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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 10, 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.
Friday, June 10, 2005
Pelham's Most Magnificent Wedding Gift: The Bolton Priory
Virtually everyone in Pelham knows The Bolton Priory located 0n Priory
Lane in the Village of Pelham Manor. The lovely home built by the Reverend
Robert Bolton in 1838 is listed on the National Register of Historic
Places.

One of the many interesting stories associated with the home involves the
fact that it was given as a wedding gift in 1892 to Miss Daisy Stevens on
the day that she married Mr. Frederick H. Allen. An interesting article
about the gift of the home appeared in the July 31, 1892 issue of The
New York Times and is reproduced below:
"A PRIORY FOR THE BRIDE
-----
MRS. FREDERICK H. ALLEN'S GIFT FROM HER MOTHER.
-----
THE FINE OLD BOLTON MANSION IN PELHAM AND SOME OF THE RARE TREASURES IT
CONTAINS -- BUILT BY AN ARTIST FAMILY.
Two generations ago few rich Americans followed the English custom of
erecting solid, lasting manor houses to stand as family monuments and
homes for their descendants.
The Rev. Robert Bolton, in 1830 the well-to-do rector of the parish of
East Chester, was an exception to the rule. He built himself an ideal
English mansion on the border line between the towns of New-Rochelle and
Pelham and called it the Bolton Priory. The mansion stands today a
conspicuous landmark in Westchester County and is one of the most
interesting homesteads in the country.
Public attention was called to the Bolton Priory last Thursday, when the
Duchess de Dino presented the mansion as a wedding gift to her daughter,
Miss Daisy Stevens, who on that day became the wife of Frederick H. Allen.
The Duchess de Dino purchased the property six years ago, not long before
her divorce from Frederic Stevens, paying for it $100,000.
The Rev. Robert Bolton was intimately acquainted with Washington Irving,
and upon one of his frequent visits at Sunnyside in the Spring of 1838 he
told the author of 'Sleepy Hollow' that he intended building himself a
home that would last for generations.
Irving advised that the homestead be made typically English, and suggested
the idea of putting the date up in the front wall. He said also that while
making some repairs at the Sleepy Hollow Church many of the old yellow
bricks had been thrown aside which could be had for the carting. The
rector followed the advice of the author, and the Rev. C. W. Bolton, son
of the rector, went to the church and carted home some of the bricks. Thus
the material of the seventeenth century entered into this building of the
nineteenth.
The Bolton Priory, as completed fifty-three years ago, stands nearly
intact to-day in the midst of a fine old park of trees a short distance
back from the road. It is approached by a winding carriage drive. The spot
is isolated and romantic. From the roadway through the trees and bushes
can be caught glimpses of the stone mansion, looking strikingly like an
English rectory with the walls overgrown with ivy.
The house was originally 115 feet deep and half that in width, but several
years after it was completed a projection was added to the rear.
Over the arched doorway is the date '1838,' set in the yellow bricks from
the Sleepy Hollow Church. The front door, to carry out the English ideas
of the Rev. Mr. Bolton, is of heavy, solid oak, completely covered with a
studding of great bolt heads. A ponderous iron knocker, brought over from
Venice, hangs upon the door. Even the scutcheon around the keyhole was
imported. Upon it is engraved the date, 'M. D., 1557.'
Graystone was used in the construction of the house. The mortar being
unpainted gives to the building an appearance of very great age. To the
right of the doorway rises a high tower, from the top of which the country
can be seen for ten miles around.
The interior of the Priory is more curious than the exterior. Passing
through the door, one enters a wide, dark hall, opening from the left of
which is the library. The members of the Bolton family were all artists of
considerable talent. The dining room gives evidence of this. The carved
frescoing, representing 'The Battle of the Chariots,' was the work of the
Rev. William J. Bolton of Bath, England. The elaborately-carved
mantelpiece was also wrought by the Bath rector. On the mantelpiece there
stood for years a bust of George Whitefield in black porcelain.
The walls are covered with rare old paintings, among them being an
original portrait of John Bunyan, once in the possession of Whitefield.
The portrait was given by Whitefield to the Rev. Cornelius Winter, who
bequeathed it to William Jay of Bath, grandfather of Robert Bolton.
On the sides of this portrait are two ancient paintings bought originally
for their frames. They were discovered in an old English shop in Reading,
Berkshire, and purchased for 2s 6d. When William J. Bolton cleaned the
canvas, one proved to be a rare Gainsborough and the other a portrait of a
French lady.
Among a hundred curious things found in the dining room are the cap worn
by the last Doge of Venice, a framed panel from the coach in which George
Washington made his last tour of the States, four Elizabethan chairs with
high, carved backs topped with crowns; six huge volumes of Macklin's
Bible, and a copy of Eliot's Indian Testament, one of the first works
written and printed in the United States. The volume was printed in the
United States. The volume was printed by Samuel Green in 1661, at
Cambridge, Mass. There are also a rare collection of autographs, the
oldest of which is that of Henry VII, and the original edition of Piranesi,
once belonging to Napoleon and bearing his signature.
The rich stained-glass windows of the library, as also of other rooms in
the house, were made by John Bolton, son of the builder.
In the parlor are more treasures of art. Over the door leading from the
library is a 'wool picture' of 'Peter Repenting.' The picture was made by
Charles W. Bolton from wool sheared by himself from his own sheep. The
method of making the picture was a family secret. This is the only 'wool
picture' in America, and there are only two in England. The chairs in the
parlor were brought over from the Louvre.
The armory is the next room south. Portraits line the walls. There is one
of Charles I., supposed to have been painted by Stuart, and others of
Henrietta, of the Pretender, and of Falstaff. Standing by the doorway are
two complete suits of Venetian armor. In the armory is an armchair bearing
the date 1639, purchased at Dorchester, in Oxfordshire, by the Rev.
Charles W. Bolton. The Trustees of Harvard College made repeated efforts
to get this relic for a President's chair, but the Boltons refused to part
with it. Valuable pieces of old armor and weapons hang on the walls.
In the armory is a huge fireplace, 6 feet high and 10 feet long, with
chimney-corner seats inside. In days gone by, the Bolton family used to
observe the twelve nights of misrule. The yule log used to be drawn in by
a donkey ridden by the rector.
When the priory was erected, it was not intended to be turned to a purpose
which subsequently made it widely known. A few years after it was finished
a young ladies seminary was opened in the building, the rear extension
being used as the schoolroom. In the west wing was the studio where the
artist family worked with their pupils. With the death of the Bolton
sisters several years ago, the school was discontinued, and Bolton Priory
has been used for many seasons past as a Summer residence.
Through the instrumentality of the Rev. Robert Bolton a parish was
organized in Pelham, and the cornerstone of the Gothic church standing on
the Priory grounds was laid April 28, 1843. The church was the first
building devoted to religious worship and instruction erected in the town
of Pelham. The incorporation bears the date of Sept. 25, 1843, with
Richard Morris and Henry Grenzebach as Wardens, and Grace Roosevelt,
George F. Mills, John J. Bolton, William J. Bolton, Peter V. King, Jacob
Le Roy, Cornelius W. Bolton, and Robert Bolton, Jr., as Vestrymen.
The Rev. Robert Bolton was the first rector and remained such until 1852,
when he resigned. The Rev. C. W. Bolton and the Rev. Alexander Shiras were
later rectors of Christ Church, Pelham. There is a Schuyler vault at the
church. The Schuylers have spent many Summers at Bolton Priory.
The old house will undergo considerable alteration previous to its
occupancy next Fall by Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Allen."
Source: A Priory For The Bride - Mrs. Frederick H. Allen's Gift From Her
Mother, N.Y. Times, Jul. 31, 1892, p. 11.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:33 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 10, 2005.
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