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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 24, 2007
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, July 24, 2007
Article About the Pell Treaty Oak Published in 1909
Yesterday I wrote about the fiery death of the Pell Treaty Oak in 1906.
See Monday, July 23, 2007:
1906 Article in The Sun Regarding Fire that Destroyed the Pell Treaty Oak.
Today's posting to the Historic Pelham Blog transcribes the text of an
article that appeared in the same newspaper three years later when the
dead stump of the ancient and revered tree was blown over in a storm and,
thus, destroyed.
"END OF THE PELL TREATY OAK
-----
IT SAW THE FIRST SUBURBAN REAL ESTATE DEAL.
-----
Under It Thomas Pell Bought a Large Part of Westchester County
From the Indians in 1654--Blown Down After a Life Extending Over
Centuries.
After taking the blows of the elements for several hundred years the old
Pell treaty oak in Pelham Bay Park tumbled over a month ago, the victim of
a gale, and there remains now nothing but an old stump to mark the spot
where it is believed the first Westchester real estate deal was put
through two and a half centuries ago.
It was under the leafy shade of the old tree that Thomas Pell negotiated
this little real estate deal, standing there with a few companions who had
journeyed with him from Connecticut while the sachems inspected gravely
his collection of beads, blankets and 'gunnes' and decided that they were
worth a large part of what is now Westchester county. The sachems took the
blankets and the beads and Pell took the real estate. He was thus
apparently the first speculator in suburban real estate, and pretty
successful at that for those times.
The old tree under which Pell is supposed to have driven his bargain with
the Indians in 1654 made a valiant fight for life in the two centuries and
a half that have since passed. Decapitated and dismembered a good many
generations ago, it defied the attempts of the elements to complete its
destruction, and with its days seemingly done for it surprised all those
who watched it in recent years by putting out new branches to be covered
with green leaves each spring like the youngsters around it. It seemed to
be making another attempt to grow and reassume the place it once had as a
monarch of the primeval wilderness.
A few years ago some of the patriotic societies decided to do what they
could to preserve it and at their expense they erected an iron fence
around it, but this did not suffice to keep off the vandals. Last fall
somebody built a fire near it and it roared up the hollow trunk. That fire
ended the old tree's fight. There was no more life in it after that, and
with its trunk scorched and its new branches withered it fell an easy
victim to one of last month's storms, taking part of the fence with it as
it fell.
In recent years, with the iron fence marking its nobility, the old tree
has been visited by many who have seen it in passing along the Eastern
Boulevard. It stood only a short distance back from the road on the
grounds of the old Bartow place, now a hospital for crippled children.
That it was no common tree one could easily tell from its size. Its
diameter several feet above the ground was over three feet and the stumps
of some of its mighty branches twenty feet or more from the ground were
two feet through.
Sawed off fresh, these stumps showed so many rings that it was hopeless to
ascertain its age by any such method. Once the Park Department tried it,
but the man who essayed to count the rings, first trying to distinguish
them, gave it up in despair. They have part of this enormous branch
preserved up in Commissioner Berry's office now, so that any one who wants
to try it can do so.
The tree experts of the park have guessed at its age at anywhere from 300
to 500 years. How many years its trunk had been hollow nobody knows, for
hollow it was, and one could climb up to the very top of the huge
cylinder.
In the case of a good many trees supposed to mark historic spots there
have been some who have had doubts as to the authenticity of the old oak
and its connection with the Pell treaty, but near it are some of the
graves of Pell's descendants, and if there is anything in the legends of
that part of Westchester the old tree saw the bargain driven.
A short distance to the southeast from where the tree stood is the old
Bartow mansion, and behind this is the Pell graveyard containing six
mossgrown tombstones. They are the graves of Pells bron years after the
man who decided to take a chance on Westchester real estate, descendants
who no doubt came to respect their ancestor's judgment and were glad of
his shrewdness. The oldest tombstone bears the inscription: 'Here Lyes
Isec Pell D. Dec. 24 No. 1748.'
At a time when most men were thinking of hewing their own homelands out of
the wilderness old Thomas Pell apparently was animated by the same object
which to-day leads many a man to invest in property above The Bronx. He
didn't want a home; he bought land to sell.
That Pell was the original spectacular in Westchester real estate is borne
out by history. One of the histories of Westchester county says of him:
'Pell himself does not even appear to have become a resident of
Westchester. He evidently regarded his purchase as a real estate
speculation, selling his lands in parcels, at first to small private
individuals and later to aggregations of enterprising men.'
A good many similar deals have been made since with some of the land Pell
bought, but at higher figures.
Pell had tried several other ventures in the way of land purchases before
what is now Westchester caught his eye, and his home was really at
Fairfield, Conn., according to the best accounts. Like a lot of the
Englishmen in those parts he decided that New York and its vicinity was
too good for the Dutchmen.
Perhaps he saw with the eye of the shrewd real estate speculator what
splendid villa sites lay along the Sound. At any rate he and a few
companions in 1654 made their way through the wilderness, took a look at
the country lying between Bronck's River, as it was then called, and the
Sound and told the sachems that they wanted to buy.
According to one of the Westchester legends concerning the old treaty tree
he and his friends saw a lot of fishhawks making their nests in the trees
there and made up their minds that the birds would bring them good luck.
That was why they got the sachems Ann-Hoock and Wampage [sic] to meet them
there and talk business.
The treaty provided that Pell was to get 'all that tract of land called
West Chester, which is bounded on the East by a brook called Cedar Tree
Brook, or gravelly brook, thence by marked trees until it reaches the
Sound.'
This land extended from East Chester to New Rochelle, and Pelham, Pelham
Manor and Pelham Bridge have taken their names from the purchaser of it.
Pell was made a lord of the manor by royal grant in 1666 and before he
died he had already unloaded several parcels presumably at a handsome
profit. One of the first sales he made was that consisting of the old
settlement of East Chester.
Although Lord Thomas Pell, as he aftward became, didn't settle on this
property himself his nephew and heir, John Pell, did and he carved up more
of the property, selling New Rochelle to some of the Huguenots.
According to Randall Comfort, one of the local historians, the old Pell
manor house stood near the old tree facing what is now a thoroughfare for
automobiles and for years was supposed to be full of ghosts, so that
lonely travelers along the lane gave it a wide berth.
Mr. Comfort and others who have taken an interest in the old tree have
asked the Park Department to mark the spot where it stood with a tablet
telling the story of the little real estate deal supposed to have been
made there.

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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:39 AM
Comment
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Posting for July 24, 2007.
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