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.

Thursday, June 29, 2017

More on the Prospect Hill Golf Course of the Pelham Manor Golf Club


Many in Pelham know that there once was a golf course in the area of today's Fowler Avenue opened in 1898 by the first Pelham Country Club, a predecessor to today's Wykagyl Country Club in the City of New Rochelle.  See Tue., Nov. 29, 2016:  1902 Report on Activities of The First Pelham Country Club on Fowler Avenue.  Fewer, however, know that several years earlier a golf course opened on Prospect Hill in Pelham Manor.  Pelham, it seems, was in the midst of the golf craze that swept over the New York Region in the mid-1890s.  

On Wednesday, November 6, 1895, Mrs. John Cunningham Hazen (of Pelham Hall, also known as Mrs. Hazen's School for Girls) and her daughter, Miss Edith Cunningham Hazen, opened a tiny golf course on Prospect Hill in Pelham Manor.  The Hazen women, working with others, decided to market the new golf club as an incredibly exclusive club limited to only one hundred upper crust members from Pelham Manor and New Rochelle.  I have written about the Pelham Manor Golf Club before.  See, e.g.:

Tue., Apr. 29, 2014:  More on Golf in Pelham During the 19th Century.  

Tue., Oct. 20, 2009:  Manager of Pelham Manor Golf Links Committed Suicide in 1899

Mon., Mar. 09, 2009:  Another Brief Account of Golf at Pelham Manor in 1895

Mon., Jan. 14, 2008:  Golf at Pelham Manor in 1895

Bell, Blake, The Early Days of Golf in Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 36, Sep. 10, 2004, p. 12, col. 2.

The opening of the new course was held in a tent near the first tee.  The course seems to have been located in an area between today's Washington Avenue and the New York City boundary adjacent to an area denoted in some newspaper articles as "Prospect Hill Park."  The principal organizers of the new club, all women, received guests in the tent.  They included "Mrs. John C. Hazen, Mrs. Robert C. Black, Mrs. Jabish Holmes, and Mrs. Frank Hunter of Pelham Manor, and Mrs. Robert Lathers, Jr., Mrs. Henry Loomis Nelson, and Mrs. Henry D. Noyes of New Rochelle."

Among the notable members of the club who once hacked around the rolling countryside of Prospect Hill were famed western artist Frederic Remington (who lived and painted in New Rochelle) and publishing magnate Howard Scribner, a Pelham resident.

The records of the Pelham Manor Golf Club no longer exist.  Because little was written about the club, it has been exceedingly difficult to piece together its history.  The club seems to have operated until about 1899 when the manager of the club committed suicide after the close of the club's summer season.  At about the same time, of course, the first Pelham Country Club founded in 1898 was offering its members a lovely new nine hole golf course in the area of today's Fowler Avenue.  These two developments seem to have spelled the end of the Pelham Manor Golf Club.

Below is a very brief news item published on November 11, 1895 noting the opening of the new course.  



Hand Colored Half Tone Depicting a Golf Match in 1895.
"A LONG PUTT TO HALVE THE HOLE. -- DRAWN BY A. B. FROST."
1895 Hand Colored Half-Tone.  15 1/2 x 11 Inches.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.  

*          *          *          *          *

"THE PROGRESS OF GOLF.
-----
NEWS AND GOSSIP FROM THE CLUBS IN NEW YORK DISTRICT. . . .

The links of the Pelham Manor Golf Club on Prospect Hill adjoining Pelhamville [sic] Park, were formally opened on Wednesday and a reception was held in a tent near the first tee.  The guests were received by Mrs. John C. Hazen, Mrs. Robert C. Black, Mrs. Jabish Holmes, and Mrs. Frank Hunter of Pelham Manor, and Mrs. Robert Lathers, Jr., Mrs. Henry Loomis Nelson, and Mrs. Henry D. Noyes of New Rochelle. . . ."

Source:  THE PROGRESS OF GOLF -- NEWS AND GOSSIP FROM THE CLUBS IN NEW YORK DISTRICT, The Sun [NY, NY], Nov. 11, 1895, p. 8, col. 4.  

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Monday, April 14, 2014

Early History of Pelham Heights Published in 1895


I have written before about the lovely area of Pelham known as The Heights (Pelham Heights) and its residents.  The area once was incorporated as the Village of Pelham before the Village of North Pelham and the Village of Pelham were merged to form today's Village of Pelham.  For a few of many examples of prior articles about The Heights and some of its residents, see:

Tue., Jan. 21, 2014:  Early History of Pelham Heights: "Then Was Formed The Idea That Gave Pelham Heights Its Birth"

Thu., Jul. 16, 2009:  Village of Pelham Trustees Grant Franchise Necessary for the Pelham Manor Trolley that Inspired the Toonerville Trolley.  

Fri., Dec. 07, 2007:  Another Biography of Congressman Benjamin Fairchild of Pelham, a Founder of Pelham Heights.  

Thu., Dec. 06, 2007:  Biography of John F. Fairchild, Engineer of the Pelham Heights Company During the 1890s.  

Fri., Sep. 28, 2007:  When Incorporated, The Original Village of Pelham Needed More Elected Officials Than it Had Voters.  

Tue., Aug. 15, 2006:  Another Biography of Benjamin L. Fairchild of Pelham Heights.

Fri., Apr. 22, 2005:  Benjamin L. Fairchild of Pelham Heights -- A Notable Pelham Personage.  

Bell, Blake A., Early History of Pelham Heights, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 32, Aug. 13, 2004, p. 9, col. 1.

Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog provides additional information about the early history of Pelham Heights.  It transcribes an article that described the earliest efforts to develop the lands that became The Heights.  The article appeared in the May 30, 1895 issue of The Mount Vernon Argus.  The transcribed text appears beneath the image below from the same article, followed by a citation to the source.  



Home of Hon. Benjamin L. Fairchild in 1895.
Source:  Pelham Heights, The Mount Vernon Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], 
May 30, 1895, Supplement, p. 7, cols. 3-4.  

"PELHAM HEIGHTS.

A place that is rapidly becoming famous is the second station from the Grand Central Depot, adjoining Mount Vernon, New Rochelle and Pelham Manor, extending from the easterly boundary of Mount Vernon to the westerly boundary of New Rochelle, and from the New Haven Railroad tracks southerly to the Pelham Manor line.  For a number of years it remained entirely undeveloped, by reason of the manner in which a portion of it was tied up in estates.  Fortunately, the several pieces of property were finally acquired by parties who had the ability and inclination to combine in developing this section into high class property, rather than to subdivide the section in accordance with the usual method of flaring advertisements, cheap lots and quick sales.

More than a year was occupied after the several properties were acquired by this syndicate in the engineering work alone, which included plans for an elaborate sewerage system, a separate drainage system, gas mains, water mains, electric lights, macadamized roads and sidewalks -- in fact, every modern municipal improvement, designed with a solidity equal to the best municipal improvements in any city in the United States.  The engineering work was immediately followed by active construction, in accordance with such plans, and the thoroughness of the work accounts for the number of years occupied in placing the property in a condition to invite the class of home seekers who can afford to comply with the restrictions, that require, among other things, a minimum cost of $5,000 for each residence, to be built upon plots of a minimum footage of seventy-five feet.  Hardly a year has passed since a sufficient number of streets have been entirely completed to warrant the offering of lots to a select class of purchasers, and already there are more than a dozen families located in the place, in handsome residences, costing from $6,000 to $20,000 quickly giving to Pelham Heights the name of a fashionable residential section.

Among the residences already erected in Pelham Heights, special mention might be made of the handsome stone residence on Pelhamdale Avenue of Mr. P.P. De Arozarena, of the Haviland Wall Paper Manufacturing Company, and the Colonial home of Congressman Fairchild, on the Third Street Boulevard, each of which is said to have cost about $20,000.  A description of the interior of these two houses would deserve a special article.  None of the visitors to Pelham Heights have failed to notice the picturesque homes on Loring Avenue of Mr. Ralph K. Hubbard, Secretary of the Provident Life Insurance Company, and Mr. Howard Scribner, son of the former Secretary of State.

There has been already as much as $200,000 expended in street improvements.  The work already completed is considerable [sic] more than appears upon the surface, and includes all the cross sections of the pipe lines, and the trunk line and main outlet sewers and drains for the whole property, including the unopened avenues, as well as those streets and avenues which have been entirely opened and completed.  The main outlet surface drain through Highbrook Avenue is a large stone, brick arch culvert erected at a considerable expense for the drainage of the whole section, and is of sufficient size for workmen to pass through if necessary to make repairs, without disturbing the surface of the avenue.  The opening and completion of any additional avenues in the future will not require the prosecution of any work in any of the streets or avenues already completed, because of such completition of all the main connections.  

The natural advantages of Pelham Heights was favorable for such a development as we have here described.  The property is higher than any of the surrounding territory, and from almomst any point on the property a wide expanse of view can be obtained of Pelham Bay Park and over toward Long Island Sound.  Congressman Fairchild, from his house, has an extensive view of Long Island and Long Island Sound on the south and east, and of the Palisades, as far north as Piermont, on the west.

A special natural attraction of Pelham Heights are the trees of many varieties, which cover a large portion of the property, and make Loring Avenue one of the handsomest anywhere.  It is not a long walk from Pelham Heights, through Pelhamdale Avenue, to the Sound.  The rapidly nearing completion of the macadamizing of the Pelham Manor streets and avenues will make Pelhamdale Avenue a finely macadamized boulevard, with sidewalks from Pelham Heights to Travers Island.

During the summer the macadamizing and construction of sidewalks along Third Street in Mount Vernon to Pelham Heights will have been completed, the new station at Pelham Heights will have been erected, and the electric railroad, which is now operated to the Pelham line, will probably have been completed through to the Sound.  The railway people wanted to build their line through the Third Street Street Boulevard, but the Pelham Heights syndicate would allow no tracks to be placed in that avenue, and the route mapped out, therefore, required the road to be built to the Pelham Station, and thence through First Street of Pelham Heights, which lies along the railroad track, and Highbrook Avenue, which is planned to be the business street of Pelham Heights and thence direct to New Rochelle and the Sound.  The entrance to New Rochelle from Pelham Height [sic] will also be improved greatly this summer.  The Suburban Railway tracks are to be raised considerably, and the old Boston Post Road, which now enters New Rochelle along a bridge over the tracks, will be carried under the tracks which will do away with the steep embankment now existing.  This will result in the final completion by New Rochelle of a macadam road and sidewalks from the terminus of the Third Street Boulevard of Pelham Heights into Main Street.  With the completion of these improvements, we will have continuous sidewalks from the westerly boundary of Mount Vernon to the northerly line of New Rochelle, through Third Street, in Mount Vernon and Pelham Heights, and Main Street, in New Rochelle, which two streets will then become practically one thoroughfare.  This is only one small indication of how rapidly Mount Vernon, Pelham and New Rochelle are becoming one community; and what a delightful community it is, and how much more delightful it is becoming, located as it is at the northerly door of the greatest of the new city parks, Pelham Bay Park, which comprises the whole of the peninsula formed by East Chester Creek, Pelham Bay and Long Island Sound."

Source:  Pelham Heights, The Mount Vernon Argus [Mount Vernon, NY], May 30, 1895, Supplement, p. 6, cols. 3-4 & p. 7, col. 3.  


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