Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 22, 2005
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Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Prospect Hill and Pelhamville Depicted on the 1868 Beers Atlas Map of
Pelham: Part II
Yesterday I published to the Historic Pelham Blog a posting entitled "Prospect
Hill and Pelhamville Depicted on the 1868 Beers Atlas Map of Pelham: Part
I". In it I discussed a few of the insights that may be drawn about
the development of the area known as "Prospect Hill" within the Village of
Pelham Manor by comparing detail of that area from Plate 35 of the 1868
Beers Map (image below) with current satellite photographs of the same
area. Today's Blog Posting will do the same thing for the area once know
as "Pelhamville" within the Village of Pelham.

Plate 35 from the 1868 Beers Atlas.
Top Arrow Points to Portion of Map Showing "Pelhamville"
Pelhamville
At some point prior to 1850-51, two real estate promoters named Lewis C.
Platt and Henry Marsden created an association named the Pelhamville
Village Association "to develop certain tracts of unincorporated property
in the Town of Pelham lying north of the Railroad and east of the
Hutchinson River. This Association purchased Wolf Farm and laid out
streets, residential plots and a business district." See Barr,
Lockwood, 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 & Mannour of Pelham Also the Story
of the Three Modern Villages Called The Pelhams, p. 135 (Richmond, VA: The
Dietz Press, Inc. 1946). The development was planned to cover
approximately 110 acres. According to the Index of Maps, Office of the
Register, Westchester County in White Plains, on June 21, 1851 the
subdivision map of Pelhamville was filed. To learn more about the hamlet
once known as Pelhamville, see Bell, Blake A.,
Early History of the Village of Pelham Part 4: The Railroad Comes To Town
(Sept. 2003).
Below is an image that shows a detail from Plate 35 of the Beers Atlas
showing "Pelhamville" on the left and a recent satellite photograph
showing the same area as it exists today.

One of the first things that you may notice is that by comparing the very
top of the map with the very top of the satellite photograph, one street
no longer exists. Construction of the Hutchinson River Parkway destroyed
the street. Apart from this one difference, the original layout of
Pelhamville can easily be seen incorporated into today's Village of Pelham
north of the New Haven Line tracks.
Pelhamville was much closer to the Pelhamville Depot and the railroad
tracks of the New Haven Line than Prospect Hill was to the Pelham Manor
Depot and the railroad tracks of the New Haven Branch Line. Perhaps that
explains why Pelhamville developed more quickly than Prospect Hill during
roughly the same period of the early 1850s until 1868. As the map detail
on the left indicates above, by 1868 there were about 50 residential
structions as well as the train station located in that portion of
Pelhamville that sat north of the New Haven Line railroad tracks.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:47 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
November 22, 2005.
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