Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 20, 2005
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Wednesday, July 20, 2005
The Pelham Manor Village Board Decides To Dedicate Park as "Martha
Emmons Weihman Memorial Park" on September 8, 1941
Regular readers of this Blog may remember that recently I have been doing
research on the history of the Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park located on
the Esplanade at Boston Post Road behind Huguenot Memorial Church. Information
about the park has never been collected in one place, so the research is slow.
I have been doing the research to assist The Junior League of Pelham, Inc. That
organization is engaged in an effort to raise funds to restore the park.
Recent postings on the topic include:
Mon. June 6, 2005: Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park in Pelham Manor - Origins
of the Idea to Create a Park
Thu. June 2, 2005: Obituary of Martha Emmons Weihman From The Pelham Sun,
August 16, 1940
Tue. May 24, 2005: Clifford and Martha Weihman of Pelham (Part I of II)
Wed. May 25, 2005: Clifford and Martha Weihman of Pelham (Part II of II)
Tue. May 31, 2005: The June 6, 1940 Fire That Destroyed the George M. Reynolds
Mansion (Part I of II)
Wed. June 1, 2005: The June 6, 1940 Fire That Destroyed the George M. Reynolds
Mansion (Part II of II)
Today's Blog posting will provide the latest additional information regarding
creation of the park that I have been able to assemble.
During the Summer of 1941, Clifford T. Weihman proposed to the Village of Pelham
Manor Board of Trustees that he would defray the cost of landscaping and
planting shrubs on the site where the George M. Reynolds Mansion burned on the
evening of June 6, 1940. On Monday, September 8, 1941 -- less than three months
before Pearl Harbor -- the Village of Pelham Manor Board of Trustees voted to
accept Mr. Weihman's offer and decided to dedicate a new park on the site named
the "Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park".
A few days later, a brief article about the development appeared in The
Pelham Sun. The article is set forth below in its entirety.
"To Dedicate Boston Post Road Corner As Memorial To Late Mrs. Weihman
-----
Property recently purchased by the Village of Pelham Manor on the
southeasterly corner of the Boston Post Road and the Esplanade will be dedicated
as the Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park. The Board of Trustees on
Monday night accepted the offer of Clifford T. Weihman of Monterey avenue, to
defray the cost of landscaping and planting shrubs on the property as a memorial
to his late wife.
The property has a 250 foot frontage on the Boston Post Road and 250 foot
frontage on the Esplanade. The three-story frame apartment building, which
stood on the site, was gutted by fire on June 6, 1940.
The property is at the edge of the residential district and as a protection
against reconstruction of an apartment building there, the village [purchased]
the site for $15,000, for improvement as a park. Mr. Weihman's offer will
make it possible that the improvement be started as soon as plans are approved
by the Village Planning Board.
Village Trustee C. Furnald Smith submitted Mr. Weihman's offer, which had the
instant of the Board.
Mrs. Weihman was born in New York City, the daughter of Francis Robbins
Emmons and Eliza Ridabock Emmons. She was a graduate of Barnard and
received her Master's Degree at Columbia. Mrs. Weihman came to Pelham in
1920 and died here on Aug. 14, 1940."
Source: To Dedicate Boston Post Road Corner As Memorial To Late Mrs. Weihman,
The
Pelham Sun, Vol. 31, No. 23, Sep. 12, 1941, p. 1, col. 1.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:08 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
July 20, 2005.
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