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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 1, 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, November 1, 2005
The Mystery of The Ancient Boulder-Lined Road Near Beech Tree Lane
The Robert C. Black Realty Co. developed the Beech Tree Lane section of
Pelham Manor, immediately south of and adjacent to Manor Circle beginning
in about 1926. At that time, there was an old dirt road lined by great
glacial boulders and massive beech trees that paralleled the street we
know today as Park Lane. Remnants of the road and the great glacial
boulders that lined it are still visible just south of Beech Tree Lane and
Park Lane in Pelham Bay Park. The photograph below, taken on October 30,
2005, shows a section of the ancient roadway, still lined by trees and
giant glacial boulders.

Lockwood Barr mentions the ancient roadway in his popular history of
The Town of Pelham published in 1946. He wrote, in part, as follows:
"When the Beech Tree Lane section of Pelham Manor was developed in
1926-27 there still remained an outline of an old dirt road, parallel to
Park Lane, which could be traced by the line of Beech trees and old walls
made of great glacial boulders, from Manor Circle down the valley of
Nellie's Brook, to the Shore Road at a point just north of Hunter's
Island." Barr, Lockwood Anderson, A Brief, But Most Complete & True
Account of the Settlement of the Ancient Town of Pelham Westchester
County, State of New York Known One Time Well & Favourably as the
Lordshipp & Manour of Pelham Also The Story of the Three Modern Villages
Called The Pelhams, p. 117 (Richmond, VA: The Dietz Press, Inc. 1946)
(Library of Congress Control Number 47003441, Library of Congress Call
Number F129.P38B3).
One theory is that the road developed as a way for residents of Manor
Circle -- some of which was developed as early as 1889 -- to make their
way to the Long Island Sound and, perhaps, the road known today as Shore
Road. Much effort, however, must have gone into the placement of the giant
glacial boulders that lined the roadway. By 1889, people in the area
realized that much of the land traversed by the road would be taken by the
City of New York for inclusion in Pelham Bay Park. It would seem, then,
that the road likely pre-dated the earliest development of Manor Circle
beginning in 1889.
Another possible explanation, favored by Lockwood Barr, is that the
road extended from an area just north of the causeway that connected
Hunters Island (where John Hunter maintained his mansion for many years).
According to Barr:
"John Hunter of Hunter's Island, in his will dated May 13, 1852,
disposed of his large farm known as the Provost Farm, on the Mainland, in
the Town of Pelham, at the Hutchinson River near the point where the
Boston Post Road crosses the River. Hunter recognized the necessity of
granting right of way and access from the Shore Road to that farm--across
a second farm he owned, known as the Sackett Farm. So, in his will, he
provided: '. . . right of way with Cattle and teams over the lane now used
by me across my farm, commonly called and known as the Sackett Farm,
situated in the said Town of Pelham, opposite Hunter's Island and between
the farms of Mr. Thacker and Elbert Roosevelt, and also right of way from
said lane through the woods of Said Sackett Farm to and from the Provost
Farm. . .' These Hunter tracts are now part of the Split Rock Road Golf
Course of Pelham Bay Park, and the Hutchinson River Parkway. A map, dated
1853, shows the dirt road running from Hunter's Island, over towards the
old Split Rock Road on Prospect Hill. This dirt lane was closed when
Pelham Bay Park Golf Course was built, but the bridge over the tracks of
the New Haven Railroad Branch, and its earthen approaches, still stand,
south of the Pelham Manor Line." Id., pp. 117-18.
The image immediately below is a detail from a reproduction of the 1853
map to which Lockwood Barr referred. The red arrow I have added to the map
shows the location of today's Beech Tree Lane section of Pelham Manor. A
roadway is plainly visible leading southeastward toward Long Island Sound
and Hunters Island.

Lockwood Barr believed that the remnants of the roadway
lined with Beech Trees and giant glacial boulders was the dirt lane across
which John Hunter drove his cattle in the mid-19th century.
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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 @
4:43 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
November 1, 2005.
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