English:
Identifier: historyofwestche00scha_0 (find matches)
Title: History of Westchester county : New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City /
Year: 1886 (1880s)
Authors: Scharf, J. Thomas (John Thomas), 1843-1898,
Subjects: Manors
Publisher: Philadelphia : L.E. Preston & Co.
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: The Durst Organization
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unx and the Bronx. Itis not surprising, then, to find a similar variation inthe name of the place and to read atone time TarryTown, at another Terry Town, as in the militaryreturn above. In the old town clerks book of MountPleasant, about 1801 and later, occurs several timesthe name of George Terry, as overseer of the road,and as furnishing days works on the road. It wouldnot be strange if he were a descendant of theTarrys or Terrys, from whom, by some connection thatdoes not now lie upon the surface, the village of 1 The title of the two volumes containing these military returns is :Calender of Historical Manuscripts, relating to the War of the Revo-lution, in the office of the Secretary of State, Albany, N. Y. Vol. I. andII. Albany : Weed, Parsons, & Company, Printers. 1868. 194 HISTORY OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY. Tarrytown took its name. Such an origin seems muchmore probable than that facetiously given by .Air.Irving or that more seriously offered in Boltons his-tory of the county.
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The situation of Tarrytown, on the east side of theHudson, and at the point of its greatest width, known 1 Kniiii HiiiIboii Blrw Uliutrated. Cojiyriglii by I). Appletou A Co. as Tappau Zee or Sea, combines in itself every thingto render it one of the most beautiful localities on thecontinent, or indeed in the world. The shore is hereso indented as to form a sort of cove or bay. Nearthe centre of the cove is a ;>oint, project-ing westward toward the river channel,and commonly spoken of as Point Dock.South of this point the cove penetratesstill farther eastward into the land, which,around its shores, rises quite abruptly toan elevation of probably from seventy-riveto eighty feet above the river-level to asecond plateau, and then still higher tothe old Albany Post road, now locallyknown as Broadway. The narrow, levelHat or bonier below the hill, which isonly a few feet higher than the river itself,and now described on the map as WaterStreet, and the projecting point abovementioned, no
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