Philipse Manor Hall State Historic Site
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Philipse Manor Hall
Warburton Avenue and Dock Street
Yonkers, NY 10702
Phone: (914) 965-4027
Directions: By Metro-North (Hudson
Line): Just two blocks east of the Yonkers Station. From Saw
Mill River Parkway: Yonkers Avenue (exit 5) west for 1.25 miles,
right on Riverdale Avenue, and left into driveway after third
traffic light. From Route 9 (Broadway): From north, follow Route
9 to merge with Warburton Avenue, right on Warburton, continue
on Warburton for 4 miles, Manor Hall appears on right side,
make right into driveway; from south, Route 9 to Prospect Street,
left one black right on Riverdale Avenue, left into driveway
after third traffic light. |
On November 28, 1776, the same year that fifty-six Americans signed
the Declaration of Independence, well over 200 colonial New Yorkers
placed their signatures on a "Declaration of Dependence."
These signers were Loyalists, citizens who remained faithful to
their sovereign, George III, King of Great Britain. Prominent among
the signatures divas that of Frederick Philipse III, Lord of the
vast Manor of Philipsburg and resident of the elegant mansion known
today as Philipse Manor Hall.
Surrounded by the City of Yonkers, Philipse Manor Hall stands on
a site which was inhabited long before Europeans settled these shores.
The Algonquian-speaking Lenape Indians called it "Nappeckamack,"
or "trap fishing place," because fishing was so plentiful on the
nearby Nepperhan ("Trap") River. In 1646, Dutchman Adriaen van der
Donck obtained a grant for the region from the Dutch West India
Company, secured this title by purchasing the land from the Indians,
and built a sawmill on the river. The Nepperhan has since become
known as the Saw Mill River. The City of Yonkers attributes its
name to Adriaen van der Donck, for he was a "youncker," or young
nobleman, and his property came to be called "The Youncker's Land."
Van der Donck gave Yonkers its name, however, the real founder of the
city was another Dutchman, Frederick Philipse I. Philipse came to new
Amsterdam in the early 1650s as carpenter for Governor Peter Stuyvesant.
Through trade land acquisition, and a strategic marriage, Philipse amassed
a fortune. In 1672, Philipse purchased the Yonkers' Nepperhan mill site.
This was the beginning of what would become a 52,500-acre estate that
was established by a royal patent in 1693 as the "Lordship or Mannour
of Philips borough."
By that time, Philipse had already been operating profitable grist mills
at both his Yonkers property, or the "Lower Mills," and his
"Upper Mills" site on the Pocantico River, located in what is
today the village of North Tarrytown. Philipse constructed a dwelling
at his Lower Mills site in the 1680s, although his main residence was
in Manhattan. Around the Yonkers site clustered the mills, barns, and
other structures from which developed the present city. When Frederick
Philipse I died in 1702, the Manor was divided between his oldest surviving
son, Adolph, who received the Upper Mills, and his orphaned grandson,
Frederick II, who received the Lower Mills and the Manor House.
Frederick Philipse II came of age and into the title of Lord of the Manor
in 1716. He received a legal education in England, and subsequently held
positions in the colonial government of New York. In 1735, during the
famous "freedom of the press" trial of Peter Zenger, Frederick
II represented Royal authority as the Second Judge of the New York Supreme
court. The Manor House served as his family's summer residence. When his
Uncle Adolph died in 1750, Frederick II inherited the plantation of the
Upper Mills, so that when he died a year later, he was able to leave the
entire Manor of Philipsburg to his son, Frederick III.
Generally known as Colonel Philipse, Frederick Philipse III appears to
have had little interest in either the mercantile, political, or legal
endeavors of his forebears. Instead, he seemed more inclined towards enjoying
the rewards of gracious country living. A man of refined taste,he was
determined to make the Yonkers mansion showcase of English gentility and
the principal family seat.
Frederick Philipse III and his family lived in luxury, well-supported
by rents from the many tenant farms on his property. But times were changing,
and while others rebelled against Great Britain, Frederick III defended
the Crown his Loyalist beliefs were so strong that, under orders from
General George Washington, he was arrested in 1776. He and his family
later fled to British-occupied New York City and then to England; where
the last "Lord of the Manor, "broken in spirit and health, died
in 1786. His land and his mansion were confiscated by the New York State
Legislature and sold at public auction.
Philipse Manor Hall passed through the hands of several owners in the
years that followed. As the nineteenth century progressed, finurban community
developed around the mansion. In 1868 the building was purchased for use
as the village hall, and soon after became the first city hall for the
ever-expanding City of Yonkers. By the 20th century, city growth threatened
the Manor Hall's future. Fortunately in 1908, Mrs. Eva Smith Cochran of
Yonkers generously provided the means for New York State to purchase the
building.
Today, Philipse Manor Hall serves as a museum of history, art and architecture.
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