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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 14, 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.
Tuesday, June 14, 2005
Ceremony in 1915 to Open Bartow-Pell Mansion as Headquarters of
International Garden Club Marred by Tragedy
On May 1, 1915, the Bartow-Pell Mansion in Pelham Bay Park was
officially turned over to the International Garden Club. New York Governor
Charles S. Whitman attended the ceremony to take part in replacing the
Pell Treaty Oak on the grounds of the mansion. The ceremony, however, was
marred by tragedy. Below is the account that appeared in The New York
Times the following day.
"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 Mr.
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 frm 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 Oak, N.Y. Times, May 2,
1915, p. 14.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:45 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 14, 2005.
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