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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
May 26, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Thursday, May 26, 2005
The New York Athletic Club's Opening of the "New Summer Home" on Travers
Island in 1889
On June 8, 1889, five hundred members of the New York Athletic Club
inspected the Club's newly-completed summer home on Travers Island in
Pelham Manor. The next day a brief news item appeared in The New York
Times detailing the events of that day. Today's Blog posting will
provide the content of that brief article. The image immediately is an old
post card view showing the original summer home as it looked before it
later was destroyed by fire.

"TRAVERS ISLAND.
The new Summer home of the New-York Athletic Club on Travers Island, near
Pelham Manor, on the Sound, was opened yesterday for inspection by the
members and their friends. The building, designed by Douglas Smythe, is a
handsome structure of wood in the prevailing style of Summer resort
taverns of the better class, with shingled roofs and many peaks and
gables. There are broad piazzas on every side. The interior decorations
are plain but handsome, and an air of comfort pervades the place from the
very doorway. The house faces the water, which is only a few yards from
the main piazza. The electric light is used in every part of the building.
There are spacious dining rooms, though the piazzas will undoubtedly be
appropriated by diners on hot nights. The view from the cupola embraces a
great expanse of the Sound. The grounds are tastefully laid out, and the
track, a fifth of a mile in length, is said to be one of the best in the
country. For the athlete, who, though he may not predominate in the
New-York Athletic Club, is held in high esteem, the clubhouse and adjacent
buildings provide every possible convenience.
A large majority of the members, of course, do not go to Travers Island to
train or to exhibit their skill on the track or in the boats. They like to
sit on the piazzas and watch the crews at practice on the placid waters
that are shielded from the wind by the cluster of islands in front of
Travers Island, which is not an island at all now, but is joined to the
mainland by an artificial handle, so that, seen from a balloon, it would
resemble a doorknob on a door. The billiard room and bowling alleys are
handsomely fitted up, and the many bedrooms are light, airy, comfortable,
and furnished with perfect taste.
Besides a portrait of the late William R. Travers, whose memory will ever
be cherished by this clud, the only art work in the new house at present
is a decorative panel by H. S. Mowbray, given to the club by Mr. Thomas B.
Clark, which is placed in the main hall over the spacious open fireplace,
bearing the motto: 'When friends meet, hearts warm.' The fireplace was
piled high with hickory logs yesterday, and there will come a night when
the east wind blows fiercely from over Whitestone way, when it will be
good to have them lighted. Mr. Mowbray's panel is called 'The Month of
Roses.' The figures are four young women in soft draperies. The prevailing
tones are delicate shades of green and red. The girls are very pretty.
They do not, perhaps, exactly symbolize the purpose of an athletic club,
but, the members feel that it is well to have them there.
At least 500 members of the club visited the island yesterday. Next
Saturday, when a public reception will be held, with games, and the
eight-oared crew will be out, 5,000 persons are likely to test the
resources of the steward and the chef. The eight-oared crew was out for
practice yesterday. They went up and down their course pulling as one man,
and a good one, too. They sneaked over to David's island and beat the
pretentious little Government steamboat in a race over to the mainland.
The David's Island band kindly went over to the clubhouse in the evening,
and the melody they contributed to the informal but pleasing proceedings
of opening day was so well appreciated that the cares of the day are
likely to be dispelled by music on many future nights at Travers Island."
Source: Travers Island, N.Y. Times, Jun. 9, 1889, p. 3.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
6:25 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
May 26, 2005.
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