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, September 09, 2019

More on the Town of Pelham's Consideration as a Potential Site for the 1893 World's Fair Eventually Held in Chicago as the Columbian Exposition


In 1889, Americans already were preparing for the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas in 1492.  A grand "World's Fair" was planned to open in 1892 as part of the "Great Columbus Celebration" in honor of the 400th anniversary. 

Eventually the event opened as the "World's Columbian Exposition," a world's fair held in Chicago.  Although dedication ceremonies were held on October 21, 1892, the fairgrounds were not ready for the public.  Thus, the World's Columbian Exposition did not open to the public until May 1, 1893.  Consequently, the Exposition often is referred to, informally, as the "1893 Chicago World's Fair."  It also is referred to as the 1892 World's Columbian Exposition and the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. 

In 1889, organizers of the upcoming Exposition were still searching for a site on which to build the fairgrounds.  Believe it or not, the Town of Pelham was in the running as a possible fairgrounds site for the World's Fair.

I have written about consideration of the Town of Pelham as the site of fairgrounds for the World's Fair before.  See Tue., May 30, 2017:  Parts of the Town of Pelham Were Considered as a Site for the 1893 World's Fair.  Today's Historic Pelham article provides more information about early efforts to tout Pelham as the site for the fairgrounds.

At least as early as the summer of 1889, New York City Mayor Hugh John Grant -- who remains the City's youngest Mayor ever even to this day -- already was working to attract the planned World's Fair to the New York City region.  That summer he reached out to five hundred notable New Yorkers to attend a massive meeting to begin planning New York's bid to attract the extravaganza.  

One of the first issues the group had to confront was the site of the massive World's Fair.  The event was expected to be so massive that there seemed to be a broad consensus that it could not be hosted on Manhattan island.  Although there were suggestions that Central Park might be a suitable site, the news media was quick to object.  One newspaper wrote:

"Central Park is not to be thought of.  Any serious proposition to turn that beautiful breathing place into a big fair ground would probably kill the whole project.  The people want Central Park for themselves, and won't give it up."

Attention quickly turned to the three new parks on the mainland north of Manhattan:  Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx Park, and Pelham Bay Park (then part of the Town of Pelham before New York City annexed the region in 1895).  Most agreed, as one newspaper put it, that Pelham was:

"delightfully situated for such a purpose as a grand world's fair.  Its area is more than twice that of Central Park.  It contains 2,700 acres of undulating land, with a water front of at least five miles on Long Island Sound.  The question of drainage is one of much importance in the case of a great fair ground, and that is already solved by nature at Pelham Bay.  The whole Park drains naturally into the deep water along its five miles of picturesque shore."

Pelham Bay Park was sufficiently large for the fair.  Its picturesque shore front offered important opportunities for water activities associated with the fair.  Additionally, Eastchester Bay and Pelham Bay offered important transportation opportunities.  The construction of docks there would permit the transport of goods for the fair.  As one article, quoted in full below, noted:  "Ships from all parts of the world could go right up to a dock at Pelham Bay and land their cargoes close by the exhibition buildings."  Moreover, fair visitors could be ferried cheaply to the site via waterways from all over the region.  The same article stated:  "If visitors to the fair preferred going by water, they could not desire a more delightful trip than up the East River and through the waters of the Sound into Eastchester Bay or Pelham Bay itself.  This trip can be made from the Battery within an hour, and the fare need not be more than 10 or 15 cents."  Proponents of the plan further emphasized that the New Haven Branch Line that ran through Pelham also offered important transportation alternatives to and from the site.

Some, however, objected that New York should host the fair within its city limits -- not within the limits of the adjacent Town of Pelham.  Proponents of the plan dismissed such objections with an interesting observation. As one newspaper put it:

"The objection that Pelham Bay Park is outside the city limits probably will not exist in 1892.  Before the great fair was talked of at all, it was intended to ask the Legislature to extend the city line eastward from the Bronx River to the Sound, and thus take in the beautiful new Park, and the request will probably be made when the next Legislature meets."  

Of course, New York City's efforts to annex the Pelham Bay Park region from the Town of Pelham did not bear fruit until 1895 -- long after the World's Fair ended.  Nevertheless, even in the late 1880s (and earlier), all expected the new park to be annexed by the city.

Of course, efforts to hold the fair in the Town of Pelham failed.  Eventually, the exhibition was held in Chicago and was wildly successful.  For a time, however, the world watched as New York City notables discussed the little Town of Pelham as a possible site for the World's Columbian Exhibition.



"Bird's Eye View of the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893"
Showing What the Area in Pelham May Have Looked Like Had Pelham
Bay Park Been Chosen as the Site. NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.

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Below is the text of a newspaper article published on July 21, 1889 that forms the basis of today's Historic Pelham Blog article.  The text is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"The Proposed Great Fair.

Mayor Grant's call for a meeting of 'representative citizens' to consider the question of a great world's fair in 1892, gives that question what may be called a boom.  Mayor Grant sees Mr. McAllister and goes him a hundred better, for his call is issued to 500 New Yorkers, instead of 400.  All of the 500 probably will not respond, for several are at the other side of the Atlantic, looking at the great show in Paris and having a good time in other ways, and many more are at summer resorts at home, and may not care to leave them just to attend a meeting.  But a sufficient number of representative citizens will doubtless come together to consider the question in a practical and serious way.  At the moment it seems highly probable that the idea of getting up a great fair for the 400th anniversary of the discovery of the land of the free and the home of the brave will be carried out.  And should it be carried out, the show will certainly be on a magnificent scale, very different from the Crystal Palace affair of 1853, though that was considered a great thing then.  One of my favorite early recollections is that of seeing President Franklin Pierce ride up Broadway at the head of a great procession to perform the important function of opening that exhibition, and I have a vivid remembrance of a sideshow near by, in which an armless young woman astonished me beyond measure by writing visiting cards with her toes, or rather with a pen held between two of them; also of a rickety 'observatory,' likewise near by, from the top of which, after one had climbed up to it, a pretty fair view of New York and a good deal of the surrounding country could be had.  The Crystal Palace Fair was held in Reservoir Square, now Bryant Park, at Sixth Avenue and Forty-second Street.  There was no Central Park then and above Forty-second Street there were very few houses.  The population of New York was about one fourth of what it is to-day.  The great metropolis of to-day was hardly imagined.  Should the outcome of the meeting called by the Mayor be the appointment of a committee to make arrangements for a really great fair, it is to be hoped that men with axes to grind won't get the thing into their own hands.  Satisfactory results certainly need not be expected if they do.  Several years ago a movement was started for a grand centennial international exhibition in 1889, but the men with axes to grind spoiled the whole business.  After the appointment of a committee the next step will be the raising of money.  Millions will be needed.  It is already proposed that the city shall subscribe generously, and then the State, and next the United States.  All right, if they are willing.  There will be use for every dollar.  And it may be expected, as a matter of course, that a good many dollars will go astray.

The Question of a Site.

Next after determining upon the fair itself will come the question of a suitable site for it.  Central Park is not to be thought of.  Any serious proposition to turn that beautiful breathing place into a big fair ground would probably kill the whole project.  The people want Central Park for themselves, and won't give it up.  It is more than likely that the fair won't be held on Manhattan Island at all.  A site for it will probably be selected in one of the new parks north of Harlem River.  Three of these are mentioned as offering suitable grounds -- Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx Park, and Pelham Bay Park.  The latter would be decidedly the best.  Pelham Bay Park is delightfully situated for such a purpose as a grand world's fair.  Its area is more than twice that of Central Park.  It contains 2,700 acres of undulating land, with a water front of at least five miles on Long Island Sound.  The question of drainage is one of much importance in the case of a great fair ground, and that is already solved by nature at Pelham Bay.  The whole Park drains naturally into the deep water along its five miles of picturesque shore.  Another important question is that of facilities for the delivery of goods for exhibition.  Ships from all parts of the world could go right up to a dock at Pelham Bay and land their cargoes close by the exhibition buildings.  New York City itself could not offer better facilities in this respect.  Pelham Bay is about 12 miles from Union Square.  It can be reached by rail from Harlem in about 10 minutes.  The Westchester branch of the New York & New Haven Railroad runs through the Park.  If visitors to the fair preferred going by water, they could not desire a more delightful trip than up the East River and through the waters of the Sound into Eastchester Bay or Pelham Bay itself.  This trip can be made from the Battery within an hour, and the fare need not be more than 10 or 15 cents.  The objection that Pelham Bay Park is outside the city limits probably will not exist in 1892.  Before the great fair was talked of at all, it was intended to ask the Legislature to extend the city line eastward from the Bronx River to the Sound, and thus take in the beautiful new Park, and the request will probably be made when the next Legislature meets.  Pelham Bay Park is by all odds the best place for the great fair, and it ought to be selected without hesitation.  But the first thing is to organize for the fair itself, and that is likely to be done very soon."

Source:  The Proposed Great Fair, Buffalo Courier [Buffalo, NY], Jul. 21, 1889, Vol. LIV, No. 202, p. 9, cols. 4-5.


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Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Parts of the Town of Pelham Were Considered as a Site for the 1893 World's Fair


In 1889, Americans already were preparing for the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Christopher Columbus on the shores of America.  A grand "World's Fair" was planned to open in 1892 as part of the "Great Columbus Celebration" in honor of the 400th anniversary.

Eventually the event opened as the "World's Columbian Exposition," a world's fair held in Chicago.  Although dedication ceremonies were held on October 21, 1892, the fairgrounds were not ready for the public.  Thus, the World's Columbian Exposition did not open to the public until May 1, 1893.  Thus, the Exposition often is referred to, informally, as the "1893 Chicago World's Fair."  It also is referred to as the 1892 World's Columbian Exposition and the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.

In 1889, organizers of the upcoming Exposition were still searching for a site on which to build the fairgrounds.  Believe it or not, the Town of Pelham was in the running as a possible fairgrounds site.

Actually, New York City was in the running, along with Chicago, Washington, D.C., and St. Louis.  Quite a number of undeveloped and lightly-developed sites were being considered as possible sites for the fairgrounds.  One of those sites was Pelham Bay Park which, in 1889, was owned by New York City but still was part of the Town of Pelham before its annexation in 1895.  Other possible New York City sites included Van Cortlandt Park, Riverside Park with some private land and Morningside Park, Claremont Park with portions of Fleetwood, and Hunt's Point.  

From Tuesday, September 10, 1889 through the early morning hours of Friday, September 13, 1889, a group of reporters from The World (published in New York City) and a photographer rode a horse-drawn buggy for 71 miles during a multi-day gale to tour all of the possible fairgrounds sites including Pelham Bay Park.  The extremely lengthy article that described the tour detailed much information about Pelham Bay Park.  It also detailed the awful conditions of the roads in the Town of Pelham, something for which Pelham was famous because the voters of City Island refused to approve budgets that included monies for most road improvements on the mainland.  The article provides a quaint and fascinating glimpse of parts of New York City, the Bronx, and the Town of Pelham nearly 130 years ago and makes for fascinating reading.  The text of the article and images created by an artist from photographs taken during the tour of Pelham Bay Park appear below, followed by a citation and link to the source.


"Bird's Eye View of the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893"
Showing What the Area in Pelham May Have Looked Like Had Pelham
Bay Park Been Chosen as the Site.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

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"EXPOSITION SITES.
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Where the Great World's Fair May Well Be Held.
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Just What Clam Each Spot Has for the Celebration.
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'The World' Inspects All Available Territory in the City.
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A Three Days' Tour of Exploration in a Carriage.
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Photographs and Sketches of New York's Uptown Parks.
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Plenty of Room and Ample Facilities for the Big Exposition.
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Beginning with Morningside and Riverside Parks, 'The World's' Inspectors of Sites Drive Over the Ground in the Teeth of the Raging Storm -- The Area and Accessibility of the Most Prominent of the Suggested Sites -- A Charming Picture on the Bronx Suddenly Dispelled -- The Routes Gone Over to Reach Each of the Proposed Tracts -- Pointers for the Members of an Important Committee -- Valuable Facts and Figures Which Show How We Stand on the Question of Sites for the Great Columbus Celebration.

Up to this time there has been no comprehensive idea given to the people of New York of the several sites suggested for the great Exposition of 1892.  Fragmentary descriptions have appeared from time to time of private and public tracts of land in the territory contiguous to New York, but the intervals between descriptions have been so long that one location was forgotten before another was presented.

THE WORLD to-day groups the most prominent of the proposed sites, and gives a minute description of the situation, topography, accessibility and the striking features of each.  This could only be accomplished in one way and that was by driving from one point to another and taking photographs of the most notable features in the landscape, which are reproduced in the cuts below.

Morningside and Riverside.

The expedition started from THE WORLD office at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning.  The clatter and rattle of Broadway was lost when the buggy was turned into the broad East drive of Central Park.  A leaden sky and a heavy mist had apparently frightened off the many fair horse-women usually encountered in early morning, for between Fifty-ninth and One Hundred and Tenth streets only one was seen -- a rosy, athletic-looking girl mounted on a superb bay, cantering towards the southern entrance.  The speedy little mare was given her head, and when the bells were ringing and the whistles screaming the hour of 7 THE WORLD men were entering Morningside Park, one of the sites proposed first by itself, and then in connection with Riverside.

The park with the odd-sounding name is situated between One Hundred and Tenth street and One Hundred and Twenty-Third street, and Ninth avenue and Morningside avenue.  The latter is an unpaved roadway skirting the western boundary of the park on a high bluff, running parallel with the Hudson River, and distant from it about a quarter of a mile.  The greatest width of the park is on the lowland under the hill.  The ground has been laid out in beautiful flower-beds, extending almost over to Ninth avenue.  Massive stone parapets are built against the wall of the bluff, and broad stone steps lead up to it.  To the south or lwer end of the park the Eighth Avenue L road makes its great, high curve, and from the train a pleasing bird's-eye view may be had of the many-hued boundary of Riverside Park, and running from flowers in the beds below.  Between the western boundary of Morningside Park and the eastern One Hundred and Sixteenth street to One Hundred and Twentieth stree, is located the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum and its spacious grounds.  

Between now and May, 1890, the asylum is to be vacated and the ground will revert to the city.  Those who favor the holding of the Exposition in that part of New York propose that the extensive tract of land extending from and including Morningside and Riverside shall be taken and used.  The ground between the two parks is private property and its purchase, in such event, will be necessary.  The area of the public tract is 120 acres and its shape an irregular parallelogram.  The private property increases the area to 215 acres.

It was beginning to rain when THE WORLD ambassadors came to a halt and unloaded their camera.  The wind was blowing briskly from the northeast and it required not a little patience to steady the apparatus and get a focus.  The view given in the accompanying cut is fairly good, requiring as it did thirty seconds exposure, because of the dull light.  It was taken from the top of the northernmost parapet and shows the part of the bluff and the low land in the distance.  

ON TO RIVERSIDE.

To Riverside was a ten-minute drive, and there, after being nearly blown from the roof of the hotel by the wind while taking a picture of the nearby landscape, the inspection of the most important portion of the proposed site was completed.  Riverside has a good water-front and there is ample room to build and provide wharfage for hundreds and, if necessary, thousands of vessels.  The ground is rolling, and for 200 yards back of the river is composed of a sandy loam.  Further back, towards Morningside, it is rcocky and its surface broken and uneven.  Riverside proper is too well known to require any extended description of its beauties or location.  It rises grandly from the shores of the Hudson, beginning at Seventy-second street and extending to Eighty-sixth street, where there is a break of a few short blocks.  Beginning again at Eighty-ninth street, it continues, gradually widening, until it ends in an abrupt bluff at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street.  The present means of access to the tract composed of the two parks and the territory lying between them is by the Hudson River railroad on the river side, all the west side Elevated Railroads, the Eighth Avenue line of surface cars on the east side and the numerous drives leading from Central Park and the Boulevard from Seventy-second street.
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Picturesque Inwood.

A chirrup to the mare and the newspaper inspectors of sites were off in a blinding rain storm for picturesque Inwood, on the historic Kingsbridge road.  The drive led up the Boulevard to this thoroughfare.  A stop was made at the old Black Horse Tavern -- now nothing but a ramshackle shanty -- and a photograph taken of the hostiery [sic], where a century ago horses were changed on the way to Albany.  Further on, within a half-mile of Kingsbridge, a magnificent view of the surrounding country was had from the villa of John Drake, situated on a lofty eminence overlooking the Kingsbridge road.  

It was the idea of Frank G. Green, of 10 Wall street, that the residents of Inwood would favor the holding of the Exposition on that plot of land lying between the Kingsbridge road and the Harlem River, beginning at a point where Dyckman street will some day be cut through; or, to be more intelligible, where Inwood street now runs through from Kingsbridge road to the Harlem River.  Mr. Green, who lives on Inwood Hill, believes that his neighbors would be benefited by this selection, inasmuch as they would gain better facilities for rapid transit than they now enjoy, and that all of that portion of the island would derive a permanent ultimate benefit.

Mr. Green's first proposal was that the land be purchased from the several owners -- of which he is not one, by the way -- but he accepts a rather novel amendment by his friend, J. G. Haven, that instead of buying the land the city 'borrow' it temporarily and that the owners depend for compensation on the extra facilities which they would receive and which would increase the value of their holdings.

The location is at least picturesque.  To the east of the Kingsbridge road the ground is rolling, with here and there a plateau of small area.  From the inn to the narrow neck where the river is spanned by Farmer's Bridge the distance is about a mile and a half, and the width between the road and the river varies from three-quarters of a mile to one-quarter of a mile.  The soil is a sandy loam and there is very little rock.  The principal means of access are now by driveways.  The Hudson River Railroad has a station at Inwood on the river side of the hill.  The cable road and the Elevated road will have extended their lines much nearer by 1892.

Mr. Green believes that in addition to the innumerable driveways that tap the section, abundant transportation could be provided on the Hudson and Harlem rivers by the building of piers to accommodate boats running from all feeding points on the North and East rivers.  The cost of transporting building materials and exhibits by water, he says, would be much cheaper than by rail, and would be a considerable item in saving expense.  The principal owners of the proposed territory are Isaac M. Dyckman and James McCreary, and the plot consists of about 260 acres.  About one-tenth of it is meadow land which would require filling up.  The new canal now being blasted through from the Harlem to the Hudson would furnish a waterway if completed in time.
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Van Cortlandt Park.

It was 6 o'clock when Inwood was finished and then the inspectors supped and lodged within a hundred yards of the spot where the minions of George III once held the highway against American rebels, cutting off all communications for weeks.  Bright and early Wednesday morning the expedition started on the second day's tour.  Van Cortlandt Park was the objective point, or rather Van Cortlandt and Jerome Parks, both of which are to be considered together as one proposed site.  It was still raining and the roads were like shallow ponds.  A good substantial breakfast helped to make things look brighter than they really were, and the inspectors as well as their horse were in the best of spirits.  Farmer's Bridge was crossed at 7.30 o'clock, and after a wearisome climb up a steep hill, Jerome avenue, with its stately residences and closely planted shade-trees, was turned, and in a few minutes the deserted race track was reached.  It looked dismal enough.  Up at the stables a couple of boys were leading horses listlessly around, and an old man was cutting grass with a sickle.  There wasn't much to inspect, and no opportunity to use the camera, for the rain was coming down in such torrents that the atmosphere was obscured, so after a delay of twenty minutes THE WORLD'S expedition moved on in the direction of Van Cortlandt Park.

Van Cortlandt avenue, running almost due north, was selected as the most direct route.  Despite the storm the drive was a delightful one, and afforded opportunity for speculating upon at least one curious circumstance.  About a mile from the turn, where the underbrush is thick and tangled and the trees plentiful, the inspectors came across a road paved, guttered and curbed.  Flagging had been laid for about a dozen square yards.  The road led into a thick wood, and the curbing extended about fifty yards into the brush.  Half a dozen sedate-looking crows were holding a convention on this strangely out-of-place sidewalk and fluttered off with a discordant caw! as the carriage approached.  The road did not appear to lead anywhere in particular, and the incongruity of the improvements was strikingly apparent.

It was nearly noon when Van Cortlandt Lake was descried through the trees.  The rain had ceased for the time being, but the wind was still blowing stiffly and the water's surface was being lashed into tiny waves.  Crossing the tracks of the Northern Railway, the explorers drove up Douglas avenue to the Van Cortlandt mansion, a fine old relic of Colonial days, still in an excellent state of preservation.  The mansion itself, as well as the country round about, is rich in reminiscence of the Revolutionary period.  It was here that Washington made his headquarters at the time he planned his retreat to Yorktown, and it was here that the struggle was waged so fiercely when it seemed as though the patriots must be wiped from the face of the earth.  The quaint Dutch tiles that framed the fireplaces a hundred years ago are still in place, and in the sash frames in the upper stories are many of the panes of ground glass that were imported from England years before the signing of the Declaration of Independence.  The sturdy old building with its thick walls and sprawling doorways was built in 1748 by an ancestor of the present Augustus Van Cortlandt, sr.  Between its four walls it has harbored many sorts and conditions of men.  In the same rooms where the Father of his Country made his brief stay, a Hessian colonel was quartered lending aid and comfort to his British allies.  Red-coats have swarmed over that house from cellar to attic.  Barefooted American soldiers have found in it a heaven of rest and of safety, and later on it became the rendezvous for all of fashionable Manhattan Island.  Many a periwigged and befrilled gallant has made love under the shadow of that broad porch, and many have been the political intrigues that had their inception in that same old library, where the Commander of the American armies ponders over the fortunes of war and the blessings of peace.

THE WORLD men found the mansion occupied by a polite and intelligent member of the park guard, who had the history of the Van Cortlandt famly from the days of Olaf Van Cortlandt up to the present time at his fingers' ends.  From the north side of the house the visitors had a magnificent view of the diversified scenery that surrounds it.  To the west could be indistinctly seen through the mist the heavily wooded range of hills that form the eastern bank of the Hudson River, and two points to the east rose the grassy mound known as Vault Hill, where the records of the city of New York were buried at the foot of a big elm while the royalists and the 'rebels' were struggling for supremacy.  The lovely valley of the Harlem in the south, filled in the perspective of a charming landscape, with the broad plateau called the 'parade ground,' dotted with four hayricks, as the main study.  Then came a drive around the borders of the lake and another unloading of the camera to seize the view before it should dissolve in the torrents that began to pour down again.

Between the lake and the mainland on the west the ground was found to be meadow land with good bottom, and in the neighborhood of Tibbitts Brook, that supplies the lake, rather soft and marshy.  The extent of meadow and marsh, however, is scarcely two acres, and arboreal vegetation, which has never been retarded in any part of the Park, is rapidly absorbing this superfluous moisture.  This is what the people there say, for THE WORLD'S inspectors saw the place and its surroundings under the most unfavorable meteorological conditions.

Van Cortlandt Lake can be reached only by inland methods of transportation.  The lake, which empties into Spuyten Duyvil Creek, is not a waterway.  The Hudson is the nearest navigable body of water.  Its distance across the hills to Riverdale is about half a mile, and there is no way of getting there by anything like a direct route, except by wagon-road from Broadway, through Riverdale lane, and thence over a rough road to Riverdale landing.  It is possible, however, to reach the banks of the Hudson further down by taking the Northern Railway to Kingsbridge and thence on a branch of the New York Central to the Spuyten Duyvil station.

The Northern is the principal means of access from the city.  There are numerous beautiful drives leading from the four quarters of the compass and a number of new steam roadways have been proposed, but are still in embryo.  Van Cortlandt Park contains 1,069 acres and next to Pelham Bay Park is the most extensive of the sites suggested where the ground belongs to the city.  Its shape is an irregular square and its extreme northern limit touches the city line.  It presents as much diversity in its soil as it does in its delightful panorama of hill and dale and woodland and lake.  To the south there is a workable clayey loam.  Higher up and towards the west the rocky formation appears -- fit for blasting and good for foundation stone.  To the east the ground is flat and comparatively free from rocks, so that a great deal of grubbing or clearing would not be necessary.

These were points that the visitors determined after two hours' careful inspection.  The rain was coming down, not quite as sharply as before, and advantage was taken of the lull to point the camera at the lake from a gate-post about 200 yards up the pike.  A group of laborers levelling off the road stopped their work and stood with pick and shovel watching THE WORLD'S artist as he demonstrated simultaneously the art of equilibrium and of photography.  Hardly was the camera packed up and in the bottom of the buggy before there was another cloud-burst, and down it came in ladlefuls [sic].  The little mare showed a decided dislike for such a continuous shower bath, for she whinnied impatiently.
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The Beauties of Bronx.

Bumping over rocks and swishing into gullies, the buggy was hurried along the pike to Gunhill road, where the traveling was almost as bad.  Williamsburg came in sight about 2 o'clock in the afternoon.  Hungry and wet as the travellers [sic] were, all their enthusiasm was aroused again as they crossed the wooden bridge, beneath which rippled the Bronx River, limpid and gentle, gurgling over its rocky bed.  But the very rippling itself seemed to say 'Go eat! go, eat!' and the enthusiasm sank out of site as the thought of food became uppermost.  Dinner over, a circuit was made of one-third of the boundary of the park, taking in, by advice of Real-Estate Dealer Hallock, the most romantic part of the tract, incluuding the Lydig Dam, the Rocking Boulder and De Lancey's ancient pine.

'Where gentle Bronx, clear winding flows,
The shadowy banks between,
Where blossomed bell or wilding rose
Adorns the brightest green
*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *
Stands high in solitary state 
De Lancey's ancient pine.'

Bronx Park extends on both sides of the river from West Farms to Williamsbridge, the course of the stream being through a scene of extraordinary loveliness.  The bans for a mile are almost perpendicular, rising to height in some place of eighty feet.  Overlooking the water, all the way down are tall pines and elm trees, several of them being of great height.  'De Lancey's pine' is of especial interest.  It stands alone and towers up straight as a plumb-line 125 feet.  Although robbed of much that belongs to it by the aqueduct, the Bronx River is still a beautiful stream.  It is shallow in spots but except during an unusual drought keeps its bed covered.  Directly behind a French restaurant, situated on the high ground, are half a dozen stone steps leading down to the water's edge.  Three boats lay moored there on Wednesday afternoon.  A dark-eyed, dark-complexioned woman, with a brilliant scarlet shawl covering her head, picked her way carefully down to one of the boats.  She placed one foot on the prow, exposing just the least portion of a well-turned ankle.  In that position the woman stood for at least a minute, evidently debating whether she would go afloat or stay ashore.

The rain-kissed cliffs, dark and sombre:  the trees arched and entertwined over the stream, and the gaudy shawl over the gracefully posed figure, standing like a statue, made a study rarely seen except on canvas.  THE WORLD men watched this picture until the principal figure upset the romance altogether by yanking a couple of big eels out of the boat and skinning them.  The inspection was then continued for the time being on foot.  The 'rocking boulder' is a huge mass of stone weighing perhaps forty tons.  During some prehistoric convulsion of nature it had been so cast as to become poised with the greatest nicety on a rocky pivot.  A touch with the hand will set it swaying, and immediately provoke a fear that it is about to crash into the river below, but thee big rock only moves a certain distance.  Beyond that point the balance is destroyed and it cannot be budged.

The rain began to increase in force while the boulder was being examined, but that did not prevent a trip to the dam, where the gentle stream becomes angry and dashes in volume over a wooden ledge breaking into a white foam on the rocks below.  Of course the camera was brought into play again and a good picture was taken.  The scene at this point is one of rare beauty.  Luxuriant Virginia creepers cover the faces of the rocky walls that form the miniature canyon.  Half a dozen varieties of wild flowers blossom on both banks, and around the gnarled and knotted trunks of aged trees twines the clinging ivy far up into the branches and hanging over the stream in festoons.  Indeed, the whole place hereabouts is like one vast botanical garden.  There has been little or no interference with nature, and she is seen in all her virgin attractiveness.

Further up stream the river leaves its rocky confines and twines through a country where the bans slope gently down to the water's edge and the surface of the ground is clothed with spear grass a foot high.

The rain began to come down in greater volume, and the inspectors were forced to take shelter in their buggy.  Driving along Briggs avenue they struck the old Boston post road, and twenty minutes later were abreast of the Tilden estate, near the junction of the two roads.  A hedge-and-stone fence incloses the property, and at the entrance gate is nailed a big sign.  'Beware of the Dog!'  Sites were of more importance than dogs at the moment, and the grounds were invaded.  The visitors were welcomed with an inquiring look from a half-grown mastiff, chained to a kennel, but there was no further hostile demonstration.  A bright-faced woman, with a paper cap on her head, came out of the house, and, in response to the request that the roof of the house might be visited, led the way up three flights of stairs and then up a step ladder, and out through a scuttle.  The camera was hauled up, and the visitors looked about them.

They had not seen a more glorious sight since the trip was begun.  The Tilden house is on the highest ground between the Boston post road and the East Chester road, and the range of vision from the roof extends to the Brooklyn Bridge, the Statue of Liberty and Staten Island.  On a clear day these points are distinctly visible, but in the rain and mist of Wednesday only the faintest outline could be seen.  This disappointment was made up by two other good views.  The Bronx was in sight, winding like a leaden-colored thread through the vale, and to the south Pelham Bay was visible.  The camera was pointed at the railroad bridge crossing the bay.

With a true devotion to art, the photographer artist took off his coat to cover his head and exclude the light while he got a focus.  The camera rested on a broad rail that surrounds the cupola.  It took both hands to hold it, for the wind was blowing hard.  There was such an apparent wobble at the first exposure that a second attempt was made, but with no better results.  The guide was very much interested in the work and was full of regrets because of the unfavorable weather.  An attempt to get a full view of Bronx Park did not meet with success, either, the light becoming obscured and making objects a hundred yards distant invisible.  An obliging real estate agent furnished the area of Bronx Park as 650 acres, which the inspectors afterwards found to be slightly incorrect.  The official acreage is given as 653.  Access is had by the Third Avenue L road beyond the Harlem, by the Hudson and Harlem River four-track depressed road, and by many beautiful driveways.  It is expected that by the latter part of 1891 the various lines comprising the suburban rapid transit system will be in operation, giving an increase in transportation facilities of at least 75 per cent.  The pictures reproduced below were taken under difficulties before the Tilden mansion was entered.
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Pelham Bay Park.

The mare's head was turned south, and after a sloppy drive of half an hour on the East Chester road, Pelham avenue was taken.  It was the intention to cross the bay near the railroad bridge, but the road was found to be submerged and there were no landmarks to indicate its location.  A wide detour was made along Pelham road to the Middletown pike, and thence to Pelham Bridge, which was crossed about 5 o'clock.  The wind had increased to a gale, and the rain was coming down in sheets.  Bartow was the first stop made.  Hotel accommodations there did not promise much, and the journey was continued over the Bartow City Island road, on which a funny little one-horse car runs through the woods to the bridge that spans Pelham Cove, connecting the mainland with City Island.  Pelham Park contains the greatest area of any of the sites proposed, either public or private.  Seventeen hundred and fifty acres was the purchase made by the city after the passage of the bitterly contested act providing for additional breathing-room for the rapidly growing metropolis.  It extends from the new proposed city line down to a narrow peninsula jutting out into Pelham Bay.  Its eastern and southern boundaries are formed by Long Island Sound and the narrow channel called Pelham Cove, which runs between it and City Island.

The upper western boundary is the Hutchinson River, named after Mrs. Anne Hutchinson,
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[Continued on Tenth Page.]

EXPOSITION SITES.
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[Continued from ninth page.]
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the puritan heroine, who was massacred by the Indians.  The name of Pelham is derived from the family of Pell, who, up to within a few years, were as numerous as the Tituses are on Long Island to-day.  There are still two of the original stock left -- Cyrus Pell and his father.  Cyrus is one of the characters of City Island and is known to every man, woman and child for miles around.  There has never been a storm severe enough to frighten him out of his boat, and he is noted for the hardy recklessness with which he will set out in the teeth of the most terrible gale that ever was known on the Sound.  He knows every foot of ground in Pelham and every fathom of water that washes its coast.

IN PELHAM BAY PARK.

It was at Pelham Neck that Gen. Howe, with 4,000 red-coats, was defeated by a handful of American patriots under Glover, and all during the Revolution the territory was the theatre of some of the most stirring scenes in the war for independence.  While interesting to the student of Colonial history, Pelham furnishes abundant material for the delver into the manners and customs of the aboriginal inhabitants.  It was the home of the warlike Mohegans, whose mounds can still be seen near the old Rapelyea estate.  Stone arrow-head and stone spears have been found.  Twenty years ago a curious document, written in hieroglyphics on sheepskin, was discovered in the extreme northern portion, near the Hunter estate.  It was cached in a stone box with a stone lid.  The finder was a stranger who announced his intention of depositing the relic with the Smithsonian Institute, but he never kept his word, as inquiry established.

As a site for the Exposition of 1892, Pelham Bay Park presents features found in none of the tracts which THE WORLD men had visited up to Wednesday night.  It has nine miles of coast line, indented at intervals with coves and bays.  On the Sound side there is an average depth of six fathoms of water.  There is only a short line of reef on which the breakers dash.  At the extreme end of of the peninsula the depth is still greater, but the current is swift and strong.  On the bay side the lead gives and average depth of five fathoms in the channel, gradually becoming shallower until the head of navigation on the river is reached.  The facilities for transportation by water are super-abundant.

As to the configuration of the land Pelham has fully the same diversity as any of the other sites suggested.  With one exception the roads are poor, but there is as much hill and dale as in Van Cortlandt, and more woodland than in Riverside and Inwood.  The entire section north and northwest of Bartow is heavily timbered.  Murmuring brooklets wind along mossy banks in the east, and hilly scenery relieves the monotony of the low lands in the west.  A fairly good idea of the character of the country an be gained from the cuts printed herewith.  The best and most comprehensive view is that of Prospect Hill, where the artist was obliged to make a pen sketch.  The wind would not permit the camera to stand.  To get to Pelham by rail, the Portchester and Harlem Railroad offers the only accommodations just now.  To get there by water, any sort of craft from a yacht to a three-thousand ton steamer can reach.
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Near the City Hall.

The storm, which had been increasing in fury, became a veritable hurricane by 9 o'clock Wendesday night and had not abated a whit when THE WORLD'S inspectors of sites awakened at 6 o'clock Thursday morning.  Instead of decreasing the force of the wind became greater, and it looked as though an attempt to start away from City Island would result in an overturned buggy.  After an impatient wait of five hours, however, a start was made in the teeth of the gale, and hard travelling it proved to be.  The roads were seas of mud.  Down on the Bartow road, near Fox's Corner, where the wagon way is built across a cove, the road was entirely submerged.  The little mare was urged forward and she plunged on steadily until the water reached her belly and covered the hubs of the wheels.  

Higher ground was soon reached, and with it innumerable gullies and washouts.  The route taken was along the Fordham and Pelham road to Fordham Heights, and thence down Jerome avenue on good hard ground to the two proposed sites near Mott Haven, where there are more railway facilities than at any of the locations yet named.

One of these borders on the Harlem River, which forms its western boundary.  It extends to a wedge-shaped point to where One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street would be if continued in a straight line, Jerome avenue bounding it on the north and Mott avenue on the southeast.  Jerard avenue runs through the centre from north to south, and the New York City and Harlem River Railroad cuts through its lower extremity.

Cedar Park, the only public ground in the territory, forms a very small portion of it, and is down near the southeastern corner.  The rest is all private property, owned by the Astor estate.

The tract, which consists of 250 acres, is certainly beautifully located, and is within a stone's throw of Melrose Station, past which all the trains on the New York and Harlem, and New York and New Haven Railroads pass.  The proposed Suburban Rapid Transit road will run within a hundred yards of the territory.  There is an ample supply of water, and good natural drainage because of the rolling character of the land.

The other site in the same neighborhood which the inspectors surveyed consists of Claremont Park, with an area of thirty-eight acres, and Fleetwood, with seventy acres.  There is a stretch of private party between the two which would bring the total area up to something like 200 acres, and that would form a tract extending from One Hundred and Sixty-fifth to One Hundred and Seventy-second street -- a good mile and a quarter, although the naming of the streets indicates only seven blocks.  Morrisania station, on the New York and Harlem and New York Central is the principal railroad depot in the vicinity.  A fairly good picture was obtained from the rear of Judge Smith's.  It gives an idea of the lay of the land.
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Advantages of Hunt's Point.

There was no cessation of rain or wind as the inspectors turned to drive to the most accessible by water of all the proposed sites -- Hunt's Point.  The route led down Jerome avenue to One Hundred and Sixty-third street, thence to Prospect avenue, over a wretchedly muddy road, then into West Chester avenue and from there along the Boulevard to Hunt's Point road, which leads down to the point.  This tract is bounded on the north by the Bronx River, on the south and east by Long Island Sound, and on the west by the rails of the Harlem River branch of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad.  That portion proposed to be devoted to the uses of the Exposition has an area of about four hundred acres, and runs back from the coast line on both sides of the peninsula to the Hunt's Point road, and from Leggett's Creek to the river.

On the water-front it embraces Oak Point, Leggett's Point and Barretto.  Seven miles of coast line, and an average depth of seven fathoms of water all around, offer ample anchorage for an extensive fleet of passenger and freight carrying vessels.  The territory possesses all the advantages of Pelham Bay Park, and is seven miles nearer the City hall.  While the nearest railroad now is the Harlem River branch of the N.Y., N.H. & H. RR., there are numerous points at which this line could be tapped without much expensive blasting or filling in.

The scenery on the coast is rugged, and inland it is fully as picturesque as in Pelham Bay Park.  There is a good growth of timber, and enough rock formation to furnish stone for building purposes.  The soil near the coast is a sandy loam, and further back in the woodland it is a rich mould.  Vegetation is luxuriant from one extremity to the other.  A good deal of clearing would have to be done, and some solid ground made where it is now marshy, near Barretto, but the area where these improvements would have to be made is inconsequential.  In view of the advantages that would be derived by having the World's Fair located on their holdings, property-owners generally express a willingness to sell their land for a nominal sum or for the payment of taxes.  No part of the ground is owned by the city.

THE WORLD'S inspectors made this last survey late at night, long after the time when photographs could be taken or pencil sketches made.  The mare's head was turned homeward, and THE WORLD office was reached at 2 o'clock Friday morning, after a buggy ride of seventy-one miles, in a severe storm, and over roads that with very few exceptions were almost impassable of the sites inspected the Van Cortlandt Park was the most beautiful, Pelham Bay Park the largest and furthest off, Riverside and Morningside the smallest, and Hunt's Point, the nearest, with a good water front and sufficient territory."

Source:  EXPOSITION SITES, The World [NY, NY], Sep. 15, 1889, p. 9, cols. 1-5 & p. 10, cols. 1-2 (Note:  Only Pelham images have been included with this transcription; other images excluded).



"Looking South From Pelham Bridge" and "Prospect Hill Looking West"
Source:  EXPOSITION SITESThe World [NY, NY], Sep. 15, 1889,
p. 10, cols. 1-2 (Note:  Click on Image to Enlarge).




"From Bartow's Looking South" and "Picnic Point"
Source:  EXPOSITION SITESThe World [NY, NY], Sep. 15, 1889,
p. 10, cols. 1-2 (Note:  Click on Image to Enlarge).


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