Eastview, New York

Eastview (or East View) is a business district and former hamlet in Mount Pleasant, New York.[1] It was primarily residential, and had a post office, railroad station, and school. In the late 1920s, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. purchased most of the hamlet's property and razed the buildings. Currently a variety of commercial buildings are present in the area. The Hammond House, a National Register of Historic Places-listed farmhouse dating to the 1720s, is located in the district, on New York State Route 100C.

Eastview
Business district
One of dozens of office buildings in Eastview
Location of Eastview in New York
Coordinates: 41°04′53.4″N 73°49′45.5″W
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountyWestchester
TownMount Pleasant
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern (EST))
  Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
Area code(s)914
GNIS feature ID972438
Historic namesEast Tarrytown
Knapp's Corners[1]

History

A stereoscopic view of the trestle at Eastview

The Eastview area consisted entirely of farmland until 1824, when Westchester County purchased 110 acres (45 ha) and built the Westchester County Alms House, a building complex and cemetery for abandoned children and the elderly, poor, and homeless. The almshousewas used by the 715 Military Police Battalion and later became part of Westchester Medical Center.[2] The area became known as Eastview after East View Farm, a 350-acre (140 ha) estate purchased by grocery chain owner James Butler in 1893. John Paulding, a captor of John André in the American Revolutionary War, had previously owned part of Butler's estate.[3]

At one point, Eastview was a small hamlet with approximately 15 frame houses, general stores and candy shops, a community hall, a Methodist church, a one-room schoolhouse, and surrounding farms that supplied dairy to Tarrytown. The hamlet was located near the old Tarrytown Lakes Pump house and continued east by the current Park-and-Ride lot. John Paulding's grandfather Joseph Paulding had built a small farm in Eastview in 1753. John F. Brown owned a small general store at the center of the hamlet. Brown's Mill, which burned to the ground in the 1920s, was one of the last active grist mills on the Saw Mill River. The Eastview railroad station was close to the almshouse, and also held the community's post office. The railroad station was part of the New York and Putnam Railroad, and close to the station was an eighty-foot (25 m) high trestle (41°5′0″N 73°50′0″W) which served as a railroad bridge. In 1881, the tracks were relocated to eliminate the trestle.[2]

In 1893, John D. Rockefeller began buying land in Pocantico Hills to develop his estate. The railroad, which ran through his property, created noise. As well, the sight of Eastview was so irritating in the estate's otherwise undisturbed surroundings, that when his son John Jr. was given the estate in 1928, he negotiated with New York Central (which had acquired the New York and Putnam Railroad) to relocate the railroad to along the Saw Mill River, costing $200,000, which Rockefeller Jr. would pay. In the late 1920s, Rockefeller Jr. hired a Tarrytown real estate agent to quietly buy property in Eastview, and paid well, from $25,000 to $50,000 for property. For $825,000, Rockefeller Jr. had purchased nearly all of the area, and the 46 long-established families moved away. The buildings were set to be razed on May 1, 1929. The railroad would run along what was Eastview's main street. In July 1930, Rockefeller Jr. donated $115,000 of Eastview land to the Westchester County Park Commission to facilitate construction of the Saw Mill River Parkway.[2] In 1935, the cemetery in Eastview was buried with 20 feet of dirt for the Saw Mill River Parkway to run over the plot.[4]

Soon after the end of World War II, Butler's Eastview estate was considered as a site for the United Nations headquarters, and was bought by Union Carbide in the early 1960s,[2] which then sold to the property to Landmark at Eastview, which still owns it.[3] Con Edison now stands where the county almshouse once stood.[2]

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References

  1. Manual of Westchester County. Past and Present (PDF). White Plains: Henry T. Smith. 1898. p. 112. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  2. Miller, Richard (April 25, 2014). "What Happened to East View?". River Journal. 16 (Late Spring 2014). pp. 11–12. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
  3. Miller, Richard (June 25, 2010). "The Egg and Butter Man of Eastview". River Journal. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
  4. "County Alms House Cemetery". Find A Grave. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
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