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.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Earliest Evidence Yet of 19th Century Football Played in the Town of Pelham


Last night the nation watched the national title football game between top-ranked, undefeated Clemson and no. 2 Alabama.  With Alabama's 45 to 40 victory and its crowning as the new National Champion, today seems the perfect time to explore a little more about early football in the Town of Pelham.  

As I have written before, for years I have pursued the Quixotic quest of documenting the earliest years of the sport of baseball in the Town of Pelham.  See, e.g., Mon., Dec. 22, 2014:  Rare 1889 Photograph of Baseball Players Playing on Pelham Field (and links therein to 36 additional articles on the topic).  The earliest documented reference to baseball being played in Pelham, so far, involves a game between the Uniteds of Westchester and the Nonpareils of City Island that was played in October, 1865.  See Fri., Mar. 28, 2014: Earliest Evidence Yet! Baseball Was Played in Pelham Only Months After the Civil War Ended.

It has been far more difficult to assemble evidence that football was played in the Town of Pelham during the 19th century.  To date, the earliest evidence I have been able to assemble involves football games played in Pelham during the mid-1890s.  See:

Wed., Dec. 02, 2015:  Earliest Football Games Played in Pelham.  

Thu., May 08, 2014:  Thanksgiving Day Football Game in 1895 Between Pelham Manor and Mount Vernon Teams.

Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog moves the dial back by nearly a decade and demonstrates that the sport of "foot-ball" was played in Pelham as early as 1884.

Although the sport we know today as American football has a long, complex history, suffice it to say that at least by shortly after the Civil War, students at various eastern colleges were combining elements from the sports of rugby and soccer to play a new sport they called "foot-ball" or "football."  The first intercollegiate football game was played between Princeton and Rutgers in 1869.  By 1873, various colleges subscribed to an agreed-upon set of rules.  The man known as the "Father of American Football," Walter Camp, played halfback at Yale until 1882.  Thereafter he coached football teams at Yale and Stanford and was inducted into the College Football Hall of fame in 1951, long after his death.

The Town of Pelham enjoyed the sport of foot-ball while the new sport was still in its infancy.  The January 25, 1884 issue of The Chronicle published in Mount Vernon, New York contains a brief report of the news of Pelham and City Island.  The report indicates that two Pelham teams played an "interesting contest at foot-ball" on Friday, January 18, 1884.  According to the report James Prout and Thomas Collins each formed a team and played the game with the final score:  Collins' Team, 22 vs. Prout's Team, 19.  

Tom Collins was a City Island oysterman, described in an article later the same year as "a red-faced good-natured Irishman."  See City Island's Oysters, The Chronicle Supplement [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 28, 1884, p. 1, col. 4.  In 1884, James B. Prout served as Commissioner of Excise of the Town of Pelham.  See ABSTRACT OF TOWN ACCOUNTS, Eastern State Journal [White Plains, NY], pr. 17, 1885, Supplement to Eastern State Journal, p. Supp. 2, col. 4.

The account of the January 18, 1884 game is, so far, the earliest account yet of football played in the Town of Pelham.



Harvard Football Team in 1884, the Same Year Tom Collins'
Foot-Ball Team Beat James B. Prout's Team in a Game Played
In Pelham.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

Below is the text of the account that forms the basis for today's article posted to the Historic Pelham Blog.  It is followed by a citation and source to its link.

"PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND.

An interesting contest at foot-ball, between two teams, chosen respectively by Mr. James Prout and Mr. Thos. Collins, took place on Friday last, and resulted in a victory for the Collins team, by a score of 22 to 19.

It is reported that a number of residents of Bartow complain bitterly of the careless manner in which the postmaster of that place discharges his duty; that letters have been opened by unknown parties, and mail matter has been presented to the owners, in a dilapidated condition.  If these charges can be substantiated, it is about time there was a change made in the postmastership."

Source:  PELHAM AND CITY ISLAND, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], Jan. 25, 1884, Vol. XV, No. 749, p. 3, col. 3.  


Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak."

Labels: , , , , , ,

Tuesday, December 02, 2014

Amusing Account of 1884 Hearing at City Island on Destruction of Oyster Beds


By 1884, the massive and rich oyster beds beneath the waters of Long Island Sound near City Island were suffering.  Scows from New York City were dumping tons of refuse, mud, and other noxious material into Long Island Sound, smothering the beds.

City Island oystermen clamored for relief.  Their livelihoods and oystering traditions were at risk.  

At about this time, New York State began an investigation to consider what legislation might be necessary to preserve the natural resources and protect the oystering traditions of the waters of the State.  State Fish Commissioner Eugene G. Blackford traveled the State and held a series of hearings to learn more about the status of the oystering industry and the views of oystermen regarding what legislation might best remedy the situation.

Blackford held one such hearing on City Island on November 24, 1884.  Oystermen from all over City Island attended the hearing including the Dean of the oystermen, Captain Joshua Leviness, who provided colorful testimony about the issues confronting the industry.

I have written about the testimony of Leviness on that occasion before.  See Mon., Mar. 22, 2010:  77-Year Old City Island Oysterman Joshua Leviness Reminisces in Testimony Provided in 1884.  

Recently I located another account of the testimony delivered by Joshua Leviness on the same occasion.  The account is noteworthy not only for its quaint (and condescending) descriptions of "sleepy old City Island" and its "sleepy little Court House," but also for its descriptions of the City Island oystermen and, more particularly, its efforts to convey the dialect used by Leviness when testifying.  A complete transcription of the account that appeared in the November 25, 1884 issue of the New-York Herald appears immediately below, followed by a citation to its source.  



Oystermen Dredging in Long Island Sound in 1883.
Source: Harpers Weekly, Aug. 18, 1883.

"ALL ABOUT OYSTERS.
-----
Commissioner Blackford Enlightened by the Inhabitants of City Island.
-----
HOW THE BEDS ARE RUINED.
-----
City Refuse Dumped on the Oysters -- The State Investigation.
-----

Fish Commissioner Eugene G. Blackford lit a new cigar yesterday morning and took a train at the Harlem river for Bartow-on-the-Sound.  Here he got into a big, fat, rumbling stage coach, drawn by a lazy horse and a driver who had an eye for twenty cent fares.  In time he reached the sleepy little Court House of sleepy old City Island, whose inhabitants are either pilots or oystermen.  On one corner was the tavern where a negro murderer's head is kept in pickle, and just beyond was the handsome little bay where a hundred craft rode at anchor over acres of fat, juicy oysters.

In the Court House were a tremendous green safe, a wooden railing, four benches, a table and a red-hot stove, around which sat a group of men with bronzed faces, furzy [sic] beards, big rubber boots reaching to their hips and great sou'wester hats.

Within five minutes all the hats were off and the ancient oystermen of City Island were deeply immersed in the 'cogibundity of cogitation' surrounding the State investigation as to the legislation required to increase and protect the oyster supply.  They were so impressed with the awful solemnity of the State of New York condescending to take an interest in their affairs that they stopped spitting on the stove and forgot to ask if it was definitely settled in 'York' as to whether Cleveland or Blaine had been elected.  Justice of the Peace Martin sat in lonely splendor close to Commissioner Blackford.

'AN OPINION AS IS AN OPINION.'

Captain Joshua Leviness, a gray haired oysterman with a mass of white whiskers and a wealth of blue shirt, from under which seemed to come his deep voice, said that he was born seventy-seven brief years ago and had been an oysterman at City Island for over sixty years.  

'This hyar practice of plantin' old shells on the nat'ral bed of oysters,' he observed, 'is hurin' the small oystermen.  The big uns get all the seed oysters and the little uns sit kinder loose around on the shore or go to the county poorhouses.  We don't pay any rent for our grounds, but the county 'thorities pertects us.  Do we watch fellers who want to steal our oysters?  Wal, yes; but, bless you, we don't 'low thieves here, nohow.  There's more oysters here now than there war fifty year ago, but the nat'ral beds are gitting spiled.  These hyar scows from York city come up here 'n dump right over our bed.  Am I sure?  Wal, b'gosh, when I find old clothes 'n mud 'n garbage smotherin' my oysters, and when I see these hyar scows dump thar, I've a right to be s'piscious, ain't I?  Great guns, why they're simply ruinin' of us!  Do star fish annoy us?  Wal, they mostly likes Connecticut oyster and, God bless 'em, they stays at New Haven.

'Do we want new laws?  Wal, we want a law as will pervent any man from dredgin' on the nat'ral beds from the middle of July till the middle of September.  We want another law which'll let us get our seed oysters on the Hudson River.  There's millions of oysters between Spuyten Duyvil Creek and Sing Sing, but we aint 'lowed to dredge for 'em.  Only the New Jersey folks can work the beds on the Hudson.  We also want a law keepin' out the Connecticut and New Jersey folks from our beds.  They won't let us at theirs, and it's only right, leastwise I think so, that we should have reg'lations same as other folks.  Last time our people went up to Tarrytown they put bullet holes in our sails.  I don't like the Connecticut idea of leasin' out the oyster grounds, for the rich 'll get richer and the poor folks 'll get left.'

ENOUGH FOR ONE MAN.

'How many acres of water can a man honestly work?' asked Commissioner Blackford.

'Wal, John Jacob Astor could work the hull of Long Island Sound.'

'Yes, but what limitation as to the number of acres to be given to any one man would you recommend?'

' 'pears to me that 200 acres ought to be all that any man can work.'

This was about the substance of all the evidence taken during the day.  Captain Bell said that he knew of natural beds and planted beds being constantly ruined by garbage and mud dumped from New York scows.

Thomas Collins was a perfect picture of Sir Walter Scott, with his sloping features, wispy hair and high forehead.  He wore a rumpled blue and white shirt, and stuck two hickory colored fists into his side pockets.  He found that dredging for parts of brick houses, old cans, hoopskirts and cinders was not so profitable as dredging for oysters.  He saw a New York scow dump 500 tons of mud on an oyster bed and he thought it was a volcano.

'I'm sartin' sure,' he said, 'in favor of keepin' out from our beds people what don't b'long in the State, an' I want all the nat'ral beds free.  Why, when we went over to Long Island to get seed the folks over there said, 'Go 'way, you thieves.''

Mr. Collins looked inquiringly around at the Justice of the Peace and seemed very nervous.

'Fact is, sir,' he said to the Commissioner, 'as thar is no ladies present I'll use my tongue, for I know all the profane letters in the alphabet.  Those Long Island folks said, 'Go way, you ______ __ thieves.'  Thar!'

And the oystermen all sat bolt upright and looked frightened, expecting each moment, no doubt, to see the Justice of the Peace order Mr. Collins to be hanged.

After hearing a lot of similar testimony, Commissioner Blackford ate a meal of roast beef, turnips, oysters and boiled onions, and after lighting a fresh cigar came back to this city.  He will continue his investigations in all the oystering towns."

Source:  ALL ABOUT OYSTERS -- Commissioner Blackford Enlightened by the Inhabitants of City Island, N.Y. Herald, Nov. 25, 1884 - Triple Sheet, p. 10, col. 3.  

*          *          *           *           *


Below are links to more stories about Pelham's rich oystering traditions.

Mon., Dec. 01, 2014:  Jury Finds City Island Oystermen Guilty of Stealing Oysters from Planted Bed in 1878.

















Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak." 

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, March 22, 2010

77-Year Old City Island Oysterman Joshua Leviness Reminisces in Testimony Provided in 1884


In late 1884, the New York State Commissioner of Fisheries, Eugene G. Blackford, conducted an investigation of the state of the oyster industry.  He held a hearing on Monday, November 24 of that year in Pelham to hear from City Island oystermen regarding the state of the industry.  Among those who testified was 77-year old oysterman Joshua Leviness.  An interesting article about the testimony appeared the following Friday in The Chronicle, a local newspaper published in Mount Vernon.  The text of the article is transcribed below.

"CITY ISLAND'S OYSTERS.

Eugene G. Blackford, State Commissioner of Fisheries, visited City Island last Monday, to conduct a hearing at the court-house there, as to the grievances, if any, of oystermen in regard to the state and county laws affecting their business.  He was accompanied by Prof. H. J. Rice, who has charge of the Fulton Market Laboratory.

Mr. Blackford explained that he wanted to know the condition of the oyster business; if the field had increased or decreased of late years, and the causes thereof.  He wanted to know, too, what were the enemies of oysters and what legislation might be necessary to insure protection or improvement for the trade.

Mr. Blackford asked Justice Martin to indicate the men whose opinions ought to be asked, and the latter called upon Capt. Joshua Leviness, the oldest oysterman on the island.  Mr. Leviness said the business of planting shells on natural beds was bad.  The beds from Captain's Island to New London were all bought up by rich men and monopolists, while the common oystermen had to sit ashore until they went to the county-house.  Our style is better, continued the Captain.  A man stakes off what he can get, and as long as he keeps staked up and looks out for his business, his ground is his own, and he can do what he likes with the oysters on it.  If he dies, it goes to his family.

'But suppose some one goes on staked ground, and takes oysters from it without asking the man who staked it?'

'We don't pretend to allow a great many thieves around here,' said the witness simply.

'Do you mean that you never have trouble of that kind?'

'Not often.  I am 77 years old., and was the first man to put a stake in the East River.  I think we have had two or three arrests in my day.  We sent the thieves to prison for two or three months, and that stopped it.'

The Captain recounted his happy experiences good humoredly until he spoke of the damage that the oyster beds had suffered from the city garbage and mud scows which had recklessly dumped their loads wherever they pleased for 10 or 15 years back.  The beds had flourished until that scourge came upon them.  Since then some of them had been smothered and others had been damaged.

Capt. Leviness thought that the beds in the North River ought to be opened for dredging.  Millions of oysters went to waste there every year because the Supervisors of Westchester County confined the digging in their North River territory to rakes and tongs, while the Rockland County authorities forbade intrusion in any form by residents of other counties.  There ought to be a law, he thought, to open the State beds to dredgers living within the State, and to keep Connecticut and New Jersey oystermen out of New York waters until the laws of those states, which keep their waters solely for their own citizens, be repealed.  Capt. Leviness also favored a law that would make from July 15 to Sept. 15 a close season, in which the beds should not be disturbed.  In response to an inquiry as to the advisability of limiting the possessions of an oysterman, Capt. Leviness thought 200 acres ought to be the limit; for no man could care properly for more, and that was enough to raise all the oysters any one could market.

This testimony was sustained by all the other oystermen whom Justice Martin presented to Mr. Blackford.  Thomas Collins, a red-faced good-natured Irishman, who informed Mr. Blackford that he was the original Tom Collins, for whom you fellows were looking a few years ago,' was amusingly earnest in his allusion to the 'parts of brick houses, cement, and hoopskirts that made harder pulling than oysters and ruined the natural beds.'

Justice Martin was given a chance after diner to express his opinion.  He agreed with those who had proceeded him, attributing the decrease of natural beds entirely to the illegal offal dumpings.  The Connecticut law, in his opinion, gave too large opportunities to 'farmers, shop girls, and monoplists,' who came in and crowded the poor oystermen out.

The above is in brief a statement of Commissioner Blackford's hearing.  The object is problematical.  The East River oystermen think it stands them in hand to be on the alert and watch closely their interests.

The City Island oystermen feel quite indignant at the Herald's report of the above hearing, and think that if the reporter had paid less attention to the taverns, which he sarcastically alludes to and more to the subject under consideration, he would have had a more readable report and the honest oystermen of the island would not have been treated to ridicule through its columns."

Source:  City Island's Oysters, The Chronicle Supplement [Mount Vernon, NY], Nov. 28, 1884, p. 1, col. 4.

For other recent postings in this series, see:

Fri., March 19, 2010:  The New York Legislature Stepped Into the Oyster War on Long Island Sound in 1895.

Thu., March 18, 2010:  1859 Town of Huntington Record Reflecting Dispute with City Island Oystermen.

Wed., March 17, 2010:  Report of September 13, 1884 Tour of Oyster Beds by Captain Joshua Leviness of City Island.

Tue., March 16, 2010:  More on 19th Century Oystering in Pelham - Descriptions of Oyster Beds Off Hart Island, City Island and in Pelham Bay Published in 1887.

Mon., March 15, 2010:  More on 19th Century City Island Oyster Industry - City Island Oystermen Complaint of Pollution.

Fri., March 12, 2010:  Early History of Oystering in the Waters Off City Island in the Town of Pelham.

Thu., March 11, 2010:  The "Great Oyster War" Between City Island and Tarrytown in 1877 and 1878.

Mon., July 30, 2007:  1885 Report Notes Decline of Oyster Industry Near City Island in the Town of Pelham.

Thu., July 26, 2007:  Pelham's City Island Oystermen Feud with Long Islanders in 1869.

Fri., July 27, 2007:  Possible Origins of the Oyster Feud Between City Islanders and Huntington, Long Island.

Fri., April 13, 2007:  Oystermen of City Island (When It Was Part of the Town of Pelham) Pioneered Oyster Cultivation.

Mon., September 18, 2006:  A Brief Description of Oystering in Eastchester Bay and at Pelham Published in 1881.

Fri., January 26, 2007:  A History of the Early Years of City Island When it Was Part of the Town of Pelham, Published in 1927.

Thu., December 3, 2009:  Pelham News on May 30, 1884 Including Allegations of Oyster Larceny and Meeting of the Pelhamville Improvement Association.


Labels: , , , , , , , ,