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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 28, 2008
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.
Monday, January 28, 2008
1884 Burglary and Gun Fight at the Pelham Manor Depot
The population of Pelham grew quickly after the Civil War. With
development came problems, particularly as so-called “tramps” found the
area enticing and hitched rides to Pelham on trains running on the New
Haven Main Line and the Branch Line. Before the Village of Pelham Manor
was incorporated in 1891, local residents founded the Pelham Manor
Protective Club as a means of working together for the good of their
community. Nearly the entire adult male population of the area – 52 local
residents – subscribed as members. Members of the DeWitt family of Pelham
Manor were members of the "Club".
The purpose of the club was “to assist the public authorities in
maintaining law and order within a radius of one mile from Pelham Manor
Depot....” The club raised money to fund its work, which included guarding
against tramps, petty thieves, stray livestock and other local problems.
The records of the club, which was disbanded once the village of Pelham
Manor was incorporated, provide documentation of the development of a
local government in lower Westchester County in the 1880s.
As part of the locality's crime-fighting initiative, burglar alarms were
installed in a number of locations including the little Pelham Manor Train
Depot on the New Haven Branch Line where burglars had struck before. One
evening, that burglar alarm awoke R. C. DeWitt who raced to the Depot with
his pistol and soon found himself in a gun battle with the burglars. An
Account of the incident appeared in the January 10, 1884 issue of the
New-York Tribune and is transcribed below.
"PELHAM MANOR -- About one a.m. yesterday Mr. R. C. DeWitt, of Pelham
Manor, was aroused by the ringing of his burglar alarm, which indicated
that the depot of the New-York, New-Haven and Hartford Railroad Company on
the Harlem River Branch had been entered by burglars. Mr. De Witt went to
the station, armed with his revolver. Then he discovered that a couple of
burglars had forced their way through a small window into the ticket
office. He fired at them five times, and the robbers in return fired shot
for shot, without effect. They made their escape from the building,
followed by Mr. De Witt and some of his neighbors; but owing to the storm
and darkness of the night all trace of them was soon lost. They obtained
only a small amount of money."
Source: Pelham Manor, New-York Tribune, Jan. 10, 1884, p. 8, col.
4.
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:27 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for January 28, 2008.
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