Sleepy Hollow -- the Past
Native Americans, Dutch settlers, English farmers, American patriots, modern
industrialists--their stories overlap and unfold in Sleepy Hollow. Where today
the Pocantico River meets the Hudson, local Native Americans had an opportunity
to remark at Henry Hudson's ship, the Half Moon, sailing up the big river in
1609.
For a time the tribes which had inhabited the lands bordering the Pocantico
shared their domain with Dutch trappers and homesteaders, but before the century
had ended, title to the lands about the Sleepy Haven kill (river) had passed to
Frederick Philipse. Philipse hailed from the Lowlands, but after England had
taken New Netherlands from the Dutch in 1664 he demonstrated his loyalty to the
British Crown. The Crown later confirmed his ownership of a great portion of
Westchester County which was to be known as Philipse Manor. Sleepy Hollow, the
valley of the Pocantico, was to be one of the featured places in his domain.
There, during the 1680's, he built a manor house, a mill, a dam and a church.
He invited Dutch families to settle nearby and during the next hundred years
English, French and German settlers and African American slaves swelled the area
of Sleepy Hollow. They paid their rent to the descendants of Frederick Philipse
and brought their corn and wheat to be ground at his mill. Yet hard work and
self-reliance forged their sense of independence and when Revolution swept the
land the majority rejected the Loyalist tendencies of their landlord. Bitter
civil war swept "the Neutral Ground" a war ravaged swath of land which lay
between the British forces in New York and the Americans to the north. The
people of Sleepy Hollow endured the terror and strife, and many volunteered for
military service.
Then followed a period of agrarian tranquillity for the Sleepy Hollow folk.
They were Americans who preserved many of their old world customs. This is the
period which Washington Irving pictures for us in the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow"
and in other writings. The image which Irving presented struck a cord with
writers and artists of the mid-19th Century. Wealthy admirers of the Irving
legacy arrived in the area to build their country estates on the hills and wheat
fields of the early homesteads. Soon other outside influences would shape the
future of the quiet community.
Commerce and industry inevitably placed their marks on the landscape. The first
Croton Aqueduct and the Hudson River railroad brought workers and their families
into the region. Many people made their homes in Beekmantown, a small hamlet
built on farmland and laid out in small lots for houses and stores. With the
dawning of the 20th Century, these folk and their descendants began to work in
the factories which had started to appear near the mouth of the Pocantico.
Meanwhile the Old Dutch Church, built over two hundred years earlier by
Frederick Philipse, was still standing vigil over Sleepy Hollow. The Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery, established in 1849, had begun to reach upstream along the
Pocantico River and north along the Albany Post Road.
The neighborhoods of Sleepy Hollow and Beekmantown were incorporated into the
modern village of North Tarrytown. Nearby, there cropped up many suburban homes
for those who made their living in New York City. The richest man in America,
John D. Rockefeller, moved his family to Kykuit Hill, which overlooks the old
church, the Hudson River, and the valley of Sleepy Hollow. The population of
this village has swelled by the welcome arrival of people from many lands, and
in 1996, the village has adopted the name Sleepy Hollow, making it easier for
visitors to find this famous American place.
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