Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 15, 2005
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Thursday, September 15, 2005
Newspaper Item Published in 1942 Sheds Light on Baseball in 19th Century
Pelham
Those who know me know that I have an abiding love for the sport of
baseball and its history. Those who have followed my research regarding
the history of Pelham also know that I have written about baseball in 19th
century Pelham. For two such examples, see:
February 10, 2005 Historic Pelham Blog Posting:
New Discoveries Regarding Baseball in 19th Century Pelham
Baseball in Late 19th Century Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol.
XIII, No. 17, Apr. 23, 2004, p. 8, col. 2.
I recently ran across an article by J. Gardner Minard published in The
Pelham Sun in 1942. The article, entitled "Do You Remember?" is
interesting for the many tidbits of life in Pelham in the late 19th
century described in the many references in the article. One particular
item, however, caught my attention. It referenced with some specificity
the location of the old baseball field on which Pelham's local baseball
team played in 1897. The article, set forth below in its entirety,
contains the following reference:
"DO YOU REMEMBER? . . . Pelham's first uniformed baseball team in 1897
that played a double header in the field opposite where St. Catherine's
church now stands and how Mr. and Mrs. John H. Young entertained the
visitors with a dinner?"
Below is a detail from Plate 20 of John Fairchild's Atlas of Mount Vernon
and Pelham published in 1899. The detail shows a three-lot field across
from where today's St. Catharine's Church now stands. (See the red arrow
pointing at the area.) Even more interesting, careful viewers will notice
that the home adjacent to the fields to the north (i.e., the right of the
image) is marked as owned by John H. Young who, according to the reference
quoted above, "entertained the visitors with a dinner".

The entire text of Mr. Minard's article containing the reference quoted
above appears immediately below.
"DO YOU REMEMBER?
By GARDNER MINARD
Pelham Veteran Newspaper Man
When Wolf's lane ran over instead of under the New Haven tracks?
When the New Haven depot was called 'Pelhamville' and located where the
post office now stands?
When the Pelhamville post office was located in the ticket office at
the station?
Charlie Merritt's old red stage that rented with driver and team for $5
a day or night?
When Chester Park was the William T. Standen farm?
When the district from the bend of Fifth avenue north to Mayflower
avenue and from Fifth avenue to the New Rochelle boundary line was the
Andrew Heisser farm?
When you could go into what is now Pelhamwood any frosty October
morning and gather a bushel of chestnuts?
When the students of Mrs. Hazen's Seminary of Pelham Manor skated at
Iden's Pong; that was on the east side of Wolf's lane 100 yards south of
Colonial avenue?
When they shot live pigeons weekly at the White Hotel grounds, north of
Third street and west of Wolf's lane?
When the gale blew the Pelhamville station platform across the tracks
and wrecked the express?
The black bull in Winyah Park (Pelhamwood) that killed Patrick Walsh?
When Jim Reilly's son, Jimmy ate green apples, his death was ascribed
to 'cholera moebus'?
When the block for 500 feet north of Third street from Fifth to Fourth
avenues was an apple orchard?
Dr. Charles A. Barker's big bob sled?
When there was not even a blade of grass growing along the New Haven
Railroad embankment from Fifth avenue to the Mount Vernon line?
Pelham's first uniformed baseball team in 1897 that played a double
header in the field opposite where St. Catherine's church now stands and
how Mr. and Mrs. John H. Young entertained the visitors with a dinner?
When trolley tracks were laid along the Post road from Split Rock road
to the New York City boundary line; also along Split Rock road from Boston
Post road to the New York City line, and no car ever ran over them?
When the fire department was called out to quell the fight between
construction gangs of the Union Railway and Connecticut Traction companies
over the laying of tracks along Fourth street?
When North Pelham Horse Car Railway Company was formed and applied for
the franchise along Fifth avenue and it was rejected?
When Mike Lynch and Eddie Barry were the 'Mutt and Jeff' of the
Democratic Party in North Pelham?
When the state enacted a law taking away from local powers the right to
appoint local excise commissioners and made them state appointments and
Pelham had two boards and the saloonkeepers would pay neither?
When officials and political leaders wore high silk hats at elections?
When the big map lithographing plants showed Wolf's lane all the way to
the Wolf homestead at Third street, North Pelham?"
Minard, Gardner, Do You Remember?, The Pelham Sun, Vol. 32, No. 3, Apr.
24, 1942, p. 3, col. 6.
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Historic Pelham
Web Site
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http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:54 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 15, 2005.
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