Highbridge photo taken 6/22/2001 by Susan Casey

                               

 

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1060anderson.jpg (52727 bytes)

This is my mother standing in front of 1060 Anderson Ave.   

CASCADES.jpg (60155 bytes)

Remember the Cascades Pool on Jerome Ave.?  Notice the Old Train on the El? 

1139ander1922.jpg (67205 bytes)

Our house "1139 Anderson Ave" circa late 1920's

1139construction.jpg (64700 bytes)

This is a view of the house while still under construction.  Notice the top of Anderson and the tip of that old house that used to be there.  I think we called it the Brown's House because it used to be part of a farm owned by the Brown family. This picture must have been taken around 1907 when my grandfather had the house built.

jeromepark.jpg (73721 bytes)

My uncle at Jerome Park (at least that is how we referred to it)

 

onstoop1139.jpg (53615 bytes)

On the steps of upper porch of our house, notice the background. There are no buildings built there yet.  This is around 1923

acrossfrom1139.jpg (54996 bytes)

My grandmother with my aunt standing on the east side of Anderson in front of the big apartment houses just off of 167th St.

privatehouseacrossthest.jpg (58587 bytes)

 This is the small private house just across the street from mine on east side of Anderson at the bottom of the hill.  The apartment building which was next to it was not built yet. 

 momfriensanders.jpg (50694 bytes)

 This is the same house as I mentioned above.  The private homes next to it were long gone by the time I was around.  In their place was a big apartment house. 

 momatNelson.jpg (56470 bytes)

 My mother on the stoop of house on corner of Nelson Ave. and 166th St. right across from the Methodist Church.  My grandmother Mary McGowan lived there  

 uncedonanderson.jpg (45328 bytes)

Another shot facing east on Anderson and 167th St.  

ogdenjerome.jpg (70205 bytes)

Bottom of Ogden.  This was taken late 1920's  

momwithfriendanderson.jpg (53655 bytes)

Another shot on Anderson Ave. circa 1920's

 auntruth.jpg (64002 bytes)

This looks like it is in front of my Aunt's house on 166th and Nelson but the background looks more like Woodycrest to me???  This picture was taken sometime in the 1940's  

insidechurch.jpg (67265 bytes)

Picture of inside SH Church in the 50's.  My confirmation was the occasion.

wall2.jpg (52759 bytes)

About 1950.  Sitting on the wall at Macombs, Yankee Stadium is in background

walljerome1950's.jpg (77013 bytes)

Another shot of same site 

unclearpic.jpg (119339 bytes)


This picture is not clear but gives a view of the fountain at Macombs.

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My cousin Eddie Shalvey (my uncle Vinnie is in the background).  This was taken across from 919 Ogden Ave. where they lived. 

debbieferrara.jpg (175995 bytes)

This looks like Ogden Ave facing North.  The little girl in the picture lived next door to us at 1145 Anderson. 

bottomofogden.jpg (79970 bytes)

Again at the bottom of Ogden.  This time in 1959

ramona.jpg (81439 bytes)

Facing north on Anderson Ave. towards 167th St. The girl in the picture is Ramona Lopez.

sam'sdeli.jpg (79289 bytes)

In front of Sam's Bar and Deli on 167th Woodycrest. 

ramonasibs.jpg (60910 bytes)

This is not a very clear picture but you can somewhat see the stores on Woodycrest specifically Sam & Lou's candy store. 

meandMr..jpg (63240 bytes)

Can anyone tell me where this was taken?  I remember that house in the background but not where it is located.  And, no, that is not President Eisenhower, but a friend of my fathers, James Stapleton. lol

ps11classof27.jpg (132839 bytes) This is the class of '23' from PS 11.  Sorry that it is so torn up.  My mom is on your far right with the tie.  Could anyone else's parents be in this picture? You never know.

PS11.jpg (62526 bytes) Just for comparison sake I am putting this picture of PS11 although it is on my other site.  

momandlittlefriend.jpg (45315 bytes)

This is my mother standing with a friend (Grace Gilbert) in front of the old tennis courts on Woodycrest. They are on the Nelson Ave. side and behind them is the tennis courts and the apts on Woodycrest.  The tennis courts later became the playground we are all familiar with.  

momgracegilbert.jpg (116962 bytes)

Again my mother with Grace Gilbert (older now) standing on the corner of 166th right off of Nelson Ave.  It looks like they are standing on the spot of the tennis courts (now gone) but prior to the playground. 

dadparkbench.jpg (48952 bytes)

This is my father and it looks like he is sitting at Macombs Park.  This is probably in the 1930's.   

sylvieonbridge.jpg (66548 bytes)

  My uncle and a friend standing on the Washington Bridge or Highbridge? 

 grandpawall.jpg (45448 bytes)

This looks to be taken from Macombs facing North

sittingparkwall.jpg (55108 bytes)

I am not sure where this picture is taken.  It could be at the park at the base of Ogden. 

DadBunck.jpg (126387 bytes)


My Father sitting in front of the Bunck House on 164th and Woodycrest.  Taken in the 1950's

janetlaponporch.jpg (494605 bytes)


Sitting on my sister's lap on upper porch of our House on Anderson. You can see some of  Anderson in the background and the boys that used to play stickball there sitting on corner 

onaleash.jpg (497653 bytes)


My mother taking me for a walk at Macombs.  Notice the Wilson building in the background? 

denysewoodycrest1950's.jpg (137442 bytes)


This picture is of my cousin in front of  1040? Woodycrest.  This building used to be located right on the corner of 167th and Woodcrest adjacent to Sam's Deli. You can't see much of it but I wanted to put it here because the building is now gone as many are on Woodycrest Ave. 

rollerskatingonWoody.jpg (149848 bytes)


I am pretty sure this is on Woodycrest and 166th St. right in front of the Playground.  Can anyone verify this for me? 

thewadingpool.jpg (167641 bytes)


In front of the ever so deep wading pool down at Jerome Park 

 

 

This is an old pamphlet from the HB library that my mother saved.  

The branch has been a part of the community since 1901 when its first charter was granted. The High Bridge Free Library, as it was then called, started in Realty Hall at Merriam and Ogden Avenues.

In 1897 and 1901, two important library events occurred in New York City: The New York Public Library contracted to provide service in Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island; Andrew Carnegie gave $5,200,000 for library buildings. Thus, in 1907, the ‘Free Library’ was transferred to the New York system, and, in 1908, moved into its new quarters. It was the fourth of the system’s branch libraries to be established in the Bronx.

The two-story Dutch colonial building opened with 5,000 books. It served its quiet residential neighborhood well until the 1920’s when apartment houses sprang up everywhere bringing thousands of newcomers; In 1933, an extension, which doubled the size of the old library, was added and the book collection expanded to 19,000. An interior renovation in 1956 resulted in a new decor, modern lighting and equipment, and other improvements.

ORIGINALLY INDIAN TERRITORY, the High Bridge neighborhood \vas part of a tract called Keskeskeck, purchased from the Indians by the Dutch West India Company on August 3, 1639.

One of the first settlers there was Daniel Turneur, who in 1671 bought an 80-acre parcel. Confirmed by an Indian deed of May 10, 1676, the land corresponded roughly with the present High Bridge area and lay between the Harlem River and, as the Dutch knew it, Maenippis Kill.

Called Mentipathe by the Indians, the Kill was renamed Cromwell’s Creek about a century later for James Cromwell, a miller who worked for General Lewis Morris in the 1770’s. Jerome Avenue (formerly Central Avenue) now follows in part the bed of the filled-in creek, while Cromwell Avenue retains the original family name.

Although Turneur owned most of the low land and meadow along the Mentipathe, a farmer named Bickley lived on the hill west of the creek. One Frederick Devoe subsequently married Turneur’s daughter, the Bickley farm was added to the Turneur property, and the Devoe family then owned all the land south of about West l67th Street.

The Indians called the area Nuasin. Later it was referred to as Turneur’s Land, and finally, as Devoe’s Point or Neck. Little change was seen in the Point until nearly the middle of the 19th century when a major engineering project was undertaken by New York City.

The decision to make the Croton River a new source of New York’s water supply necessitated the construction of a huge aqueduct. Since an earlier court action protected the navigability of the Harlem River, the section of the aqueduct crossing the Harlem was supported by a pedestrian bridge high enough to permit boats to pass. Begun in August, 1839, the “high bridge” carried “ carried water on July 4, 1842, even though construction continued until 1848.

The original granite bridge was 1,450 feet long with  15 semi- circular arches 100 feet high. In the early 1920’s a single span of steel replaced the stone piers in the bed of the river to allow for increased navigation on the Harlem.

During the years of bridge construction, a hamlet grew up at the Bronx end of the new aqueduct. The community took its name from the bridge, and beginning in the l840’s, the neighborhood extending along Devoe’s Neck as far as Macomb’s Dam Bridge was known as Highbridgeville, later shortened to High Bridge.

The shopping center of the village was at Ogden Avenue and West 167th Street, where a general store, Spellman's Tavern, a dry goods store, and other establishments were located.  The old tavern still stands as do a few early homes and gardens. 

Toward the end of the 19th century, Highbridgeville was a resort area, and Harlem River steamers brought many tourists to its hotels and restaurants.  Above West 165th Street on the west side of Central (Jerome) Avenue, was a popular roadhouse called "Judge Smith's," where at the beginning of each winter, a magnum of champagne was offered as a prize to the first sleigh that came up from Macomb's Dam Bridge on its own runners. 

The early 1900's saw High Bridge young people sleigh riding, ice skating on Cromwell's Creek near P.S. No.114, attending strawberry festivals and May parties, minstrel shows and lantern slide lectures in old Realty Hall. 

Years have passed and the old homesteads and mansions had disappeared along with the orchards and stone walls separating pastures.  But High Bridge, New York City's oldest bridge, continues, to supply the city with 24,000,000 gallons of water a day.

 

Old clippings from the Sunday News 
New York Changing Scene Articles dated around late 1950's to early 1960's


click on image to enlarge

newsarticle.jpg (115455 bytes)     newsart2.jpg (190580 bytes)    newsart3.jpg (172259 bytes)

 

This old article is pretty beat up but I
think you will be still able to read it

hbfarm.jpg (181123 bytes)

 

Some more shots of High Bridge
    most of these are from the Library of Congress website

http://memory.loc.gov/

 

4a12688r.jpg (31817 bytes)    4a32413r.jpg (21343 bytes)    aerialhighbridge.jpg (54305 bytes)

hibridgetoday.jpg (114580 bytes)

hbold3.jpg (50495 bytes)    highbridold.jpg (43069 bytes)

These pictures are from Mike Daly.  Thank you Mike 

CoomesHotel.jpg (109516 bytes)    hbcrossingebay.jpg (21524 bytes)HighBridge1860.jpg (324568 bytes)

HighBrige1861print.jpg (481267 bytes)    HighbridgeFerryLanding.jpg (287473 bytes)

 

hbwatertower.jpg (57020 bytes)    highbr5.jpg (12674 bytes)
I don't remember where I got these pictures but they are the 
Highbridge Water Tower and entrance onto the Highbridge 
walkway which has been long closed up.

Some More Old News Articles 
regarding the construction of the Alexander Hamilton Bridge 

finishedjournal.jpg (209902 bytes)            finishedtimesart.jpg (282016 bytes)

Our Lost Doughboy

This is a picture of the Doughboy statue standing in a storeroom 
waiting to be restored and reinstated onto his base (picture below)at
the intersection of Ogden and University Aves.

***********
These pictures and following articles were sent to me 
from Denae Brewer of the Highbridge Horizons Newspaper

ourlostdoughboy.jpg (220149 bytes)        emptybase.jpg (150424 bytes)    

                    doughboyarticle1.jpg (367949 bytes)            doughboyarticle2.jpg (324204 bytes)

Remembering our old Library and the traveling 
library in the Bronx 

hb1.jpg (78200 bytes)    hb2.jpg (63718 bytes)    ex2.jpg (221370 bytes)

hb3.jpg (70273 bytes)    hb4.jpg (41521 bytes)    hb5.jpg (68543 bytes)

 

 ANOTHER OLD ARTICLE  
click on image to enlarge

hbarticle.jpg (69338 bytes)

 

Some more memorabilia 

My mother actually saved this in her scrapbook 
She used to commute when attending 
The College of Mt. St. Vincent 

 

Wow!!! This is a great site for old train buffs
Lots of pictures are here 

http://www.nycsubway.org/irt/irt-els/9th-ave-el.html

 

 

More stuff my mother saved!!! Would you believe????


bridgearticle.jpg (197614 bytes)

 

hbbowlingart.jpg (140698 bytes)

A couple of Highbridge views 
taken from the Circle Line Cruise

        viewfromcircleline.jpg (109249 bytes)               yankeestadiumcircleline.jpg (106432 bytes)

 

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