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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 11, 2010
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).
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Thursday, February 11, 2010
Prospect Hill Landowners Face Loss of Their Properties in 1900 Due to
Allegedly Defective Deeds
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Historic Pelham Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/.
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I recently ran across an odd, yet interesting, little item published in
1900. It indicates that heirs of a landowner who once owned the Prospect
Hill area of today's Pelham Manor planned in 1900 to file suit to recover
the entire area under a theory that the property owner's deeds were
defective. The article is transcribed below in its entirety, followed by
a citation to its source.
"PELHAM MANOR NEWS.
-----
Townsend's Heirs Will Sue to Prove They Own the Entire Manor.
Residents of Pelham Manor are interested in a suit to be brought in the
Supreme Court of Westchester County to recover practically the whole of
the manor for the heirs of John E. Townsend, who owned the property in
1819, and died intestate. The property consists of ninety acres, used for
residential purposes. The value of this is said to be about $350,000.
Those heirs who are about to begin suit to recover are poor. They live in
Brooklyn. They are Andrew E. Townsend and Herman Fischer.
Townsend is employed in the Navy Yard, and lives at No. 653 Metropolitan
avenue. Fischer is an electrical worker, and lives with his wife and two
children at 287 Bleecker street.
Fischer is a grandson of the original owner of the Pelham Manor property,
John E. Townsend. The other contestant is an uncle of Fischer.
John E. Townsend sold the property to Andrew J. Conselyea, who made a
contract with the Prospect Hill Village Land Association to sell it. No
deed was given to the association, it is held, therefore the titles to all
the property, which it afterward disposed of in villa sites, are said to
be defective.
The association went out of existence in the early seventies.
Some heirs of Andrew Conselyea have joined their claims with those of
Fischer and Townsend. The latter have retained Henry Bonowitz, a lawyer
of Brooklyn.
The whole of the disputed Pelham property is occupied by handsome
residences."
Source: Pelham Manor News -- Townsend's Heirs Will Sue to Prove They Own
the Entire Manor, New Rochelle Pioneer, Feb. 24, 1900, p. ?, col. 2
(newspaper page contains no printed page number).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/.
Please
Click Here for Index to All Blog Postings.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:31 AM
Comment
Click Here to View the Blog Posting for
February 11, 2010.
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