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, December 09, 2016

Stowell's Pharmacy in Pelham Manor and its Stunning Early Real Photo Postcards


Opening of Stowell's Pharmacy in 1907

One of the earliest pharmacies to open in the tiny Village of Pelham Manor was "Stowell's Pharmacy" operated by J. S. Stowell.  It was not Pelham's first pharmacy.  That distinction belongs to a tiny pharmacy opened by a member of the Roosevelt family in the 1890s.  That pharmacy quickly failed.  Its fixtures were sold to Seth T. Lyman of the Village of North Pelham who opened his pharmacy at Fifth Avenue and First Street with those fixtures.

Before opening his Pelham Manor pharmacy, J. S. Stowell was with the Chambers Pharmacy operated by James Chambers in Bronxville.  In 1907 Stowell decided to strike out on his own and open a pharmacy in the region.  He settled on the Village of Pelham Manor which had about 450 residents but no pharmacy.  

First Stowell had to locate the building to house his new business.  He was in luck.  A building at a prime location had just become available -- the old Pelham Manor Post Office.

The story of that old Pelham Manor Post Office building is interesting in and of itself.  In 1897, the Village Clerk of the Village of Pelham Manor, Gervas H. Kerr, became Pelham Manor postmaster.  He oversaw the post office in the Pelham Manor Depot until 1904, when it was moved out of the Depot to a nearby residence on Terrace avenue, a roadway that no longer exists due to the construction of Interstate 95 during the 1950s.  The post office remained in that residence (a home later owned by F.C. Allen, Jr. of Pelham Manor) for only three years.  In 1907, Postmaster Kerr oversaw construction of a new post-office building nearby, near the front entrance to the nearly-new Pelham Manor Train Station built of stone, designed by noted architect Cass Gilbert and opened in about 1907.  Stowell seized on the opportunity and took over the vacant Terrace Avenue residence formerly used as the Post Office.   



Detail from 1908 Map Showing Likely Location of the
Old Post Office Building That Became Stowell's Pharmacy
in Lower Right Corner on Property Owned by Mrs. Emma
J. Roosevelt.  Source:  Fairchild, John F., Atlas of the City
of Mount Vernon and the Town of Pelham Compiled from
Official Records, Personal Surveys, and Other Private Plans
and Surveys, Plate 35 (Mount Vernon, NY:  John F. Fairchild,
1908).  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Stowell successfully opened his new business.  A brief newspaper reference published before he opened Stowell's Pharmacy indicated plans for a "first class" and "attractive pharmacy" with an "up to date prescription department" as well as a classic soda fountain.  According to the same reference, the soda fountain would serve not only "ice cream sodas and sundaes," but also "a long list of popular drinks such as egg phosphate, malted milk and egg, vishy and milk, lemonade to order, etc."

It is not known with certainty how long Stowell's Pharmacy operated in Pelham Manor.  It certainly operated for at least three years.  References to the pharmacy in 1910 can be found in a variety of sources.  In the short time that the pharmacy existed, it seems, it left one fascinating, historic, and beautiful legacy.

The Stowell's Pharmacy Real Photo Postcards

At about the time J. S. Stowell was opening his pharmacy, the golden age of American Postcards was underway.  More significantly, a recent development in the creation of such postcards was generating excitement throughout the country.  Stowell's Pharmacy, it seems, took advantage of this excitement.  

In 1903, Kodak introduced a camera (the 3A Folding Pocket Kodak Camera) designed to use film that produced postcard-size images to allow consumers to take photographs and have them printed on postcard paper with postcard backs.  The camera was such a success that Kodak introduced a new service in 1907 that it named "Real Photo Postcards."  The service enabled customers to make postcards from any photograph they took regardless of the camera used.  

At about the same time, Federal law changed to permit -- for the first time -- the inclusion of a message on a portion of the back of a postcard.  Until that change in the law, only the address was allowed on the back of a postcard.  Any message had to be included on the front of the postcard where, typically, an image of some sort appeared.  

These two developments combined to create a boon in the creation and use of Real Photo Postcards (often known to collectors as RPPs or RPPCs).  According to one source:  "No other single format has provided such a massive photo history of America, particularly of small-town and rural America where photography was often a luxury."  "Real Photo Postcard" in Wikipedia -- The Free Encyclopedia (visited Dec. 3, 2016).  

A fascinating series of Real Photo Postcards created in about 1909 seems to be connected to Stowell's Pharmacy.  Although only one in the series uncovered so far has a Stowell's Pharmacy designation on it, the images are remarkably similar and contain handwritten titles that appear to be in the same handwriting in each instance -- handwriting that matches that on the only example in the series uncovered so far that includes a Stowell's Pharmacy reference.  

The Stowell Pharmacy postcards represent an important and fascinating group of RPP images taken at about the same time.  The images reveal, if nothing else, long-gone views of Pelham that were deemed significant enough to capture as part of an entrepreneurial scheme to profit from those views through postcard sales.  It now seems certain that among the many things one could purchase in Stowell's Pharmacy were these lovely postcards to collect or to mail to family and friends.

Below are the Real Photo Postcard images I have been able to identify so far that likely are part of the Stowell's Pharmacy series of such cards.  Since not all are labeled as "Stowell's Pharmacy" cards, there is no definitive way to determine if they all are part of the same series.  However, you may judge for yourself based on the "look" of each postcard and the handwritten titles in identical handwriting whether they seem to be part of a series of cards prepared by (or for sale at) the pharmacy.  Most importantly, since some of the cards have legible postmarks that seem to compare favorably with the time we know Stowell's Pharmacy existed, it is now even easier to assign a narrow date range for all the images including those without postmarks (or without legible postmarks).



This undated postcard shows the "RES. [i.e., Residence of] MUNROE CRANE PELHAM MANOR, N.Y. 5981."  The note on the left contains the following reference important for present purposes "FROM STOWELL'S PHARMACY."  Pay close attention to the handwritten titles as you will see similar handwriting on each of the following postcards as well.  (Click on image to enlarge.)


This undated postcard shows the "R.R. STATION.  PELHAM MANOR, N.Y."  This is the Pelham Manor Depot designed by famed architect Cass Gilbert that opened in about 1907 when Stowell opened his new pharmacy only a few steps away from where this photographer stood.  The postmark is somewhat illegible, but the card clearly was postmarked in 1910 when Stowell's Pharmacy was known to be operating.  This photograph was taken from one of the station platforms opposite the station.  The Pelham Depot Plaza is on the other side of the station.  The station obscures the view of the new Pelham Manor Post Office and Grocery that is entirely "behind" and, thus, blocked by the station in this photograph.  Stowell's Pharmacy would have been located to the right in this image, somewhat behind the photographer.  Note that the handwriting used for the title as well as the "look and feel" of the image is the same as before.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This undated postcard shows the "POST OFFICE PELHAM MANOR, N.Y."  This is the Post Office building built by postmaster Gervas H. Kerr in 1907 almost directly adjacent to the Pelham Manor Depot.  The shadow of the roof and lightning rod of the Pelham Manor Depot can be seen in the foreground of the photograph.  This photograph was taken with the Pelham Manor Depot behind and to the left of the photographer.  The photographer would have had to walk through the underground tunnel that connected the station area to the platform from which the photograph immediately above was taken.  Stowell's Pharmacy would have been almost directly behind the photographer, a few dozen feet away.  Note that the handwriting used for the titles as well as the "look and feel" of the image is the same as before.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This postcard view of the "Little Red Church" (the original Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church) located at Four Corners (the intersection of Boston Post Road and Pelhamdale Avenue) is titled "5819 PRESBT. CHURCH.  PELHAM MANOR, N.Y."  The postcard is postmarked November 3, 1911.  Stowell's Pharmacy is known to have been operating in 1910 and may have been operating in 1911 as well.  This image was taken from Boston Post Road facing the church which stands essentially where the sanctuary of today's Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church is located.  Note the same handwriting for the title and the same "look and feel" of the image.  (Click on image to enlarge.)  Note that there is a handwritten four digit number "5819" on the postcard very similar to the four digit number in the same handwriting (5981) on the Munro Crane postcard.  The purpose of the number is not known.



This is a postcard view of "ESPLANADE PELHAM MANOR, N.Y." postmarked November 2, 1909 during the time Stowell's Pharmacy was operating.  This image, taken on the Esplanade (with the dividing median between the Esplanade lanes on the left), shows the rear of the horse watering fountain at the intersection of Esplanade and Boston Post Road.  Note the same handwriting for the titles and the same "look and feel" of the image.  This image was taken just off of Boston Post Road a few hundred feet west from where the photographer took the image of the Little Red Church included above.  On the extreme right, the buildings of Mrs. Hazen's School for Girls may be seen.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This is a postcard view of "MRS. HAZEN'S SCHOOL PELHAM MANOR, N.Y." with an illegible postmark.  All three "houses" of Mrs. Hazen's School for Girls that stood on the Esplanade at Boston Post Road are depicted in the photograph which was taken from across the Esplanade (both lanes visible in the foreground).  Chester House is on the left.  Edgewood House is in the center, slightly in the rear (it was named after the street it was closest to).  Marbury House, named after Anne Marbury Hutchinson, is on the right.  This image was taken just off of Boston Post Road on the opposite side of the horse drinking fountain, once again only a few hundred feet away from where the photographer took the image of the Esplanade showing the rear of the horse drinking fountain included above.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This is a postcard view of "BOSTON POST ROAD PELHAM PELHAM MANOR, N.Y." postmarked September 4, 1909 when Stowell's Pharmacy was operating.  This image, taken on Boston Post Road facing its intersection with Esplanade, shows the horse watering fountain in the distance on the left.  Once again the same handwriting is used in the title and the photograph has the same "look and feel" of the other images.  This image was taken from Boston Post Road a few hundred feet west from where the photographer took the images of the rear of the horse watering fountain and the buildings of Mrs. Hazen's School for Girls included above.  (Click on image to enlarge.)




This is a postcard view of "'RES. [i.e., Residence of] MONT D. ROGERS PELHAM MANOR, N.Y." postmarked June 7, 1910 when Stowell's Pharmacy is known to have been operating.  This residence (which no longer exists) was located near the intersection of Wolfs Lane and Secor.  Thus, the photograph was taken only a few hundred feet away from the photograph of Boston Post Road immediately above. The same handwriting is used in the titles and the photograph has the same "look and feel" of the other images.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This is an undated postcard view of "WOLFS LANE.  PELHAM MANOR, N.Y."  This image was taken on Wolfs Lane (likely somewhat near Boston Post Road but further along Wolfs Lane than Secor).  Admittedly, though, it has not yet been placed geographically with certainty.  It seems likely, however, that it was taken only a few hundred to a few thousand feet away from the photograph of the residence of Mont D. Rogers immediately above.  Note the same handwriting and the same "look and feel" once again.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This is a postcard view of "'THE RESERVOIR.' NO. PELHAM, N.Y." postmarked January 8, 1911.  Stowell's Pharmacy is known to have been operating in 1910 and may have been operating in 1911 as well.  This image seems to have been taken from the New Haven Line railroad embankment looking down over the reservoir showing the facilities of the New York Inter-Urban Water Company that provided drinking water from the reservoir to Pelham at the time.  Once again the same handwriting is used in the titles and the photograph has the same "look and feel" of the other images.  (Click on image to enlarge.)  For more on the history of the Pelham Reservoir, see:  Wed., Mar. 11, 2015:  Research Regarding the History of the Pelham Reservoir in Today's Willsons Woods Park.



This is an undated postcard view of "R.R. STATION.  PELHAM, N.Y."  This image was taken from near the western end of the Connecticut-bound platform of the New Haven Line Pelham Station.  Note the same handwriting and the same "look and feel" once again.  (Click on image to enlarge.)



This is an undated postcard of "L. EPPLE NORTH PELHAM, N.Y."  It shows the home, florist business, and greenhouses of Louis Charles Epple once located at Seventh Street near Fifth Avenue.  The photographer was standing on 7th Street near its intersection with Sixth Avenue facing toward Fifth Avenue.  As with the earlier postcards in the series, the same handwriting is used in the title and the photograph has the same "look and feel" of the other images.  (Click on image to enlarge.)  To read more about this postcard and Louis Charles Epple, see:  Tue., Sep. 20, 2016:  Louis Charles Epple and His Florist Business in the Village of North Pelham.



This is an undated postcard view of the "CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.  NO. PELHAM, N.Y."  It shows the tiny clapboard chapel of the Church of the Covenant, Congregational that was known as the "Congregational Church" in the Village of North Pelham.  It was located on Second Avenue between Third and Fourth Streets.  The photographer was located on Second Avenue in front of the chapel.  Again, the same handwriting is used in the title and the photograph has the same "look and feel" of the other images.  (Click on image to enlarge.)  To learn more about this postcard and the Congregational Church, see:  Thu., Jul. 23, 2015:  The Home at 45 Maple in Chester Park Built to Serve as a Church.

Conclusion

These thirteen postcards seem to be part of a series of related postcards with a possible connection to Stowell's Pharmacy in Pelham Manor.  It seems almost positive that there are other examples out there of similar postcards in the same series that have the same handwriting and the same "look and feel" as these thirteen examples.  Although it is impossible to know with certainty, it seems most likely that the photographs used in these postcards were taken in 1909 given the historical context of all these images and given that the earliest postmark on any of them (at least as known for now) is September 4, 1909.

Most likely the photographs were taken on different dates.  However, the shadows and greenery suggest that the images were taken on a spring day (or on spring days) with the sun nearly directly overhead in most images.  

It is easy to imagine, at times, how the photographer may have walked along a particular route to snap some of the photographs.  For example, it may have been the case that on one occasion the photographer took a photograph of the Pelham Manor Depot, then wandered in the tunnel beneath the tracks and emerged to photograph the Pelham Manor Post Office adjacent to the Depot.  The photographer, we imagine, then walked a few thousand feet up Pelhamdale Avenue to Four Corners.  

At Four Corners, the photographer took a photograph of the Little Red Church and turned west on Boston Post Road, stepping briefly onto the Esplanade to take a picture of that roadway (showing the rear of the horse watering fountain).  Next the photographer remained on the Esplanade, but crossed Boston Post Road to photograph Mrs. Hazen's School for Girls on Boston Post Road at the Esplanade on the side of Boston Post Road opposite the horse drinking fountain.  

The photographer next took the few steps back onto Boston Post Road and walked a few hundred feet west.  Standing in the middle of Boston Post Road, the photographer turned around toward the Esplanade and took a photograph of Boston Post Road (with a dog seated in the roadway and the horse watering trough in the distance).  The photographer next turned onto Wolfs Lane and walked a few hundred feet to the intersection of Wolfs Lane and Secor and photographed the monumental mansion of Mont D. Rogers (one of a number of nearby monumental mansions).  

Next, the photographer walked a few hundred to a few thousand feet further on Wolfs Lane and took a picture showing a few homes on Wolfs Lane.  Then the photographer continued on Wolfs Lane to the Pelham Station on the New Haven Line and took a picture there.  Thereafter the photographer would have taken a brief detour along the railroad right-of-way to take a photograph of the nearby Pelham Reservoir.  (And so on, and so on.)

These photographs are rare images of a Pelham that no longer exists:  Pelham in 1909.  They are beautiful.  There are so many clues in each that have yet to be explored.

*          *          *          *          *

Below is the text of a number of items that shed some light on Stowell's Pharmacy.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"-- J. S. Stowell, recently of the Chambers Pharmacy, is going into business for himself in Pelham Manor.  That happens to be the one prosperous village in the heart of things that has no drug store.  It likewise has a new post office building which leaves the old one vacant.  Mr. Stowell has taken this building and will put it in first class shape for an attractive pharmacy, with an up to date prescription department and a soda fountain where a long list of popular drinks such as egg phosphate, malted milk and egg, vishy and milk, lemonade to order, etc. will be on tap for the automobilist in addition to the ice cream sodas and sundaes for home consumption.  E. S. Sawyer of New York has taken Mr. Stowell's place at Chambers'."

Source:  [Untitled], The Bronxville Review, Aug. 15, 1907, Vol. VI, No. 33, p. 5, col. 2.  

"PELHAM MANOR, Westchester Co. . . . . [Population 638] Stowell's Pharmacy"

Source:  The ERA Druggists Directory of America - 14th Edition - 1910, p. 134 (NY, NY:  D.O. Haynes & Co., Publishers, 1910).  



Fascinating Advertisement that Included Local Businesses
Including Stowell's Pharmacy in Pelham Manor that Sold
"ELECTRIC DEATH," A "1000 Volts Strong" Way to Destroy
Cockroaches, Bedbugs, Waterbugs, Ants and Fleas.  And, it was
"Warranted to do the Work."  Source:  ELECTRIC DEATH
[Advertisement], The Daily Argus, Mar. 23, 1910, p. 2, cols.
3-4.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Where Was Anne Hutchinson Park? Even Pelham's Town Board Did Not Know at Tax Time!


The entire Town Board was huddled in the Board room at Town Hall on the evening of Wednesday, May 18, 1938.  To a man, they were scratching their heads in puzzlement.  Finally, they could stand it no longer.  One of them blurted out to the crowd seated in the public section:  "Where is Anne Hutchinson Park?"

Pelham, it seemed, had a park that few knew existed.  It sounded like a lovely park.  The melodic name of "Anne Hutchinson" remains to this day a name spoken sonorously and with profound respect within the boundaries of the little Town of Pelham.  Every schoolchild knows that the famed Anne Hutchinson moved in 1642 to the region that became the Manor of Pelham.  Yet, on that Wednesday evening in 1938, no one seemed able to answer the question "Where is Anne Hutchinson Park?"

Finally an informed reporter for the local newspaper, The Pelham Sun, broke the uncomfortable silence in the board room.  The Village of Pelham Manor had created the park nearly two years before.  

It was, indeed, a lovely park.  It was adjacent to the Pelham Manor Station that once stood on the Branch Line near today's Manor Circle.  It was located on a tiny plot of land bounded on the east by the plaza in front of the station, on the north by Pelhamdale Avenue, on the west by Terrace Avenue (a roadway destroyed when I-95 was built), and on the south by Esplanade.  A detail from a map published in 1914 shown immediately below shows the tiny strip of land that formed the park.



Detail from Map Published in 1914 Showing a Sliver
of Land Designated as Owned by "Mary G. W. Black"
Bounded by Pelhamdale Avenue, Terrace Avenue,
Esplanade and the Pelham Manor Station Plaza.  The
Plot was Designated "Anne Hutchinson Park" by the Village
of Pelham Manor Board of Trustees in May, 1936.
Source:  "Pelham Manor" in Bromley, G.W., Atlas of Westchester
County, N.Y. Pocket, Desk and Automobile Editiion, Vol. I, p. 129
(NY, NY:  G. W. Bromley & Co., 1914).  NOTE:  Click Image to Enlarge.

The tiny little park no longer exists.  The area it once encompassed now lies beneath the concrete behemoth we know today as I-95 -- the New England Thruway.

Anne Hutchinson Park was the brainchild of Town Historian William R. Montgomery in 1936.  He proposed to the Village of Pelham Manor Town Board that the tiny little area be designated "Anne Hutchinson Park" in recognition of "the heroism of Anne Hutchinson who settled in this region in 1642, after being exiled from Massachusetts, in a religious controversy."  

Little seems to have been done to publicize the creation of the new park.  Within a year or so, the park already was the butt of trivia questions trying to test local residents' knowledge of Pelham minutia.  See Quiz Proves Knowledge Can Be Gained In Adult School After Classes -- Amusing "Information Please" Program is Presented at Eleventh Night Entertainment.  Local Experts Know Enough to Correct Authorities, The Pelham Sun, Dec. 15, 1939, p. 12, cols. 4-5 (Answer to "Information Please" trivia question was "Anne Hutchinson park is located in Pelham Manor between the Esplanade and Pelhamdale avenue, adjacent to the New Haven railroad branch line.").  There was even talk of erecting a memorial tablet at the little park in further honor of Anne Hutchinson, but that never seems to have been done.  See PELHAM BATTLE ANNIVERSARY WILL BE OBSERVED IN PROGRAM PLANNED BY TOWN HISTORIAN, The Pelham Sun, Jul. 8, 1938, p. 1, cols. 1-2 ("As a memorial to Anne Hutchinson, the first white settler in this section, a Memorial Tablet is to be erected at Anne Hutchinson Park in Pelham Manor at the southerly end of the Esplanade."). 

It seems that even the Village of Pelham Manor -- the very entity that created the little park -- forgot its existence.  Law at the time provided that municipal property dedicated as a park would be assessed for the nominal sum of one dollar for purposes of the Hutchinson Sewer Tax Act.  When the Town of Pelham assessed the property and sought payment of the full sewer tax for the property in 1937, the Village of Pelham Manor dutifully paid the tax without question.  

That all changed in 1938.  That year the Town of Pelham assessed the property as valued at $14,000 and issued a sewer tax bill of $11.41 to the Village of Pelham Manor.  This time the village issued a letter of protest citing a decision providing that "village property used for park purposes is to be assessed at the nominal assessment of one dollar."

That protest led to the meeting held on Wednesday evening, May 18, 1938 at which the Town of Pelham officials sat huddled, scratching their heads and asking "Where is Anne Hutchinson Park?"  A headline in the local newspaper two days later screamed, tongue in cheek, "11.41 Tax Bill For Anne Hutchinson Park Gives Town Board Opportunity To Find Out Where It Is Located."



Local Newspaper Article Noting That Town Board
Did Not Know Location of Anne Hutchinson Park.
Source:  $11.41 Tax Bill For Anne Hutchinson Park
Gives Town Board Opportunity To Find Out Where It Is Located
,The Pelham Sun, May 20, 1938, Vol. 29, No. 7, p. 1, cols. 1-2.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

That evening, the Town Assessor was called before the Town Board.  He defended himself saying that "the assessors had not been previously notified that the property in question was a park" and emphasized that "Pelham Manor paid taxes on the property last year."  The Board ended the meeting by instructing the Town Attorney to ask Village of Pelham Manor officials "to submit proof that the property has been dedicated as a park" which, presumably, they did.

Tiny little Anne Hutchinson Park sat quietly and without fanfare even after the Branch Line railroad ended its regular commuter service and the Peham Manor station closed (and later reopened as the headquarters of a model railroad club).  The tract disappeared beneath the concrete of I-95 when that superhighway was constructed in the 1950s, a victim of transportation progress.

"Anne Hutchinson Park Is Proposed In Peham Manor
-----

At the suggestion of Town Historian William R. Montgomery, the Pelham Manor Board of Trustees on Monday night, took steps to officially designate the park adjacent to the Pelham Manor depot of the N.Y., N.H. & H.R.R. branch line 'Anne Hutchinson Park.'  The Town Historian will be asked to prepare an official document relative to the history of Anne Hutchinson, to be filed in the village archives.

Mr. Montgomery proposed the designation of the park in recognition of the heroism of Anne Hutchinson, who settled in this region in 1642, after being exiled from Massachusetts, in a religious controversy."  

Source:  Anne Hutchinson Park Is Proposed In Peham Manor, The Pelham Sun, May 28, 1936, p. 3, col. 6.  

"$11.41 Tax Bill For Anne Hutchinson Park Gives Town Board Opportunity To Find Out Where It Is Located
-----

Protest of a tax bill prompted the Town Board to do a little historical research on Wednesday night.  A letter of protest against the $11.41 tax bill against property known as Anne Hutchinson Park in Pelham Manor was received by the board and this prompted the question, 'Where is Anne Hutchinson Park?'  None of the village or town officials present could answer the question and it remained for a Pelham Sun reporter to inform them that the small park adjacent to the Pelham Manor station of the New Haven Branch Line was recent[ly] officially designated 'Anne Hutchinson Park' by the Pelham Manor Board of Trustees.  The park extends from Pelhamdale avenue to the Esplanade and fronts on Terrace avenue.  

The Hutchinson Sewer Tax act provides that municipal property owners . . . shall pay sewer taxes the same as private property, but Village Attorney Edgar C. Beecroft in his letter of protest called attention to a recent decision which provides that village property used for park purposes is to be assessed at the nominal assessment of one dollar.  The town tax roll lists Anne Hutchinson Park at $14,000 and a sewer tax of $11.41 has been levided against it.

Assessor Edward B. Harder informed the board that the assessors had not been previously notified that the property in question was a park.  'Pelham Manor paid taxes on the property last year,' he said.  'We didn't know but what they were going to do so again.'

Town Attorney George Lambert was authorized to ask the village officials to submit proof that the property has been dedicated as a park."

Source:  $11.41 Tax Bill For Anne Hutchinson Park Gives Town Board Opportunity To Find Out Where It Is Located, The Pelham Sun, May 20, 1938, Vol. 29, No. 7, p. 1, cols. 1-2.


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