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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
December 23, 2009
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
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BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
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Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Attack on the Toonerville Trolley by Strikers in 1916
Pelham and nearby localities suffered through a violent, months-long
strike of trolley line workers in 1916. In October of that year, the
Westchester Electric Railroad Company decided to try to reopen the
strike-closed line between New Rochelle and Mount Vernon that ran through
Pelham. That line included a portion of the tracks along which ran the
Pelham Manor trolley that inspired Fontaine Fox to create the Toonerville
Trolley portrayed in his long-running Toonerville Folks comic strip.
Pelham Manor detailed members of its police force to ride along the line
to protect the cars and their crew members as the cars bounced along the
tracks through the Village of Pelham Manor. When the trolley cars passed
from Pelhamdale Avenue onto Colonial Avenue toward Wolf's Lane, however,
they entered the tiny little Village of Pelham (today's neighborhood known
as Pelham Heights). Pelham Manor police considered the area out of their
jurisdiction. They hopped off the trolley cars as strkers approached the
cars for a coordinated attack.
Charges were leveled against members of the police forces of the Villages
of North Pelham and Pelham Manor for allegedly standing by during the
subsequent violence. One report even accused a member of the Pelham Manor
police force of skulking away through vacant lots as strikers approached
to attack.
An extensive article about some of the violence appeared in the October
28, 1916 issue of the New Rochelle Pioneer. A large excerpt from
that article is quoted below.
"ANOTHER RIOT AND AN ACCIDENT MARK SEVENTH WEEK OF STRIKE
-----
LOCAL STRIKERS DESCEND ON PELHAM AND TEMPORARILY STOP TROLLEY CARS FROM
OPERATING ON MAIN LINE TO MOUNT VERNON -- REAR-END COLLISION NEAR ELK
AVENUE INJURES FOUR PERSONS -- COMPANY OFFICIALS CLAIM THAT STRIKE IS NEAR
COLLAPSE.
-----
Temporarily stopping trolley cars on main line between this city and Mount
Vernon, and a collision between cars in this city, were the chief
incidents that marked the seventh week of the strike.
Fifty striking trolleymen from this city made good their threat to stop
the traffic between New Rochelle and Mount Vernon last Saturday afternoon
after the main line had been opened by the Westchester Electric Railroad
Company that morning, by resuming the service with three cars on a
twenty-minute headway. While the police of Pelham Manor, headed by Chief
Marks, who claimed the trouble was taking place in Pelham Heights and
therefore he had no authority to interfere, witnessed their tactics, the
crowd savagely attacked the cars and their crews, hurling stones through
the windows.
Because it is alleged that the Pelham Manor police who up to that time had
been riding on the cars got off and gave no protection, the trolley
company accuses the police of neglect of duty and insinuates cowardice.
One policeman is alleged by the company to have jumped off the car he was
detailed to guard and to have left the scene via vacant lots when he saw
the crowd of strikers approaching.
Not only were two New Rochelle-Mount Vernon cars stoned, but the Pelham
Manor car was damaged. All three cars were discontinued in service
temporarily, and with the motormen behind the screened vestibules, the
cars were finally run through the gauntlet of stones and sticks into Mount
Vernon, a sanctuary. No arrests were made, although the trolley company
officials claim that Chief Marks and four or five men as well as Chief
Holden of Pelham Heights with one other policeman, were witnesses of the
happenings. The service on the main line was resumed yesterday morning.
After leaving Pelham Manor the crowd of strikers returned to this city,
where on Mayflower Avenue the men bombarded a Webster Avenue car, breaking
six windows and denting the car. The crowd evidently was after William
Smith, a motorman who had remained faithful to the company but Smith came
through unhurt. Three New Rochelle policemen drew their guns and started
after the crowd, but the strikers ran away. As the police were pursuing
them, they saw another crowd approaching the car from the opposite
direction and had to give up the chase to protect the company's property.
There were a number of women and children in the car, and several of them
were hit and cut by glass.
Strikers were again active in this city on Sunday in stoning cars and two
arrests were made. A crowd gathered on Drake Avenue and threw stones at a
Glen Island car, breaking several windows, so William Hubbard, Saul Levy
and Walter Pickwick, striking motormen, were arrested, in connection with
the disturbance.
Wednesday witnessed the first accident since the cars were resumed here.
A rear-end collision between two cars occurred on North Avenue near Elk
Avenue, about 8 o'clock in the morning, and as a result, four persons were
injured. Three were taken to the New Rochelle Hospital -- Mrs. Elizabeth
Dunn of 8 Morgan Street, for a sprained ankle; Motorman John Peters for
wounds received when glass cut his face, and Special Officer Michael
Buckley, whose arm was bruised. Officer John E. Godding was bruised on
one leg, but he remained on duty.
Leaves on the rail is given as the probable cause of the accident. Two
cars were sent up North Avenue together. According to witnesses the first
car was stopped to let Mrs. Dunn get off. The second car, some distance
behind, was following at a fair rate of speed, and it is believed that the
motorman could not stop it when it slid on its brakes over the rails. The
second car crashed into the first just as Mrs. Dunn alighted, the front
vestibule of the former being smashed and a piece of its door hurled
forward, striking Mrs. Dunn on the ankle.
Other than these incidents, nothing violent or of a serious consequence
has occurred. Ten cars are being operated on almost schedule time in this
city and an increasing number of passengers ride every day.
On Monday, a number of strikers and their sympathizers, concealed in the
grass near East Main Street, in the Dillon Park section, waited for the
approach of the Larchmont car. They were seen by Motorcycle Officer
Sutton and the special policemen on the car. The car was stopped and the
three policemen charged into the lot with drawn clubs. The crowd did not
wait, but ran for the weeds, where they disappeared. Then the car
proceeded unmolested.
Mayor Griffing sent an invitation to ten of the strikers to appear at a
conference on Wednesday with Edward A. Maher, General Manager and
Superintendent William E. Wheeler of the trolley company, in order that a
solution of the strike might be reached, but Messrs. Griffing, Maher and
Wheeler were greeted by a letter which stated that the men declined to
attend the conference on the ground that the officials of the trolleymen's
union had been ignored, and that it was discoureous to these officials.
Failing to get the assistance they had expected from the two federal
mediators, John A. Moffit and James A. Smyth, Secretary of Labor Wilson's
staff, the strikers on Tuesday night called on Governor Whitman to use his
good offices in procuring a settlement with the companies by sending the
following telegram, which was signed by presidents of the eight local
unions:
'The undersigned officers, representing 11,000 striking street car men of
New York City and vicinity who have been on strike for the last seven
weeks to establish the right of organization and permit the execution of
collective bargaining recognized by the law of the supreme court of the
United States, have been instructed by the unanimous vote of the
membership of the several different divisions to request of you, as
governor of the state of New York, to use the power of your great office
and your personal influence to adjust the present difficulty between the
street railway companies and this great army of men now on strike, which
will relieve the demoralization existing on the traffic lines of New York
City and vicinity.'
So far as the Westchester Electric Railroad Company is concerned, the
strike is practically broken, according to what the officials say now.
Practically every line of the company is in operation, the service is
gradually being extended to include the running of cars at night and more
strikers continue to return to work. It has been stated by the trolley
company's representatives that twenty of the regular motormen and
conductors including John Gotti, the motorman who is well known in this
city, who had remained faithful and refused to go out on strike, were now
working regularly. Moreover the men are receiving double pay.
Estimates are made that a majority of the striking carmen have found
employment elsewhere. Attendance at the daily meetings of the men has
dwindled until now only a handful of strikers gather in the various
meeting places. These are mostly the old men who have not secured work
anywhere else and who have found it possible to subsist on whatever
earnings they might have laid by, supplemented by the strike benefits
which come through occasionally from Detroit.
One of the men said to newspaper men yesterday: 'This is the forty-eighth
day since the strike began and all I have received from the union has been
$10. That doesn't go far toward supporting myself, my wife and three
children, does it? Last week I worked as a driver in a meat market,
twelve hours a day except on Saturday when it was fifteen, and I almost
killed myself with the hard work, but I needed twelve dollars. Before
going on strike I had a clean job. The hours were not long. The pay was
good and I could live well. Now all is changed, and I am standing here on
the corner trying to make up my mind whether I ought to go back to the
trolley company again. . . . ."
Source: Another Riot and an Accident Mark Seventh Week of Strike, New
Rochelle Pioneer, Vol. 58, No. 29, Oct. 28, 1916, p. 1, col. 1.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:38 AM
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