census reference indicates that her first name was Ellen but the last name is illegible.  The last name may be Sinsing or Sining or something similar.  It lists the woman's occupation as "Fancy Store" and shows that her household included three young children (James, 7; Charles, 5; and Imogene, 3) as well as a 20-year-old woman listed as a "Domestic."

     Other Possible Local Small Businesses

The 1868 Beers map contains references to a few other possible local small businesses.  For example, there are references to "L. Leviness Boat House," "S. Pell Store," the "Ferry and Ferry House" for crossing to and from the mainland, and "P.A. Patterson Carpenter's Shop" in northern Pelhamville.

It is not known if such businesses might best be viewed as sole proprietorships or more significant commercial enterprises.  Simply reviewing the 1860 and 1870 federal censuses for the Town of Pelham makes clear that many Pelham residents worked on their own out of their residences as seamstresses, dressmakers, shoemakers, farmers, oystermen, boat builders, ship captains, Hell Gate Pilots and the like.  Moreover, there were other substantial Pelham employers that have not been included in this brief article on Pelham businesses after the Civil War including the Priory School for Girls that employed faculty and others, the educational facility on Hart Island for delinquent boys that also employed faculty and others, local churches, and the like.  Still, today's Historic Pelham Blog article hopefully sheds some light on the growth of local businesses that served the 1,800 or so residents of the little Town of Pelham shortly after the Civil War ended.  

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Tuesday, July 11, 2017

A Pelham Scandal and Resultant Lawsuit Set Pelham Tongues Wagging in 1885


Twenty-year-old Mary Amelia Ross of City Island seemed to have it all in 1884.  She was the "prettiest girl for miles around."  She was, according to one account, "admired by all the young men" of lower Westchester County.  She was "very highly accomplished" and was a daughter of wealthy City Island oysterman James Ross.

In early 1884, Mary Amelia Ross became the object of the affections of twenty-year-old George Leviness.  Leviness was a son of another wealthy City Island oysterman, Joshua Leviness, and was the proprietor of City Island Hotel.  George Leviness began an "ardent courtship" of Miss Ross.  

Leviness called on the young woman frequently "and took her walking in the evening."  On only the second or third such stroll, George Leviness proposed to Miss Ross who readily accepted his proposal.

Only a few weeks later, George Leviness called on Mary Amelia Ross at her home.  Her parents were away that evening.  During that visit, George Leviness, reportedly "took improper liberties with her under promise of marriage."  Within a few months, Miss Ross was visibly pregnant or, as local newspaper reports put it so delicately, experienced "her condition."  

George Leviness did not deny "improper intimacy" with Miss Ross.  He did, however, deny that he promised to marry her.  Whether he had a change of heart, or never intended to keep his promise, however, young George Leviness refused to marry Miss Ross.  In 1885, Mary Amelia Ross hired a lawyer, Norman A. Lawlor of Mount Vernon, New York.  Lawlor promptly filed a civil lawsuit on his client's behalf against George Leviness seeking $25,000 damages for "seduction under promise of marriage."

Pelhamites became obsessed with the scandal.  According to one news report, "The suit has occasioned considerable of a flutter on the Island and in the town of Pelham, where the persons interested are well-known."  

On Monday, March 15, 1886, the lawsuit filed on behalf of Miss Ross was tried before a jury in the Supreme Court of the State of New York before Justice J. O. Dykman sitting in White Plains.  Once again Leviness "did not deny the improper intimacy, but repudiated the promise to marry."  At the close, the jurors deliberated for only ten minutes before returning a verdict for Miss Ross of $6,000 (about $207,000 in today's dollars).  With interest and costs, the total due from George Leviness was $6,400.

Twenty-one-year-old George Leviness simply did not have the money to pay the judgment.  On Wednesday, June 30, 1886, police served a warrant for "execution against his body" and carted young Leviness off to the White Plains Jail where he was to be kept in jail until he paid the judgment or arranged to have it paid.  Leviness was able to arrange several bondsmen to post his $12,800 bail, but the terms of his bail placed limits on his ability to leave White Plains.

George Leviness lapsed into a routine of remaining in White Plains all week, then quickly returning home to City Island on Sundays before traveling back to White Plains early each Monday to avoid forfeiting the bonds placed by his bondsmen, Frank Vail and Everett Leviness, each of whom posted half of the $12,800 bail.

 Mary Amelia Ross certainly was not finished with George Leviness.  On July 12, 1886 she and her attorneys appeared before a local Judge and swore out a criminal complaint against Leviness charging him with "betrayal."  On Sunday, July 18, two police officials from Eastchester, Thomas Woods and C. T. White, appeared on City Island with an attachment against Leviness on the criminal charge.  They arrested Leviness and tried to haul him before local Justice Edmonds for a bail hearing.  When Justice Edmonds could not be found, Leviness was jailed.

When Frank Vail, one of the two bondsmen who guaranteed half of the bail set for George Leviness in White Plains learned of his arrest, Vail hustled to the Westchester County Sheriff's office and arranged a "surrender" of Leviness to the Sheriff so as not to lose the bond he had placed for Leviness in connection with the civil action judgment that Leviness had failed to pay.  The Sheriff's officer, in turn, hustled to the lockup where Leviness was being held and fought with one of the constables over who had the right to hold Leviness.  In any event, Justice Edmonds was found in the morning and held a bail hearing for Leviness.

At that hearing, an attorney for Mary Amelia Ross appeared and argued that bail on the criminal charge should be placed at $2,000 (in addition to the $12,800 bail already placed in the related matter).  An attorney for Leviness argued that bail on the criminal charge should be $500.  Justice Edmonds decided bail should be $1,000.

Poor George Leviness.  He was returned to White Plains because he was still subject to "the limits" placed in connection with his first bail.  Would he raise the money to pay the $6,400 judgment to Miss Ross?  

The answer, sadly, remains for another day.  Research has not yet revealed how the matter was resolved.  One thing seems certain, however.  George Leviness learned a lesson. . . .




*          *          *          *          *

"CITY ISLAND'S SOCIAL SENSATION.
-----
MISS ROSS, A LOCAL BELLE, SUE FOR $25,000 DAMAGES FOR BREACH OF PROMISE.
[From Yesterday's Edition.]

Assemblyman-elect Norman A. Lawlor has begun a suit for breach of promise for Miss Helen [sic; should be "Mary Amelia"] Ross, aged twenty-one years, against Mr. George Leviness, proprietor of the City Island Hotel, and son of the wealthy oysterman, Joshua Leviness.  Miss Ross is also a resident of City Island and is the daughter of James Ross, an oysterman, who is also quite wealthy.

The young lady claims $25,000 damages.  Miss Ross has been admired by all the young men of that part of the county, and is considered to be the prettiest girl for miles around.  She is small of stature and very highly accomplished.  The suit has occasioned quite a flutter on the Island and in the town of Pelham, where both parties are well known.

In her complaint Miss Ross states that she got acquainted with Mr. Leviness about a year and a half ago, and he began making love to her the first time they went out together for a walk.  She did not at that time fully comprehend his intention:  but as their acquaintance grew and she saw more of him she learned to love him and then to trust him, and then comes the old, old story of loving too carelessly and subsequent desertion.  Of course the people on the Island are not aware of the extremity to which the intimacy went; but in her affidavit Miss Ross states that the intimacy went too far.  He promised to marry her six months ago and has not kept his promise and steadily refuses to do so.

Mr. Leviness denies that he ever promised to marry the young lady, and denies that he is responsible for her condition.  The suit is on the calendar for the December term."

Source:  CITY ISLAND'S SOCIAL SENSATION -- MISS ROSS, A LOCAL BELLE, SUE FOR $25,000 DAMAGES FOR BREACH OF PROMISE, The Daily Graphic [NY, NY], Nov. 23, 1885, p. 147, col. 3.  

"SUING A HOTEL MAN FOR BREACH OF PROMISE.

Assemblyman elect Norman A. Lawlor has begun a suit for breach of promise for Miss Helen Ross, age twenty-one, the daughter of James Ross, an oysterman, against George Leviness, proprietor of the City Island Hotel, and the son of the wealthy oysterman, Joshua Leviness.  The young woman claims $25,000 damages.  The suit has occasioned considerable of a flutter on the Island and in the town of Pelham, where the persons interested are well-known.  The defendant denies that he ever promised to marry Miss Ross."

Source:  SUING A HOTEL MAN FOR BREACH OF PROMISE, New-York Daily Tribune, Nov. 22, 1885, p. 5, col. 1.  

"COURT PROCEEDINGS. . . .

SUPREME COURT. -- CIRCUIT.

Before Hon. J. O. DYKMAN, Justice.

The supreme court convened at the court house on Monday, March 15.  The following cases were tried: . . . 

Mary Amelia Ross against George Leviness. -- This action was for seduction under promise of marriage.  Both parties reside at City Island.  Miss Ross is 20 years old, and is the daughter of a well-to-do oysterman.  George Leviness is 20 years old and is the son of Joshua Leviness, a wealthy resident of the above place.  Leviness made her acquaintance about a year ago, and began an ardent courtship.  He called frequently and took her walking in the evening, and on the second or third occasion made a proposition to marry her, and she accepted him.  A few weeks later he called at her house one evening when her parents were away, and there he took improper liberties with her under promise of marriage.  The defendant did not deny the improper intimacy, but repudiated the promise to marry.  The jury after an absence of ten minutes rendered a verdict for Miss Ross of $6,000. -- Lawlor & Swits, for plaintiff; H. M. Henderson, for defendant."  

Source:  COURT PROCEEDINGS. . . . SUPREME COURT. -- CIRCUIT, The Eastern State Journal [White Plains, NY], Mar. 20, 1886, Vol. XLI, No. 50, p. 2, cols. 2-3.  

"THE COUNTY. . . . 

LODGED IN JAIL. -- George Leviness, of City Island, was taken to White Plains Jail on Wednesday, by Officer Mark Skennion, under an execution against his body, he having failed to pay the sum of $6,400 damages awarded Miss Mary Amelia Ross in her suit in the Supreme Court against Leviness for betrayal under promise of marriage, which he failed to keep.  He will now be kept in jail until he pays up or arranges to have it paid."

Source:  THE COUNTY . . . LODGED IN JAIL, The Yonkers Statesman, Jul. 1, 1886, Vol. III, No. 809, p. 1, col. 4.

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND. . . .

George Leviness was taken to White Plains, last week, under an execution for failing to pay the sum of $6,400, awarded to Miss Amelia Ross in her suit for betrayal under promise of marriage. . . ."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 9, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 896, p. 3, col. 2.  

"LOCAL NEWS. . . .

Geo. Leviness, of City Island, was arrested last Sunday, by Officers Thos. Woods and C. T. White, of Eastchester, on a warrant issued on the 12th inst., by Justice Edmonds.  The complainant was Miss M. A. Ross, and the charge seduction under promise of marriage.  In a civil suit, last spring, Miss Ross obtained a verdict against Leviness for $6,400.  He refused to pay the amount, and an attachment for him was issued, and he was taken to White Plains Jail and locked up.  Subsequently he was admitted to the limits, and Saturday night last went to his home at City Island, where he was arrested on Sunday.  An effort was made to find Justice Edmonds Sunday evening and have Leviness admitted to bail, but he could not be found.  In the meantime Mr. Frank Vail, who was bondsman for Leviness in the sum of $6,400, surrendered him to the Sheriff, and there was quite a lively time between the Sheriff's officer and Officer Woods; the former threatening to take their man away from the constable, but the constable didn't see it in that light.  Monday morning Officer Woods produced his man before the Justice, who after hearing the argument of counsel on both sides, admitted him to bail in the sum of $1,000."

Source:  LOCAL NEWS, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jul. 20, 1886, Vol. XVII, No. 899, p. 3, cols. 1-2.  

"THE COUNTY. . . .

HAVING A HARD TIME. -- George Leviness, of City Island, is 'on the limits' to satisfy a judgment for breach of promise of marriage attained by Miss Amelia Ross.  On Sunday he has been in the habit of going home and returning to White Plains before Monday morning, thus avoiding the forfeiture of his bonds, which are $12,800.  Last Sunday he was arrested on a criminal warrant for betrayal sworn out by Miss Ross, and taken to Mount Vernon, where he was detained until Monday morning.  His bondsmen then surrendered him.  He subsequently gave bail in $1,000 and returned to his limits. . . ."

Source:  THE COUNTY. . . . HAVING A HARD TIME, The Yonkers Statesman, Jul. 20, 1886, Vol. III, No. 824, p. 1, col. 4.  

"Arrest of George Leviness.

George Leviness, of City Island, who is on the limits at White Plains, in default of payment of a judgment of $6,000, visited home last Sunday.  In the afternoon Officers Wood and White drove over to City Island and arrested him on a criminal warrant, for the same case for which he was on the limits.  On their return to this village with Mr. Leviness, they could not find Justice Edmonds, and prisoner was held.  In the morning the prisoner was brought before Justice Edmonds When H. C. Henderson, Esq., of Westchester, appeared for Leviness, and Messrs. Lawlor & Swite, Jr., of Mount Vernon, for plaintiff, Miss Ross.  Leviness pleaded not guilty and waived an examination, and offered Messrs. Frank Vail and Everett Leviness as bondsmen.  Attorney Lawlor requested that bail be placed at $2,000.  Attorney Henderson argued for $500, in view of the $13,000 bail under which he is held.  After a patient listening to learned counsel on both sides, His Honor put the amount at $1,000. -- Record."

Source:  Arrest of George Leviness, New Rochelle Pioneer, Jul. 24, 1886, p. 3, col. 5.

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