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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
August 11, 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, August 11, 2005
How Dry I Am: Pelham Goes Dry in the 1890s and Travers Island Is
At the Center of a Storm
In 1896, Pelham was the only town in Westchester to vote, pursuant to the
terms of the so-called Raines Law, to go dry. On Tuesday, March 31, 1896,
the Town voted, in effect, to close all saloons and to bar the selling of
liquor except by druggists on physicians' prescriptions.
Almost immediately the New York Athletic Club on Travers Island found
itself at the center of a storm. Travers Island lies partly in Pelham and
partly in New Rochelle. It suddenly dawned on the Town that through a few
simple machinations, the Club would be able easily to circumvent the
prohibition on the sale of liquor. The New York Times described
the situation in an article published on April 3, 1896. The article
appears below.
"NEW-YORK'S ATHLETES GUESSING.
-----
Whether Travers Island Is in Pelham
or New-Rochelle?
PELHAM MANOR, N. Y., April 2.-Where is the New-York Athletic Club's
country house? The answer always has been Travers Island, and the big
clubhouse and fine grounds have usually been thought of as belonging to
Pelham Manor.
The question now will require a much more exact answer, it is said,
since on Tuesday the town of Pelham voted to close all saloons and to
bar the selling of liquor everywhere except by druggists on physicians'
prescriptions.
The best authorities obtainable on the town lines of Pelham and
New-Rochelle claim that the dividing line runs through the big clubhouse
itself, and the Town Assessors call to mind the fact that the New-York
Athletic Club is assessed in both Pelham and New-Rochele. It is said,
therefore, that the New-York Athletic Club must not hereafter dispense
liquors to its members in the town of Pelham.
The members of the club who visited the clubhouse yesterday discussed
the situation. It was not until yesterday, in fact, that it fully dawned
on the club members what the vote against license in Pelham meant to
them, and the great quantity of puzzling questions that might arise when
the law should be enforced. Most of them thought the clubhouse, gronds
and all, was in Pelham, and began to think of the feasibility of selling
the property and getting another place untrammeled by obnoxious liquor
restrictions.
The cottage which stands a few feet southwest of the main clubhouse is
kept open all Winter. It contains a bar and cozy smoking and reading
rooms. The main clubhouse is not opened until late in the Spring. The
cottage is a favorite haunt of the country members of the club whose
homes are in Mount Vernon, Pelham Manor, and New-Rochelle. The cottage,
it is said, really contains the main bar of the entire establishment,
though a supplementary bar is opened in the clubhouse in the Summer
season. The club bars have always been duly appreciated, just as they
are in big New-York City clubs.
A member of the New-York Athletic Club said this morning that the
cottage, bar and all, was unquestionably in Pelham, and that he thought
the big clubhouse itself was in Pelham. Another member of the club said
he had heard somewhere that the town line intersected the main
clubhouse. Every one agreed that the cottage was in Pelham. If a part of
the main clubhouse was in New-Rochelle, the bar could easily be moved to
the New-Rochelle end, and the necessary license could be obtained from
New-Rochelle.
It is no easy matter to determine just how the town line runs. George
Lambden, Town Assessor of New-Rochelle, who is considered the best
authority on local boundaries, says the New-Rochelle line cuts off just
eighteen feet of the clubhouse, and that the rest of the clubhouse is in
Pelham. Joseph J. English, for many years Tax Collector of Pelham, says
the boundary passes through the clubhouse. Mr. Lambden and Mr. English
both say that the club grounds and buildings are assessed in New
Rochelle and Pelham. If Mr. Lambden is right, the bar can easily be
taken from the cottage and placed in the eighteen feet in New-Rochelle,
or a little house can be built in the part of the ground that lies in
New-Rochelle. It will be very inconvenient to have the bar taken from
the cottage and placed in a house by itself.
The question has also arisen, whether, in case the bar is moved over
into New-Rochelle, it would be legal for a person sitting at a table in
the part of the clubhouse in Pelham to summon a waiter and order drinks
brought to him from the New-Rochelle barroom.
If the barroom is transferred to New-Rochelle, it will no doubt be
closely watched Sundays, as New-Rochelle has an organized police force,
whereas Pelham Manor has but one policeman who is only on duty at night.
All the members of the club admit that many vexatious questions are
liable to arise. It is likely that measures will be taken to find out
exactly where the town line cuts the clubhouse. There does not seem to
be any maps that decide the question, but it is said stone posts were
placed in the ground to fix the course of the line. It is said also that
everything on one side of a line that runds though the knob on a front
door of a certain house in Cedar Road is in Pelham and that everything
on the other side is in New-Rochelle."
Source: New-York's Athletes Guessing Whether Travers Island Is in Pelham
or New-Rochelle?, N.Y. Times, Apr. 3, 1896, p. 6, col. 4.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:53 AM
Comment
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August 11, 2005.
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