Saturday, December 12, 2009

The Branch gets its Name (Part II)

Early Long Island was linked by Indian trails, which existed long before European settlers moved to the area.  In the Five Towns area,  Broadway and Rockaway Turnpike follow those routes.  When the railroad laid track through the Long Island communities, many areas were named for the families who had owned the land. In the southern part of the Town of Hempstead Foster's Meadow, Pearsall's Corners, Jennings Corners, Brower's Point and Hewletts were the first names of the communities of and near the Rockaway Peninsula (click for map).


Throughout the United States, the birth of the railroads saw a boom in railroad stocks and real estate values as railroads made long distance commutation a reality.  As early as 1855 brothers Alfred, George and Newbold Lawrence invested in large tracts of farmland in the area called Rockaway Neck.  I n 1870, when the Lawrence brothers donated land for the South Side Rail Road station, the name was changed officially to Lawrence. Their planned resort community grew around the station and, after the establishment of the Rockaway Hunt Club in 1884, attracted many of its members.


In 1869, Thomas and Samuel Marsh, who made their fortune in the grain business, bought most of the farmland between Woodsburgh and the property held by the Lawrence Brothers to the West. The land they donated to the railroad became the Ocean Point station. When a post office was established on the grounds of the Rockaway Hunt Club, it was given the name of Cedarhurst, for the grove of cedars which surrounded it.

In the 1870s, Samuel Wood began to purchase property for the development of an exclusive vacation community. He named the community Woodsburgh, after his family. Wood opened the Woodsburgh Pavilion, a luxury hotel on Woodsburgh Boulevard and Broadway and attracted wealthy vacationers to the resort by the bay. Thirty years later, Robert Burton bought the Wood properties from Samuel Wood's heirs. He then proceeded to demolish most of the existing structures and create his vision of a modern, affluent residential community. When a post office was established, the authorities rejected the name of Woodsburgh as being too similar to Woodbury, another Long Island community. "Woodmere" was chosen as an alternative. This evidently was no longer a problem in 1912, when the incorporated village of Woodsburgh was created.



The South Side Rail Road, an early competitor subsequently absorbed by the Long Island Rail Road, established the rights to cross existing property lines and to establish stations. Land speculators like Samuel Wood, the Lawrence brothers and the Marsh brothers donated land for railway stations in the hope of attracting potential investors to the area.





When the railroad came to the area known as Hewletts, they established a station and, for about three months in 1869, it was named Cedar Grove. In October 1869, the name Hewletts appeared on the Rockaway Branch timetable and remained until the 1890's when it was replaced by the name "Fenhurst." A "fen" is a term for a marsh or a swamp, and local residents were unhappy with that connotation. In 1893, Augustus J. Hewlett, a descendent of George Hewlett, who established 17th Century settlement, donated land to build a station, with the codicil that the Hewlett name be re-established.

The 1870 station house still functions as the Hewlett station. The oldest of the LIRR's station houses and the only one to be erected by a predecessor of the LIRR, it has been restored and renovated and retains much of its original charm.


Inwood, which shares its name with a neighborhood in northern Manhattan, was originally known as North West Point. A fishing community from its early Nineteenth Century origins, it was name for its location on the Rockaway Peninsula. As the population expanded after the Civil War, the area became known as Westville. In 1888, when it was decided to apply for a post office, Westville suffered the same fate as Woodsburgh -- another community had taken the name. The residents then decided on "Inwood," and so it is known today.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The Branch Gets its Name

When the Brooklyn and Jamaica Railroad Company was incorporated in 1832, Long Island was sparsely populated farmland and forest. The occasional settlements were connected by dirt trails originally cut through the woodlands and over the plains by generations of Native Americans and the settlers who came after. Horses and stage coaches were the main forms of long-distance transportation during the Eighteenth and early Nineteenth centuries. Many people either walked or stayed home.

Stage coach routes stopped at Jennings Corners (Broadway and Rockaway Turnpike in today's Lawrence) and at the Weyant General Store and post office (pictured above*-- located near the Broadway and Franklin Avenue intersection in today's Hewlett) on the route from Far Rockaway to Hempstead. Individual settlements were known by family names (Hewletts, Jennings Corners) or by identifying land elements (North West Point, Ocean Point, Hewlett Neck, Rockaway Neck). The area between Far Rockaway and Near Rockaway (named for their proximity or distance from Hempstead village) was simply known as the Rockaway Peninsula or the Rockaways.

The Long Island Rail Road, which was incorporated in 1834, expanded the Brooklyn and Jamaica line and began a route which was intended to connect New York and Boston. The track was to stretch to Greenport, where a ferry would connect with Stonington, Connecticut. Passengers would then continue on by rail to Providence and Boston. In 1844, when the route was completed, trains completed what had previously been a three-day journey from Brooklyn to Greenport in less than five hours!
In September 1860, the South Side Rail Road was established to bring rail transport to Long Island's South Shore. During the Civil War years, an uncertain financial climate forced several delays in the company's establishment. With the war's end in 1865 stocks and bonds were offered for public sale and the building of a south shore rail route from Brooklyn to Patchogue began.


The beaches of Far Rockaway had attracted summer vacationers since the 1830's. The end of the war brought a renewed interest in the area and the directors of the South Side Rail Road saw an opportunity to provide transporation to the area. The Far Rockaway Branch Rail Road was incorporated in July 1869, connecting Valley Stream with Far Rockaway. As a result, the Long Island Rail Road offered a competiing line with the founding of the New York and Rockaway Railroad Company in 1870, to provide service between Jamaica and Far Rockaway.






*from the Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library Local History collection
Railroad illustrations courtesy of Art Huneke at ArrtsArchives.com

Further information:
Web sites
Online Databases (requires H-WPL library card login)

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Marshing Season


The early settlers of the Town of Hempstead were primarily farmers and tradesmen. Like the native American tribes who inhabited the land, the European settlers of Seventeenth Century Hempstead found the area well-suited to the cultivation of corn and beans. They added other grains and found they still had plenty of area to graze cattle and sheep on the open grasslands of the Hempstead Plain.
The vast marshlands of the South Shore were held as common land by the Hempstead townsmen. Natural sources of salt hay --dried wild marsh grasses like sedge and cordgrass -- the marshes required no cultivation and provided a rich winter fodder for the animals as well as mulch for crops. It was also used for mattress stuffing and in the making of paper. As early as 1667, the Hempstead townsmen protected this natural resource by regulating the cutting of the common marshes and imposing fines on anyone who began the harvest before the approved date, usually the second Tuesday in September -- the beginning of Marshing Season.

This process turned into an eagerly anticipated annual event, as the Town's male population -- and sometimes complete families -- headed south to camp out on the marshes for what amounted to a working holiday. Daniel Tredwell (1826-1921) remembers with humor and great detail the nine-day stay in the marshing camp "during which period we slept on the marsh, ate eel and clam chowder and smothered flounders, or fluke, with the mess."


His diary entries of September 1842 recall how the first to arrive would set up a rake, pitchfork, grindstone or other device to stake his claim to the area, which was honored by those who followed. No sedge could be cut on Monday, so the time was devoted to construction of shelters and preparation for the next day's work.

As the sun rose on Tuesday, another delay was caused by the native snail population. As the snails climbed the sedge stalks to collect a drop of fresh water, their hard shells and great numbers made it impossible to cut the grass without damaging the scythes. Two hours later, the snails had abandoned the tall grass and the harvest could progress unimpaired. Tredwell writes that by 9:30 a.m. their first freight had been loaded and was being transported to the landing.

 

In the early days, the hay was cut by hand, but horse teams were also employed, as in this illustration from Sand Dunes and Salt Marshes, by Charles W. Townsend (Estes, 1913).






The photograph on the right,  demonstrates how the hay was transported in scows which could carry ten ordinary boat loads. Towed or poled, they were used to ferry the hay to the mainland, where it was cured and stacked. Most of the hay was consumed by the local cattle, but for those who could transport it there, the Hay Market Exchange in Brooklyn was an additional source of revenue for the Long Island farmer.

Further research:

Sunday, July 19, 2009

New York World's Fair 1939-40

The theme was "Building the World of Tomorrow". For New Yorkers in the late 1930's, the Great Depression had severely impacted most families and war in Europe was already a very real possibility for the U.S.




















These photographs from the Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library collection, were photographed by Gibson resident Max Hubacher.

When the New York World's Fair opened at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park on a hot April day in 1939, it was the largest exposition of its kind ever planned. It's modernistic sculptures, the Trylon and Perisphere symbolised the brave new world where industrial design would improve everyone's lives. The Fair showcased Corporate America's innovations for the future: improved methods of transportation, medicine, farming and food production, advancements in communication -- the spectacular introduction of television!

Four years earlier, a group of retired policemen came up with the idea to promote commerce and good will in a recovering nation and to give people a reason to rejoice. Former Chief of Police Grover Whalen was elected President of The New York World's Fair Corporation, which brought titans of commerce and industry into the enterprise, and included Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and Park Commissioner Robert Moses to organize and run the exposition. The corporation paid for the renovation of the Flushing
Meadow area, which was at the time a dumping ground, and arranged that it would become a city park after the Fair.

While the event was a commercial showcase, it was also a diplomatic event, structured to present the benefits of the American way of life as the pathway to personal freedom and economic success.

Hitler's Germany did not participate in the Fair. By the time the Polish and Czech pavilions were completed, their countries had been invaded by Germany and, effectively, no longer existed. The Soviet presence at the Fair already portended the tension of the Cold War; the U.S.S.R. pavilion was razed and replaced in the 1940 season by an open plaza called the "American Common." By the summer of 1940, France had fallen, Italy had invaded Ethopia and Britain had declared war on Germany.
Over 200,000 people attended the April 30th grand opening. The admission fee, which was considered expensive at the time, was seventy-five cents for adults and twenty-five cents for children. (A subway ride was five cents). Over 44 million people had visited the exhibits by the end of the second season. Yet, the Fair did not make a profit.









For further Inofrmation:
Search for information about the Fair in the ALISweb Catalog

Related links:

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Memorial Day

Decoration Day was first observed after the Civil War as an opportunity to decorate the graves of soldiers who died in the war. New York officially recognized the holiday in 1873, but it was not a national holiday until 1971. In fact, it was only after World War I that the ceremonies honored those who have died in all American wars.

We walk and drive past it every day and may not even know it's there. Once a year, maybe twice, we notice the red, white and blue decorations which have been placed there. The granite memorial on the corner of Broadway and Conklin Avenue in Woodmere was dedicated on Memorial Day (May 31) 1948 to the

sacred memory of those from Woodmere and Hewlett who gave their lives to defend and preserve this nation
The old Rockaway Journal articles recount that the weather was not pleasant on that Memorial Day. Yet, a crowd of 1,500 gathered in a parade, half of which began at the Lawrence Station progressing towards Woodmere Boulevard.

Veteran and civic groups, members of houses of worship, Boy and Girl Scouts and fire companies from Lawrence, Cedarhurst and Inwood joined a their counterparts from Hewlett and Woodmere, which marched down Broadway from Prospect Avenue.


Clergy from the local churches and synagogues delivered the Benediction and Invocation. Featured speakers included Charles Hewlett, Chairman of the Dedication, Chauncey Ogden, Superintendent of Schools, and Brigadier General Cornelius Wickersham, a prominent attorney with a distinguished military career. His father had been Attorney General under President William Howard Taft.

Members of the Woodmere-Hewlett Exchange Club, 1942
(left to right: George Hewlett, Chauncey Ogden, Gaylord Healy,
President; Harry Pearlstein, Wallace Small, Rev. Leon Kofod, Charles Hewlett)

The memorial to those lost in the two World Wars was purchased with donations from the community, most of them $2 and $5 and organized by the Woodmere-Hewlett Exchange Club, the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

H.K. Peacock Memorials in New York City created the monument, which replaced a temporary honor roll listing local servicemen and women.

Landscaped by Dalisimer Inc., the permanent memorial was on the grounds of Woodmere High School. Just a few years before, most of those listed on the granite were students there. Below are archival photographs of some of the memorialized servicemen. They were brothers, husbands, and sons and they lived in the neighborhoods of your home town.


Photographs of some of those from the Five Towns lost in World War II


So the next time you walk down Broadway, or are stuck in traffic in front of Woodmere Bicycle shop, take a moment and recall the sacrifice of these servicemen and their brothers and sisters whom we honor this Memorial Day.















Memorial Day ceremonies, 1992

Monday, March 23, 2009

Gardens in the Five Towns

At the first sign of daffodils, many Long Islanders head straight to the beautiful gardens of estates that once housed the rich and powerful. Old Westbury Gardens, Planting Fields and Bayard Cutting Arboreteum were made available to the public when the costs of maintaining them became prohibitive for their owners or their heirs. Although most of the Five Towns estates were sold and subdivided when the postwar exodus to the suburbs made housing a priority, the Five Towns at the turn-of-the-century was home to many who shared the society pages with Astors and Rockefellers.


George Woodward Wickersham (1858-1936), Attorney General under William Howard Taft, was a prominent New York corporate lawyer. Marshfield, his summer home, is described in a 1928 article in the New York Times as being:


"...filled with many varieties of roses. The entire garden is
surrounded by on [sic] ivy cov
ered brick wall. In the midstof the flowers are a picturesque fountain and several bird baths."



Marshfield, located in what is now Lawrence was designed by the architecture firm of Foster, Gade and Graham. A small, Shingle Style house, it nevertheless sat on extensive grounds which included a pond. Landscape architect Mary Rutherfurd Jay (1872-1953) worked with Mildred Wickersham and in 1914 created a Japanese garden, adding man-made islands to the existing one, and planting evergreens, rhododendrons, bamboo, and azaleas. The Wickershams were among several families who annually opened their gardens for fundraising activities.

William Fox (1879-1952) the founder of the Fox Film Corporation, built his estate, Fox Hall, in Woodmere in the 1920s. The Rose Garden was one of several gardens on the property, which included a boat house and a 125-seat movie theatre. Fox, who made his fortune in a true American immigrant rags to riches story, was one of the pioneers of the film industry. He lost his fortune after the 1929 stock market crash and, after a series of law suits and questionable business dealings, he declared bankrupcy in 1936.



Isaac D. Levy, president of Oppenheim, Collins and Co., made his fortune in New York's garment industry. Roselle Manor, his Cedarhurst summer home, was built in the early 1900s in the style of an English Renaissance manor house. Designed by the architects Buchman and Fox, it was landscaped by the firm of Lord and Burnham, who designed the conservatory for the property.




In the early part of the 20th century, Joseph Auerbach, the attorney for the Hewlett Bay Company, owned vast tracts of land in the Five Towns. His own home, Seawane, was to become the clubhouse for the Sewane Club, a country club on over 35 acres in Hewlett Harbor, which has been in existence since 1927.






Five Oaks was the estate of William H. Erhart (d.1940), Chairman of the Board of the Pfizer Company. Another of the homes which was open to the public for charity benefits, a 1928 article in the New York Times describes the property:


"The estate has an enchanting rose garden with a novel
and effective background of rambler roses combined with apple trees.
Hundreds of heliotropes are in full bloom in the formal garden."


For more information:

Books:





Saturday, January 31, 2009

Fred Ward's Bicycle Shop

Lance Armstrong would have felt right at home in 1890's Long Island. Before automobiles became a practical alternative, the bicycle had a bloom of popularity which owed its success to the mechanical improvements of the Industrial age. In the early 1800s, the gearless "hobby horse" and the big-wheeled "bone crusher" (shown at the left in an illustration from Harper's Weekly ) evolved into the more familiar "safety bicycle" design which sported gears and brakes.

In 1880, the League of American Wheelmen was formed to promote bicyclists' interests. Over the next decade, local clubs of cyclists or "wheelmen" formed throughout the country. While many engaged in bicycle racing, most were formed as social clubs, with dining and drinking almost as important as riding. The Long Island Wheelmen, The Brooklyn Wheelmen, The Century Wheelmen, The Nassau Wheelmen, the Dean's Cycle Club, the Riverside Wheelmen, the Greenwich Wheelmen, Manhasset Cyclers, the Lexington Wheelmen are just a few of the local groups represented in articles about the popularity of cycling. By 1898, according to the League of American Bicyclists' web site, the League had more than 102,000 members, including the Wright Brothers, Diamond Jim Brady and John D. Rockefeller. Many clubs had meeting halls and admitted women as well as men.

Susan B. Anthony (in a February 2, 1896 interview with The New York World) said:

"Let me tell you what I think of bicycling. I think it has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world. It gives women a feeling of freedom and self-reliance. I stand and rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a wheel...the picture of free, untrammelled womanhood."
In 1880, part of New York City's Washington's Birthday celebration featured a rallye of all the bicycle clubs from the New York area and from as far away as Hartford, Boston, Trenton and Philadelphia. The route stretched from Third Avenue in New York City to Tarrytown, NY, where the participants would dine and then return to the City (a round trip of at least 50 miles.)

An article in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle (7/22/1895) details another ride which passed through Freeport on the way to Patchogue. Among the names listed in the article is one Fred Ward, whose bicycle shop is pictured below.













Note the motors on some of the bicycles. Beginning with early models in the 1860's, motorized bikes like those designed by French and German inventors (most notably Gottlieb Daimler in 1885) entered the market and in 1895, the DeDion-Buton company of France designed a lightweight, 4-stroke combustion engine which allowed the mass production of motorcycles. This was rapidly copied by Harley-Davidson and Indian and American motorcycle companies quickly made up for lost time.

Anyone with information about Mr. Ward and/or the location of his shop is invited to contact the Library.
Further reading in the Hewlett-Woodmere collection:

From our Historic newspapers: (New York Times requires ProQuest login):
From other Internet sources: