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| Just as you can't swing a dead cat (sorry, PETA) without hitting something called "Richmond" in Staten Island, The Bronx is filled with place names ending in "-chester," as in Westchester, Eastchester, Parkchester. Until 1874, The Bronx was a part of Westchester County -- New York County annexed the portion of Bronx County west of the Bronx River that year (Morrisania, West Farms and Kingsbridge), and east of the Bronx River in 1895 (the town of Westchester and parts of Eastchester and Pelham). The following year City Island voted to become part of NYC; New York County became a part of Greater NY in 1898, and finally, The Bronx became its own borough in 1914. The old town of Westchester is still represented by Westchester Square, where Westchester Avenue and East Tremont Avenue come together, and the square still resembles the county village it once was. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I have spent quite a bit of time in Westchester Square during my Forgottenhood -- I admire its compactness amid the sprawling Bronx, which remains the Borough of Apartment Buildings and is more relentlessly urban than any other borough save Manhattan, despite the thousands of acres that make up Bronx Park, Van Cortlandt Park and Pelham Bay Park. My times here have not always been happy ones -- I was in Westchester Square a great deal in the early summer of 2003, when my father was headed to the last roundup at nearby Calvary Hospital. But what a weekend it was in September 2006 when ForgottenTour 26 steamed through Westchester Square and Parkchester the same weekend the ForgottenBook hit the bookstore shelves. Did I miss anything in Westchester Square? If I did, perhaps this brief FNY series can fill in the blanks.
Westchester Square, even to the present day, appears to be a small town hub, clustering around the triangle formed by Westchester, East Tremont and Lane Avenues. The “town” has recently celebrated its 350th anniversary, having been settled here, as Oostdorp (‘east village’) by the Dutch in 1654 and taken over by the British with the rest of New Amsterdam in 1664. It became a busy port along Westchester Creek, which hastened its development; by 1693 St. Peter’s Episcopal Church was founded. The parish is still in existence. During the Revolution, patriots dismantled a bridge over the creek, delaying British advancement (the present-day bridge carries East Tremont Avenue over the creek).





Note the inscription mentioning "Dock Street." It is one of the oldest byways in the Bronx, running between East Tremont and Ferris Place. Along with Kirk Street (see this FNY Bronx alleys page) it was a landing point for ships approaching the town of Oostdorp, now Westchester Square, in the days of New Amsterdam. Since 1989, it has sat forlornly behind a chain link fence on the property of the Schildwachter Fuel Oil Corp.




On to Westchester Square Part 2: the North Square
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Page completed January 19, 2010
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