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Harlem
Welcome to Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill and West Harlem. Historically and
architecturally, it is one of New York City's richest and most diverse
neighborhoods. The development of the area from West 135th to West 155th
Street, Edgecombe Avenue to the Hudson, spans a period of over 350 years
and is an exciting and evolving chapter of the settlement of Manhattan
Island and the development of New York City. The first non-native settlers
of the area were farmers of diverse origins (eleven Frenchmen, four
Walloons, four Danes, three Swedes, three Germans, and seven Dutchmen) who
were offered land grants by the Dutch West India Company after founding
Nieuw Amsterdam at the foot of Manhattan in 1625. In 1791, the Bloomingdale Road was extended to meet the Kingsbridge
Road at present day West 147th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue giving
easier access to the area and attracting residents who often created grand
estates and country retreats, enticed by the cool breezes, panoramic
views, and inexpensive land with rich soil. The last remaining great house
of this period is The Grange (1801-2), the twelve-room country home of
Alexander Hamilton, the nation's first Secretary of the Treasury. The
Federal-style house, designed by John McComb Jr., a co-designer or City
Hall, is now a museum operated by the National Park Service, open to
visitors daily. Hamilton's thirty-two acre property extended from present
day Hamilton Place on the west, to Hamilton Terrace on the east, and from
West 140th to West 147th Streets. The growth of New York City intruded upon the bucolic calm of Hamilton
Heights. New transportation links (the elevated railroad on 8th Avenue
with stations at 135th and 145th Streets opened in 1879 and the IRT subway
line in 1904) spurred rapid urbanization. The large country estates were
sold and divided into building lots for speculative development. William
H. De Forest, one of the early developers, along with his son, William De
Forest, Jr., developed much of the land south of 145th Street. In the
1870s and 1880s, De Forest purchased The Grange and surrounding property
in several transactions. He later donated the house to St. Luke's Church
and arranged to have it moved to accommodate his development plans. The De
Forests laid out streets and planned single-family houses. An 1886 article
in the Real Estate Record and Builders Guide noted that the development
"will certainly have a strong distinctive character of its own, though
bearing more resemblance to the suburbs of London than to anything in the
vicinity of New York." St. Nicholas Avenue attracted freestanding mansions
including one in a Romanesque Revival style still standing at 10
St.Nicholas Place, the grand home of James A. Bailey, the circus king and
partner of Phineas T. Barnum. |
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New York Real Estate Broker, Copyright New York
City Apartments 1999, NYC. All information deemed
reliable but not guaranteed. Listings subject to errors, omissions, change in
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