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Order a Copy of "The Haunted History of Pelham, New York"
Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak."
I have written about the histories of the various bridges at that location numerous times. A number of such articles, with links, are listed at the end of today's Historic Pelham article.
An odd incident in the early history of the current Pelham Bridge occurred only a few weeks after the bridge opened in mid-October, 1908. The dramatic incident involved a 17-year-old young person named Henry Goodsell.
Though accounts differ, Henry Goodsell lived on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Late in the day on Friday, November 6, 1908, he was in his large touring car on Shore Road after dropping friends off in the region. He was on his way back to the Upper West Side as he approached Shore Road.
Ahead, in the darkness, the draw of Pelham Bridge was open to let a vessel pass on the waters below. The bridge tender, a man named Michael Selig (or Seelig, depending on the account) stood on the roadway tending a rope stretched across the roadway with two red signal lanterns hanging from the rope to warn approaching motorists.
As the vessel in the waters below passed, the bridge engineer began lowering the two halves of the draw. As the two giant halves of the draw closed slowly, young Henry Goodsell came burning down Shore Road at the then incredible speed of thirty miles per hour. The bridge tender saw the touring car approaching too fast and grabbed one of the two lanterns hanging from the rope. He began swinging the lantern frantically, to no avail.
Henry Goodsell's touring car blew through the rope, slicing it like a hot knife through butter. Goodsell realized his circumstance at the last moment and slammed on the brakes. The car climbed the inclined draw just as the two halves were about to close.
The touring car barely made it through the steel jaws of the closing draw and plunged over the edge. The bridge tender hear Henry Goodsell's scream as the touring car made a complete "somersault" before plunging into the waters of Eastchester Bay below, sending a "geyser" of water into the night air.
The bridge tender began scrambling down from the bridge to get to a nearby rowboat. A second bridge tender, Elijah Miller, and the bridge engineer, John Beyer, also witnessed the accident and likewise scrambled down from the bridge to try to save the young man.
Once again, accounts differ, but clearly the car sank immediately. The young driver was unconscious, but reportedly -- according to one account -- was found floating face up before he was dragged into a rowboat and taken ashore. The three men called an ambulance and tended to the young man until he was transported to the hospital.
Miraculously, Henry Goodsell survived. He was badly hurt with broken ribs and was in serious condition when taken to the hospital. Yet, the three men had saved the young lad's life.
The touring car was left at the bottom of Eastchester Bay, although its location was marked with a float.
"NEW PELHAM PARK BRIDGE OVER EAST CHESTER BAY.
Formally opened yesterday. Source: NEW BRIDGE OPENED,
New-York Daily Tribune, Oct. 16, 1908, p. 12, cols. 2-3. NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.
New-York Daily Tribune, Oct. 16, 1908, p. 12, cols. 2-3. NOTE:
Click on Image to Enlarge.
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"AUTOMOBILE LEAPS THROUGH DRAW INTO BAY
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With Driver at Wheel Plunges Into 60 Feet of Water While Going at Full Speed -- Driver, Floating Unconscious, Rescued and Revived.
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New York, Nov. 8. -- A big motor car traveling more than thirty miles an hour, driven by Henry Goodsell, 17 years old, of No. 324 West Seventy-second street, its sole occupant, went through the open counter-balance draw on the new Eastchester bridge over Pelham bay last night, and plunged down into sixty feet of water.
Young Goodsell, who said he was the owner of the car, had taken a party of friends to New Rochelle and was returning to his home alone and driving at high speed along the road when he came in sight of the bridge. The structure was recently opened and is not completed. Instead of iron gates to protect passengers a heavy rope was used.
Michael Selig, one of the bridge tenders, was standing at the rope barrier as the draw had been opened to permit a vessel to pass through. He saw the lights of the approaching car and realized that it was travelling at a high rate of speed. The red lanterns hanging to the rope had evidently failed to warn the driver of the car, and Selig picked up one of them and waved it frantically as a signal for the automobile to stop, shouting a warning at the same time.
Goodsell put on the brakes, but too late, and the car tore through the rope barrier, ran up the platform and with a loud splash disappeared beneath the water. The car barely missed being caught between the ends of the platform as they came together.
Selig shouted for help and called over the rail of the bridge below in a vain attempt to get a response from the driver of the car. Failing, he climbed down one of the piers and set out in a rowboat to try to find the man.
Engineer John Beyer and Bridge Tender Elijah Miller, stationed on the opposite side of the span, had witnessed the accident and heard Selig's call for aid. They also set out in a small boat and joined in the search. After a few minutes they came upon the body of Goodsell. He was unconscious, but was floating face up on top of the water.
A call was sent to the Fordham hospital, three miles away, and the three men worked over Goodsell while waiting for the ambulance. They succeeded in resuscitating him and bringing him back to consciousness just as the ambulance arrived. He gave his name and address. The surgeon found that several of his ribs had been fractured and removed him to the hospital. No attempt was made to recover the automobile, but a float was set to mark the place where it had disappeared."
Source: AUTOMOBILE LEAPS THROUGH DRAW INTO BAY -- With Driver at Wheel Plunges Into 60 Feet of Water While Going at Full Speed -- Driver, Floating Unconscious, Rescued and Revived, The Topeka Daily Capital [Topeka, KS], Nov. 9, 1908, Vol. XXXII, No. 264, p. 1, cols. 4-6 (Note: Paid subscription required to access via this link).
"AUTOMOBILE AND BOY DROP INTO BAY
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Large Touring Car, Driven by Henry Goodsell, Plunges Through Draw of East Chester Bridge.
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LAD'S LIFE IS SAVED
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Driving a large touring automobile at a high rate of speed, Henry Goodsell, seventeen years old, who lives at No. 234 West Seventy-second street, plunged through the open draw of the East Chester Bridge, over Pelham Bay, yesterday afternoon, and the boy and machine tumbled thirty-five feet into the stream below. Young Goodsell was rescued just in time to save his life, but the automobile lies at the bottom of the bay. The boy was taken to the Fordham Hospital, where it was found he was suffering from a fractured rib, possibly internal injuries and submersion.
Alone in the car, Goodsell was on his way home from City Island when he approached the bridge. The structure has not been finished, and in lieu of a gate which could be closed against vehicles and pedestrians when the draw is open ropes are stretched across the roadway.
It was about half-past five o'clock when Michael Seelig, watchman on the bridge, saw the automobile coming along at a furious pace, and he ran out and waved his arms, at the same time shouting to John Byer, engineer in charge of the construction work, to close the draw.
Before Byer could reach the levers the car had cut through the ropes as if they were threads of silk, and as the boy uttered a scream of fright the machine turned a somersault in the air and, striking the water with a splash that sent up a geyser, sank to the bottom. Seelig ran to the foot of one of the piers, jumped into a boat and rowed toward the spot where the machine and boy had gone down. Byer and Elijah Miller, a bridge tender, also put out in another rowboat, but before they could pull far Goodsell had risen and sunk several times.
He had gone under the surface again when both boats reached the spot, and Byer, stripping off only his coat, plunged overboard. He caught the lad in his arms and just managed to lift him into Seelig's boat. When the shore was reached Goodsell was taken to Geck's Hotel and a call for an ambulance was sent to Fordham Hospital, three miles away. Meantime, the three men worked over the unconscious boy, and when Dr. O'Reilly arrived he said that while his condition was serious it was likely that he would recover.
In the hospital Goodsell told the policemen that he as the owner of the automobile, but because of his youth this statement was doubted, and an investigation was begun. It was promptly learned that the lad had told the truth. He is the son of a lawyer now dead, and lives with his mother at the address he gave. When an inquirer called there Mrs. Goodsell was at a front window, watching for her son, and she fainted when she learned of the accident. When she had been revived sufficiently she started for Fordham Hospital to see the boy."
Source: AUTOMOBILE AND BOY DROP INTO BAY -- Large Touring Car, Driven by Henry Goodsell, Plunges Through Draw of East Chester Bridge -- LAD'S LIFE IS SAVED, N.Y. Herald, Nov. 7, 1908, p. 1, col. 5.
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Below are examples of previous postings that address the histories of the various Pelham Bridges that have spanned Eastchester Bay for the last two centuries.
Thu., Oct. 13, 2016: The Eastchester Bridge Company Raised Tolls on Pelham Bridge Before It Was Even Built.
Wed., Oct. 12, 2016: More on the Early History of Pelham Bridge Including Ownership of the Bridge Between 1834 and 1860.
Tue., Oct. 11, 2016: Is It Possible The First Pelham Bridge Built in About 1815 Was Repaired After Near Destruction by a Storm?
Wed., Oct. 1, 2014: Bridge Keepers of the Pelham Bridge from 1870 to 1872.
Mon., Jul. 21, 2014: Image of the Second Pelham Bridge Built in 1834 From a Sketch Created in 1865.
Thu., Jul. 17, 2014: Sabotage Brought Down the 70-Ton Draw Span of Pelham Bridge in 1908 and Delayed its Opening.
Tue., Jun. 10, 2014: Construction of the Concrete Arch Pelham Bridge.
Mon., May 12, 2014: The March 6, 1812 New York Statute Authorizing Construction of the Pelham Bridge.
Tue., Sep. 22, 2009: Names of Early "Keepers of Pelham Bridge" Appointed by Westchester County.
Thu., Jan. 08, 2009: Another Brief History of The Pelham Bridge.
Thu., Jan. 1, 2009: A Brief History of Pelham Bridge.
Wed., Jan. 2, 2008: New York State Senate Report on Petition by Inhabitants of Westchester to Allow Construction of Toll Bridge Across Eastchester Creek in 1834.
Tue., Aug. 28, 2007: The Laying Out of Pelham Avenue From Fordham to Pelham Bridge in 1869.
Wed., Jul. 4, 2007: 1857 Real Estate Advertisement for Sale of the Pelham Bridge.
Fri., Jul. 22, 2007: 1857 Real Estate Advertisement for Sale of "Country Seat" at Pelham Bridge.
Fri., May 18, 2007: Celebration at Pelham Bridge in 1872.
Wed., May 16, 2007: Board of Supervisors of Westchester County Vote to Build New Iron Bridge to Replace Pelham Bridge in 1869.
Tue., May 15, 2007: The Owner of the Pelham Bridge Hotel Sold it for the Princely Sum of $22,000 in 1869.
Mon., May 14, 2007: Plans to Widen Shore Road in the Town of Pelham in 1869.
Fri., May 11, 2007: A Sad Attempted Suicide at Pelham Bridge in 1869.
Thu., Dec. 08, 2005: The First Stone Bridge Built Across Eastchester Creek in Pelham, 1814-1815.
Thu., Aug. 18, 2005: The Opening of the New Iron "Pelham Bridge" in 1871.
Tue., Aug. 9, 2005: Cock Fighting at Pelham Bridge in the 19th Century.
Thu., Jul. 21, 2005: Today's Remnants of the Bartow Station on the Branch Line Near City Island.
Tue., Jun. 28, 2005: The Hotel and Bar Room at Pelham Bridge.
Thu., Mar. 24, 2005: The Bartow Area of Pelham in the 19th Century: Where Was It?
Wed., Mar. 23, 2005: Prize Fighting at Pelham Bridge in 1884.
For more about the Pelham Bridge and its history, see Pelham Bridge, Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia, available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelham_Bridge (visited May 6, 2014).
Archive of the Historic Pelham Web Site.
Home Page of the Historic Pelham Blog.
Order a Copy of "The Haunted History of Pelham, New York"
Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak."
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