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, October 26, 2017

The Cow Rustler Ghosts of Pelham Road


Introduction

Halloween soon will overshadow Pelham.  In the ghoulish spirit of the time, for the next few days Historic Pelham will recount previously untold Pelham ghost stories (and provide new twists on old Pelham legends).

Perhaps no other town the size of our little Pelham (population 12,000) has more ghost stories, more haunted territory, or more ghoulish legends.  That is no surprise.  Pelham is an ancient hamlet, with European settlement as early as 1654 and Native American settlement extending back thousands of years before that.  

Nearly four dozen different ghost stories arising from the old Manor of Pelham have been documented so far, with many more, undoubtedly, yet to be uncovered.  Today Historic Pelham recounts the tale of "The Cow Rustler Ghosts of Pelham Road."

The Haunted Spy Oak

Its gnarled limbs once stretched silently above Pelham Road, reaching as though each limb sought to grab horses, riders, or others who passed.  All who passed and knew its lore hurried a little more quickly as they passed the ancient tree.  It was the Haunted Spy Oak of Pelham Road.

For nearly 250 years, the story has been told of the local wanderings of the ghost of a British spy hung during the Revolutionary War from a massive limb of the giant, ancient Haunted Spy Oak of Pelham Road.  See, e.g., Fri., Sep. 16, 2005:  The Legend of the Spy Oak on Pelham Road.

The Spy Oak on Pelham Road once stood not far from the Village of Westchester (today's Westchester Square in the Bronx, part of the original Manor of Pelham).  During the early years of the 20th century, the ancient tree was a massive, spreading tree.  It was more than twenty-two feet in circumference at its base.  It was more than one hundred feet high, about the height of a ten-story building.  It had a massive limb that extended directly over Pelham Road.  From that limb, according to legend, a British spy (some say two) reputedly was hung during the Revolutionary War.  The limb was about twenty feet above the roadway and nearly a foot in thickness where the limb joined the trunk of the old tree.  The limb had an ominous name.  It was known by all as "Gallows Limb."



Undated Photograph of the Ancient Spy Oak Adjacent
to Pelham Road.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Few today know that the British spy was not the first to be hung from the massive limb of the tree that came to be known as the Haunted Spy Oak.  Indeed, seven Englishmen who rustled a local cow were hung from the same limb before the British Spy was killed there.  For many, many years, the ghosts of these Englishmen were seen among the limbs of the ancient tree and beneath its giant boughs.  Some say that the ghosts of the seven rustlers as well as that of the British spy still wander Pelham Road, far and wide.

In 1912, Girard Post "Pop" Doty, a descendant of Mayflower passenger Edward Doty, was 79 years old and living with his nephew, Warren Doty, in a home on Pelham Road about a half mile from the Haunted Spy Oak.  Pop Doty's family had owned and populated the area for more than a century.  Indeed, at the time of the American Revolution, Pop Doty's ancestors owned much of the land between the settlement of Westchester and Throggs Neck.  As Pop Doty often said, he had played beneath the branches of what he called the "Haunted Oak" as a child, just like his mother and her mother had.

Pop Doty's maternal grandmother, whom he called "Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant," was 105 years old when she died.  According to Pop Doty, she knew the story of the "Haunted Oak" better than anyone since she lived much of her life in a home just "across the way" from the tree.  Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant often told a chilling story about the Haunted Oak that went something like this.

 The Cow Rustler Ghosts of Pelham Road

When she was a young girl, Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant's father and her brothers fought with General George Washington during the American Revolution.  At about the time of the Battle at Westchester Creek and the Battle of Pelham that followed almost a week later on October 18, 1776, the area was overrun with British.  Some were said to be deserters from the British army.  Others were said to be British sympathizers who wandered the region, up to no good.  Indeed, it was the very beginning of the so-called "Neutral Ground" period during which so-called "Cowboys and Skinners" marauded throughout the region during the years of the War, decimating the Manor of Pelham and other parts of the region.  

A group of seven hungry "Englishmen" who remained in the area after the Battle of Westchester Creek decided to rustle the Stuyvesants' family cow.  In the absence of the Stuyvesant men who were off fighting with General Washington, the seven Englishmen stole the cow, brazenly, from the matriarch of the family -- the mother of Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant.  They butchered the cow and feasted on its remains.  Among those who participated in the theft was a young fellow -- a young Englishman Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant would never forget.

As fate would have it, the very evening of the theft, the matriarch's husband and two of his sons -- the father and brothers of Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant -- stopped by the home to check on their family.  When they learned the family had been accosted and a cow had been stolen, the three men organized neighbors and went after the rustlers.  They captured all seven in short order.

Though she was a young girl at the time, in her later years Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant recalled that the seven captured Englishmen were dragged to the foot of the giant oak near her home and told they would be hanged.  The youngest fellow of the lot broke down and asked for paper and pencil to write a final letter -- to whom we'll never know.  He sat forlornly under the giant oak, gathering his thoughts, and writing his last words, knowing that soon he would meet his maker.  

The Americans then strung up all seven Englishmen and hung them from the giant limb, forever known thereafter as Gallows Limb, until they were dead.  Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant would never forget the young English fellow seated beneath the tree writing what most assuredly was a despondent letter in the last few minutes of his brief life.

Not much later, Americans hung a British spy -- some say two -- from the same Gallows Limb.  Thereafter, Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant and others in the neighborhood began seeing strange things at the giant oak, particularly during exceptionally dark nights with little or no moonlight.  They plainly saw spirits of seven ghosts on the limbs of the tree at night.  Indeed, it certainly was not just Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant who saw the seven ghosts.  There were plenty of old folks who admitted they had seen the same sight.

One moonless night as she passed the great oak, Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant had the fright of her life.  There, seated beneath its branches was the luminous ghostly spirit of the young English fellow, writing his despondent letter all over again.  The luminous spirit looked exactly as she remembered so many years before, writing his letter just before he was hung.

The Haunted Spy Oak long since has died and been removed.  To this day, however, the spirits of seven Englishmen and a British Spy wander the region, back and forth along Pelham Road, forever tied to the place where each of their lives ended.  One of those spirits, however, can still be seen, flitting from tree to tree on particularly dark nights.  It is the luminous spirit of a young fellow, carrying a paper and pencil, searching endlessly for the missing Haunted Spy Oak beneath which he hopes to write his last letter.


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"'POP' DOTY  THE SPY OAK.  ARROW INDICATES WHERE
GALLOWS LIMB WAS CUT OFF."  Source:  Cut Off "Gallows' Limb"
The Evening Telegram [NY, NY], Sep. 16, 1912, p. 4, cols. 3-5.  NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.

"Cut Off 'Gallows' Limb' of Westchester's Noted Spy Oak
-----
'Pop' Doty Says Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant Predicted Loss Seventy Years Ago.
-----
HANGED 7 ENGLISHMEN FROM BOUGH FOR KILLING COW
-----
Children Feared the Weather Beaten Trunk, Which Was Said To Be Inhabited by Ghosts.
-----

Of course it was not news to 'Pop' Doty that the gallows limb of Westchester's Spy Oak would have to be cut off.  He told the men who did the work that he had been expecting it for some time, as Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant had seen a red squirrel gnawing the limb near the trunk of the old tree and she knew that the bough should be trimmed off near the wound.  This was seventy years ago, but even if there had been some delay her idea about saving the old landmark was right.  The limb has been taken off just where she said it should and 'Pop' is happy, because he always wanted the limb cut off anyway.

'Sort of like losing an old friend,' said 'Pop' as he watched the workmen sawing off the gallows limb.  'That tree seems about the only old timer in Westchester besides myself.  My mother played under the tree, and her mother before her.  The folks here in Westchester call it the Spy Oak, but when I was a youngster we just used to call it the haunted tree, and Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant used to tell us children of the ghosts that came out on its limbs at night and whose ghosts they were.  I never saw the ghosts myself, but there were plenty of old folks who asserted they had, although maybe they were just trying to make us children keep indoor after dark.
-----
Hanged Seven Englishmen.

'Grandmother Stuyvesant was my mother's mother.  She died a good many years ago and was 105 years old when she left us.  She knew the history of this old oak tree just as well as any one, for her home was just across the way from it, and it was through the killing of her mother's cow that the first men were hung on the limb the men have just cut off.

'Grandmother's father and her brothers were fighting with General Washington when the cow was killed.  Only a few days before the General himself had crossed over from Long Island and passed the house.  That was just before the battle near White Plains.  There were a lot of deserters and others left from the British army who remained in our village after the battle, and one day when they got hungry they decided to kill my great grandmother's cow.  They killed it all right, but that night my great grandfather and two of his sons came home.  Grandmother saw them go out and get the neighbors together and they caught seven of the Englishmen and strung them all up from the limb that these men are cutting off.
-----
Ghosts of Cow Killers.

'After that they hung two British spies from the same limb.  It was always supposed that the ghosts the old folks talked of, who were said to wander around the tree, were the spirits of the seven cow killers the farmers lynched.  Grandmother Stuyvesant said she saw the ghost of the youngest of the lot writing a letter under the tree one night just the same as she had seen him do before they hung him.'

'Pop' Doty is seventy-nine years old.  He is a bachelor and does not look within thirty years of his age.  He now lives with his nephew, Warren  Doty, in Pelham road, about half a mile from the famous old oak tree.  The tree stands to the west of Pelham road, just below Appleton avenue, Westchester.  'Pop's' real name is Girard Post Doty, and he is a descendant of Edward Doty, who came to this country on board the Mayflower.  Prior to the Revolution his family owned nearly all the land between Westchester Village and Throgg's Neck.  He is a veteran of the civil war, having served in the Thirty-ninth New York Volunteers.

'Grandmother Stuyvesant always said that the gallows' limb gave her the creeps and wished they would cut it down.  It's too bad she isn't alive to-day to see them doing it,' said 'Pop.'

The Spy Oak is a great, spreading tree.  It is more than twenty-two feet in circumference at the base and about one hundred feet in height.  The gallows' limb that has had to be cut off was itself more than a foot in thickness where it joined the trunk of the old tree."

Source:  Cut Off "Gallows' Limb" of Westchester's Noted Spy Oak -- "Pop" Doty Says Grandmother Baxter Stuyvesant Predicted Loss Seventy Years Ago -- HANGED 7 ENGLISHMEN FROM BOUGH FOR KILLING COW -- Children Feared the Weather Beaten Trunk, Which Was Said To Be Inhabited by Ghosts, The Evening Telegram [NY, NY], Sep. 16, 1912, p. 4, cols. 3-5.  

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I have collected ghost stories and legends relating to the Town of Pelham for more than fifteen years.  To read more examples that now total in the several dozens, see

Bell, Blake A., Pelham's Ghosts, Goblins and Legends, The Pelham Weekly, Oct. 25, 2002, p. 1, col. 1. 

Bell, Blake A., More Ghosts, Goblins of Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 43, Oct. 29, 2004, p. 12, col. 1. 

Bell, Blake A., Archive of HistoricPelham.com Web Site:  Pelham's Ghosts, Goblins and Legends (Oct. 2002). 

Bell, Blake A., Bibliography of Pelham's Ghost Stories and Legends (Oct. 2002).

Mon., Oct. 31, 2016:  Pelham Was Overrun by Ghosts for a Few Months in the Winter of 1887-1888.

Fri., Oct. 28, 2016:  The Old Stone House Has At Least One More Ghost -- The Ghost of Mrs. Parrish is Not Alone.

Thu., Oct. 27, 2016:  Did Google Maps Camera Capture the Ghost of the Elegant Lady of the Old Stone House at 463 First Avenue?

Wed., Oct. 26, 2016:  The Ghost of the Murdered Traveler Who Wanders the Bartow-Pell Grounds.

Tue., Oct. 25, 2016:  The Suicidal Specter of Manger Circle.

Mon., Oct. 24, 2016:  The Fiery-Eyed Phantom of Pelham Heights.

Mon., Sep. 19, 2016:  The Dark Spirit of the Devil and His Stepping Stones: A Pelham Legend.

Fri., Oct. 30, 2015:  The Shrieking Ghosts of Execution Rocks: Yet Another Pelham Ghost Story.

Thu., Oct. 29, 2015:  The Apparition of Wolfs Lane:  Another Pelham Ghost Story.

Wed., Oct. 28, 2015:  The Shadowy Specter of James Street:  A Pelham Manor Ghost Story.

Tue., Oct. 27, 2015:  The Ghostly Gardener of Bolton Priory:  A Pelham Apparition.

Mon., Oct. 26, 2015:  The Ghostly Matron of the Manor Club:  Even a Ghost Whisperer's Nightmare!

Fri., Oct. 31, 2014:  Ghosts in Pelham! Yet Another of Many Accounts of the Haunted Cedar Knoll.

Mon., Sep. 08, 2014:  In 1888, The "Ghost of City Island" Upset the Town of Pelham.

Fri., Jan. 17, 2014: The Phantom Bell Ringer of Christ Church in Pelham Manor.

Fri., Jan. 30, 2009:  Article Published in 1901 Detailed Ghost Stories and Legends of Pelham.

Mon., Feb. 19, 2007:  Another Manor of Pelham Ghost Story: The Whispering Bell.

Fri., Aug. 18, 2006:  The Ghost Gunship of Pelham: A Revolutionary War Ghost Story.

Wed., May 03, 2006:  Another Pelham, New York Ghost Story.

Thu., Oct. 13, 2005:  Two More Pelham Ghost Stories.  

Fri., Sep. 16, 2005:  The Legend of the Spy Oak on Pelham Road.

Wed., Oct. 14, 2009:  1879 News Account Provides Additional Basis for Some Facts Underlying Ghost Story of Old Stone House in Pelhamville.


Archive of the Historic Pelham Web Site.
Home Page of the Historic Pelham Blog.
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Monday, May 01, 2017

Tragic Accident Marred Pell Treaty Oak Ceremony at Bartow-Pell in 1915


On Saturday, May 1, 1915, New York Governor Charles Seymour Whitman was on hand for a special ceremony at the Bartow Mansion on Shore Road.  There was a ceremony that day to celebrate the transfer, by lease, of the mansion and its lovely grounds to the International Garden Club and to plant an oak tree to replace the Pell Treaty Oak that had died in 1906 after lightning struck the tree blowing off its top, followed by a fire set by youngsters that damaged the trunk, and a windstorm that finally toppled what was left of the legendary tree.



Photograph of the Pell Treaty Oak from The Office of The Historian of
the Town of Pelham and Painting of the Pell Treaty Oak by John M. Shinn,
Both Showing the Tree As It Looked Shortly Before its Destruction
in 1906.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

A Pelham legend, since determined to be apocryphal, said that local Native Americans signed a deed granting Thomas Pell the lands that became the Manor of Pelham under the branches of this mighty oak on June 27, 1654.  By the earliest years of the 20th century, little remained of the mighty oak as it neared its end and, finally, its destruction in 1906.

Thus, on May 1, 1915, Governor Whitman arrived at the mansion to plant a replacement oak.  The crowd that day was large -- much larger than anticipated.  Indeed, the planners of the event had expected up to 1,000 visitors.  Instead, more than 5,000 visitors showed up, along with more than eight hundred automobiles.  

As the Governor arrived, members of the New York State National Guard were on the scene to fire a nineteen-gun artillery salute to the Governor.  When the first round was fired, a troop horse harnessed to a caisson was spooked and reared straight up with his front hoofs flying.  As the horse came down, his hoofs struck a young private in Battery D named Charles Vail on the head.  Once Vail collapsed to the ground, the frightened horse trampled him, crushing his skull.  

Reports differed over Vail's injuries.  He was rushed to Fordham Hospital.  At least two newspapers reported that his injuries likely were fatal.  Another speculated he would recover.  Reports also differed over whether Governor Whitman was aware of the accident.  In any event, the ceremony continued after Vail was removed to the hospital.

With spectators and International Garden Club officers and members gathered around him, Governor Whitman used a silver trowel with blue, orange and white ribbons signifying the colors of New York City to toss dirt ceremonially on the newly-planted oak tree.  The tree was planted only a few feet from where the original Pell Treaty Oak had stood.

As noted in the book entitled "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak" published in 2004, the location of the oak planted by Governor Whitman is now lost to us.  Eventually the iron fence used to protect the original Pell Treaty Oak was placed around the tree planted by Governor Whitman that day.  During World War II, however, the historic and protective fence was taken down to prevent its theft by those hoping to sell scrap iron to salvagers.  After the war, the fence was put back up around the wrong tree.  The fence and the tree it protects may still be found on the grounds of today's Bartow-Pell Mansion.



Bartow-Pell Mansion in an Undated Post Card View.
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

Following the tree planting that day, a tea was held in the Bartow Mansion.  During the evening, the President of the International Garden Club, Mrs. Charles Frederick Hoffman, and her husband hosted a dinner for the Governor at their home located at 620 Fifth Avenue in New York City.  

No account yet has been located that reveals the fate of poor Private Charles Vail who was so terribly injured in the ceremonies held at the Bartow Mansion that day more than a century. ago.



New York Governor Charles Seymour Whitman in 1915 as He
Looked at the Time of the Ceremonies at Bartow Mansion on
May 1, 1915.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

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I have written before of the tragedy that occurred at the Bartow Mansion on May 1, 1915.  See Tue., Jun. 14, 2005:  Ceremony in 1915 to Open Bartow-Pell Mansion as Headquarters of International Garden Club Marred by Tragedy.  Below is the text of a number of articles that addressed the events of that day.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"GOVERNOR PLANTS A NEW TREATY OAK
-----
Bartow Mansion in Pelham Bay Park Turned Over to the International Garden Club
-----
MANY NOTABLES TAKE PART
-----
Private Charles Vail of Battery D Is Crushed by Horse Frightened by a Salute.
-----


When the first gun of a nineteen-gun salute for Gov. Whitman was fired at the International Garden Club at the Bartow Mansion, Pelham Bay Park, yesterday afternoon, a troop horse reared and fell back, crushing Charles Vail, a private in Battery Day. The guardsman, with a fractured skull and probably mortal injuries, was rushed to the Fordham Hospital. Vail was standing at the head of a horse attached to a caisson wagon. As the first fun boomed out, the animal reared straight up, and, descending, struck him on the head with its hoofs and trampled on his body as he lay helpless on the ground.


Gov. Whitman came down from Albany to be present at the opening and to take part in the replacing of the Treaty Oak in the grounds of the clubhouse, and the officers of the International Garden Club sent out many invitations to view the ceremony, meet the Governor, and have tea in the historic Bartow mansion. The city turned over the house to the club with seventeen acres of wooded ground surrounding it, without rental. In return the club has put the house, which was sadly in need of it, in good repair, furnished it, and laid out the grounds, which are to be transformed by gardens. Mrs. Charles Frederick Hoffman is President of the club, Dr. George Norton Miller, Vice President; Mrs. H. de Berkeley Parsons, Secretary, and William A. Jay is the Treasurer.

Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, Honorary President of the club, made the speech of the day, and greeted the Governor, who arrived at 4 o'clock, accompanied by two aids [sic] ablaze with gold. After the ceremonies attending the planting of the oak, the Governor visited the clubhouse and had tea. He left a little before 5 o'clock.  

In the evening the Governor attended a dinner, given for him and Mrs. Whitman by Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hoffman, at their residence, 620 Fifth Avenue. The rest of the day, however, he spent on the thirty-day bills, and received no callers except Bainbridge Colby, an old college friend. On May 26 the Governor will start for California, and his Military Secretary, Major J. Stanley Moore, is now working out his iternerary [sic].  

A walk marked by many little red flags showed the way from the clubhouse to the roped-in inclosure, in which the speeches and the planting took place, and ropes marked with red flags indicated the parking space for the many motors. Tea and other refreshments were were served in the Colonial dining room and on the veranda and terrace outside.

The oak planted yesterday took the place of the famous treaty oak recently destroyed by lightning [sic], which was planted in 1643 [sic] when the Pell family obtained from the Indians the property on which Bartow Manor stands for $17 [sic].

Dr. Butler outlined the history of the tree, and said the city had now turned the ground over to the International Garden Club to be made into a breathing spot for the people. The club, whose headquarters will be in the Manor house, has already spent $25,000 in improvements.

The Governor used a silver trowel in planting the tree, and said that the new treaty between the city and the public was more important than the orginal one. The exercises also marked the turning over of the property to the club's use.

Bartow Mansion is a substantial and roomy stone house, and the front lawn is one of several acres. In the rear the ground slopes away to the Sound, and a series of descending terraces has been arranged. In the center of the middle terrace is a large fountain.  

On either side are tall old trees, and a wide veranda taken in the entire back of the house. On this and the upper terrace many pale-green tables, with lattice chairs to match, are placed. At the right of the house is a large conservatory, done entirely in white and pale, dull green. As yet few flowers are seen, but some rare orchids were on view yesterday, and outside the trracs [sic] showed some old-time gardens in pansies and primorses [sic].  

The walls throughout are done in palest dull blue and the woodwork in dull finished white. Each room is in a different color. One upstairs room is done in the most vivid colors in old-time chintz, with flowers of many kinds. Another is done in black and white stripes, with an occasional flower, and pink roses abound in another. A reception room on the first floor is done in brownish orange, with old-time black wooden plaques, and another room is in deep blue.  

Mrs. Hoffman, the President; Mrs. Parsons, the Secretary, and others received, and the official receiving committee included the President of the Board of Aldermen.

Commissioners of Parks for the Bronx and Manhattan and Richmond, the President of the Botanical Garden, the President of the New York Horticultural Society, the President of the Florists's [sic] Club of New York. On the committee also were Mrs. C. B. Alexander, Mrs. A. B. Boardman, Mrs. Amory S. Carhart, Mrs. Alfred Ely, Miss Sarah Cooper Hewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver J. Jennings, Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Pendleton, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Parsons, Mrs. Moses Taylor Pyne, Mrs. James Speyer, Mrs. Charles H. Senff, Miss Amy Townsend, Mrs. H. McK Twombly, Mrs. John Hobart Warren, Mrs. J. J. Wysong, Mrs. Newbold LeRoy Edgar, Mrs. J. Archibald Murray, Mr. and Mrs. John Callender Livingston and William Adams Delano.  

Among others who were present to receive or as guests were Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, Bishop David H. Greer, Mr. and Mrs. Seth Low, Mrs. Herbert C. PYell [sic], Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Taft, Mrs. Whitney Warren, Mr. and Mrs. James B. Clews, Mr. and Mrs. F. Ashton de Peyster, Mrs. Lewis Cruger Hassell, Mrs. George B. de Forest, Mrs. Burke Roche, Mrs. Lauterbach, Mrs. Nicholas Murray Butler, the Misses Catherine and Margaret Leverich, Mrs. Gouverneur Kortwright, Mrs. E. Reeve Merritt, Lady Herbert, Mrs. E. H. Harriman, Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Pell, Mrs. Oakleigh Thorne, George I. Rives, John D. Crimmins, Frederick C. Bourne, Miss Eleanor Hewitt, Mrs. James O. Green, A. M. Bagby, and Mrs. Henry S. Redmond."

Source:  Governor Plants A New Treaty OakN.Y. Times, May 2, 1915, p. 14, col. 1 (Note:  Paid subscription required to access via this link; free version available here).

"Governor Whitman Plants Treaty Oak for Garden Club
-----
Hundreds of Persons of Prominence Attend Ceremonies When Historic Tree, Destroyed by Lightning, Is Replaced in Pelham Manor Lawn.
-----

The celebration which included the planting of a new 'Treaty Oak' by Governor Whitman and reception in the Bartow Mansion yesterday afternoon marked the turning over to the International Garden Club b y the city of the twenty-five acres in Pelham Bay Park which surround the historic manor house.  Hundreds of persons prominent in society who are interested in the Garden Club attended the ceremonies.

For more than a year the society has been hard at work.  Its purpose in taking the grounds around the Bartow Mansion is to establish experimental gardens, such as those of the Royal Horticultural Society near London.  The other objects of the society are to hold monthly exhibits, to form a library, to give monthly lectures, to establish a department to give certificates to gardeners and to assist other horticultural societies and clubs.  

The appearance of the ground yesterday, the throng which attended the opening and the presence of the Governor told of the interest aroused by the undertaking.  The officers of the society were congratulated repeatedly.  They are Mrs. Charles F. Hoffman, president; Dr. George Norton Miller, vice president, and Judge William A. Day, treasurer.  Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler is honorary president.  

Eight Hundred Automobiles.

The arrangements for the opening exercises were in the hands of a committee which included persons of prominence.  Park Commissioner Thomas Whittle, of the Bronx, had prepared to accommodate nearly one thousand guests, and it was estimated that fully eight hundred automobiles were parked on the grounds.  Mr. Whittle has taken an active interest in the society, and recently $25,000 was expended to restore the Bartow Mansion.

Soon after the arrival of the Governor's party, which included Mrs. Whitman and Major J. Stanley Moore, the Pell 'Treaty Oak' was planted.  The new oak is to replace [the] old 'Treaty Oak,' which was destroyed by lightning in 1906.  According to legend, it was under the old tree that Thomas Ball [sic], in 1654, signed a treaty with the Siwanoy Indians for the purchase of the land which later was known as Pelham Manor.

When Governor Whitman arrived and the first gun of salute was being fired by Battery D, of the Second Field Artillery, one of the battery horses became frightened.  The animal reared, and in coming down struck Private Charles Vail.  His head was crushed by the horse's hoofs.  He was taken to Fordham Hospital, probably fatally injured.  Most of the guests were unaware of the accident, and Governor Whitman did not hear of it.

The new 'Treaty Oak' was planted only a few feet from where the former tree stood on the lawn in front of the mansion.  Governor Whitman, Mrs. Hoffman and George L. Rives led the procession of guests to where the young oak stood.  Dr. Butler introduced the Governor.

Governor Whitman threw dirt on the tree with a trowel, tied with the orange, blue and white of New York city."

Source:  Governor Whitman Plants Treaty Oak for Garden Club -- Hundreds of Persons of Prominence Attend Ceremonies When Historic Tree, Destroyed by Lightning, Is Replaced in Pelham Manor Lawn, N.Y. Herald, May 2, 1915, First Section, Part I, p. 5, cols. 2-3.  
-----

"WHITMAN SETS TREE IN HISTORIC SOIL
-----
Artilleryman Is Hurt by Horse Frightened at Firing of Salute.
-----
BARTON [SIC] TRACT GIFT TO THE PUBLIC
-----
International Garden Club to Make Breathing Spot Near Famous Treaty Oak.

While Governor Whitman was receiving a salute of nineteen guns on his arrival to open the International Garden Club, at Barton [sic] Manor, The Bronx, yesterday afternoon, a troop horse attached to a caisson wagon, frightened at the booming of the guns, reared and trampled Charles Vail, a private in Battery D, 2d Field Artillery, N. G. N. Y.  Vail had his skull fractured, and received other injuries.  He was taken to the Fordham Hospital, where it is said he will recover.

Governor Whitman, after witnessing the accident and inquiring about Vail's condition, proceeded with the exercises of turning over to the International Garden Club the seventeen acres surrounding the historic Barton [sic] Manor House, Pelham Bay Park.  Before 5,000 persons the Governor planted a small oak tree to replace the famous Treaty Oak, recently destroyed by lightning.

The Treaty Oak was planted in 1634 [sic], when the Pell family obtained the property from the Indians for $17.

Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, honorary president of the club, who presided at the exercises, said that the city had turned the ground over to the International Garden Club that it might be made a breathing spot for the people.  Improvements at a cost of $25,000 have been made recently, and it was announced that the club will have its headquarters in the mansion.  

Governor Whitman, before turning the soil with his silver spade, said that treaties had been signed under the old oak, but there were none of them as important as the treaty of yesterday between the city and the people, giving for public use such a large piece of property.

The exercises at Barton [sic] Manor saw the only public appearance of the Governor during his stay in New York.  In the morning he devoted himself to the consideration of several bills which he must pass upon within the thirty-day period.  In the early afternoon he had a long conference with several members of the Legislature.

Last night Governor and Mrs. Whitman were guests at a private dinner at the home of Charles F. Hoffman, 620 Fifth Avenue.

It was announced yesterday that the Governor has decided to set out on his trip to California on May 25.  The itinerary and make-up of the official party has not yet been determined, that matter being left largely in the hands of Major J. Stanley Moore, military secretary.

The Governor and his party will return to Albany to-day."

Source:  WHITMAN SETS TREE IN HISTORIC SOIL -- Artilleryman Is Hurt by Horse Frightened at Firing of Salute -- BARTON [SIC] TRACT GIFT TO THE PUBLIC -- International Garden Club to Make Breathing Spot Near Famous Treaty Oak, New-York Tribune, May 2, 1915, Vol. LXXV, No. 25,004, p. 6, cols. 6-7.  

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Friday, April 28, 2017

The Celebration of Arbor Day in the Town of Pelham in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries


Happy Arbor Day Pelham!  In recent years, the State of New York has recognized the last Friday in April as Arbor Day.  The first Arbor Day celebration in the United States is generally believed to have been celebrated on April 10, 1872 in Nebraska City, Nebraska.  Some sources claim that on that day over one million trees were planted in Nebraska.  Because the Arbor Day holiday promotes a better future through tree planting and tree care, its celebration long has centered around young people including students, Boy Scouts, and Girls Scouts.  

According to one source (quoted in full below):

"The first observance of Arbor Day in this State [New York] under the law of 1888, took place May 3, 1889.  More than half of the school districts of the State . . . [celebrated] the day by planting trees about school grounds.  In nearly every case the planting was accompanied by interesting literary exercises."

Pelham has a long tradition of celebrating Arbor Day.  During the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, Arbor Day celebrations in Pelham were common and were widely reported in local newspapers.  Pelham schoolchildren planted trees.  Local Pelham Boy Scouts followed suit. Such plantings typically were accompanied by patriotic songs, presentation of the Colors, speeches, poem-readings, essay contests and essay-readings, and more.

Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog collects and transcribes a number of news stories about the celebration of Arbor Day in the little Town of Pelham.  Happy Arbor Day!  





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Below is the text of a number of news articles about Arbor Day celebrations in Pelham.  Each is followed by a citation and link to its source.

"OUR NEARBY NEIGHBORS. 
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Pelhamville. . . .

Arbor day was observed with appropriate exercises on Friday last.  Following is the programme: 

Saluting the Flag..........................School 
Robin Red Breast........................Elmer Anderson 
Morning Call...............................Chorus 
Ginger Tree................................Harry Stone 
What to Plant.............................Fritz Ernst 
Song of Liberty..........................Chorus 
Historical Trees..........................By several 
Briar Rose.................................Evelyn Waugh 
Arbor Day March......................Chorus 
Surprise.....................................Susie Owens 
Sir Robin...................................Leonard Glover 
Violets.......................................Mary Whalen 
Brave Old Oak..........................Chorus 
Little Nut People........................Agnes Ernst 
Secret........................................Alice Miller 
Supposing..................................Bertie Glover 
Naughty Pussy...........................Gracie I. Wright 
America....................................Chorus 
Tree planting.............................John Campbell 
The Brave Rabbit......................John Marvel 
Star Spangled Banner................Chorus . . ."

Source:  Our Nearby Neighbors - Pelhamville, The Chronicle [Mount Vernon, NY], May 10, 1894, p. 4, col. 1.

"Arbor Day April 17th In Pelhams 
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Friday, April 17 has been designated as Arbor Day in the Pelhams, in a proclamation issued this week by Dr. Frank P. Graves, Commissioner of Education.

Public School children of the Pelhams, following the custom of previous years will plant trees on that day."  

Source:  Arbor Day April 17th In Pelhams, The Pelham Sun, Mar. 20, 1925, Vol. 16, No. 3, p. 1, col. 6.  

"Twenty Trees Planted.

As an Arbor Day observance, Pelham Scouts planted twenty trees about the Scout Cabin site on the old Polo Grounds Saturday April 18th.  Troops 1 and 4 tied in the contest and Scout T. Kasmer, Troop 3 received honorable mention for bringing in the specimen showing the best preparation and care for transplanting.  The planting was in charge of Vice-President Remington Schuyler and Deputy Commissioner Stacy Wood."  

Source:  Twenty Trees Planted, The Pelham Sun, May 1, 1925, Vol. 16, No. 9, p. 3, col. 1.  

"Pelham Girls Receive A. B. Degrees At Wells
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Miss Odelein Pearce President of Senior Class Delivers Arbor Day Address
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Three Pelham girls received their A. B. degrees on Tuesday from Wells College, Aurora, N. Y. They were Miss Odelein Pearce, of Roosevelt avenue, Miss Kathrine King, of the Esplanade and Miss Eloise White, of Nyac avenue.

Miss Pearce was president of the Senior Class and delivered the Arbor Day address on Monday before the entire college and the guests assembled for the Commencement Exercises.  Miss Pearce played the part of Orsino, Duke of Hyria, in the performance of 'Twelfth Night,' given as part of the Commencement activities.  Miss King and Miss White also took part in the performance for which Miss White was chairman of the costume committee.

Miss Pearce was graduated from Pelham Memorial High School in 1924 and Miss White in 1925.  Miss King was graduated from the Lenox School in New York."

Source:  Pelham Girls Receive A. B. Degrees At Wells -- Miss Odelein Pearce President of Senior Class Delivers Arbor Day Address, The Pelham Sun, Jun. 15, 1928, p. 7, col. 4.  

"TREES PLANTED ON ARBOR DAY AT HUTCHINSON
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Prize Money Won in Essay Contest Used to Purchase Two Trees for School Campus.
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In observance of Arbor Day, Friday, May 10, the children of the Hutchinson School planted two English Hawthorn trees on the school campus to replace two which were destroyed in the ice storm of March 4.  The trees were purchased with prize money received by the school as its award in the recent Gerard Swope Essay Contests.  The planting of the trees was timely in conjunction with the project selected by the school for the essay contest,, 'Nature in Our Own Back Yards.'

The tree-planting program was conducted by Mrs. Raymond S. Deck, director of the Naturalists' Club of the school; Mrs. Mary F. Canty, teacher of the 6A Grade and Miss Jane Grinker, teacher of music.

The American Flag and the School Flag were brought on the field by the Color Guard of Scouts of the 6A Class.  The program opened with the Salute to the Flag and the singing of 'America.'

Eleanor Gillooly told 'How We Won This Money.'  Stanley Jones told 'What to do With It.'  Betty Kelly recited 'The Story of the Hawthorn Tree.'  George Jones recited an 'Introduction to Tree Poems.'  Constance Coughlin recited, 'The Tree Stands Very Straight and Still.'  John Johnson recited, 'The Friendly Tree.'  Francis Vick recited 'The Beggar Trees.'  The program closed with the singing of 'Trees' by Joyce Kilmer."

 Source:  TREES PLANTED ON ARBOR DAY AT HUTCHINSON -- Prize Money Won in Essay Contest Used to Purchase Two Trees for School Campus, The Pelham Sun, May 17, 1940, p. 5, cols. 7-8.

"ARBOR DAY.
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In a letter sent out by A. S. Draper, superintendent of public instruction, dated April 1, 1890, he says:  The first observance of Arbor Day in this State under the law of 1888, took place May 3, 1889.  More than half of the school districts of the State . . . [celebrated] the day by planting trees about school grounds.  In nearly every case the planting was accompanied by interesting literary exercises.  

This result was very satisfactory.  It is hoped that all districts which observed the day in 1888, may observe the day in 1889, may observe the day with still greater enthusiasm this year, and that school districts which did not observe it may be induced to inaugurate the custom on May 2, next.

While the work performed on Arbor Day cannot counteract in a sensible degree the constant inroads upon our forests, made necessary by the unceasing demands of our rapidly increasing population, the children of the commonwealth may be taught to love nature and a reverence for trees.  Wanton destruction of our forests may be stayed, and something can certainly be done through this agency to make attractive the school grounds of the State, already too long neglected.

It is hardly necessary to repeat here the general observations on this subject published in the circular of 1889.  The purpose of the law in establishing Arbor Day is commendable in every way, and its general observance throughout the State is earnestly recommended.  With the hope that pleasure and satisfaction may come to all who observe the day, and that practical results may follow, the accompanying suggestions are offered.

In some sections of our state it may be impracticable to delay the planting of trees till May 2, the day fixed by law for Arbor Day.  In such cases it is recommended that trees be planted when this work can most successfully be done, and that all districts unite in observing the day by literary exercises on the day fixed by law."

Source:  ARBOR DAY, The Eastern State Journal [White Plains, NY], Apr. 12, 1890, Vol. XLVI, No. 2, p. 2, col. 2.  

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