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CHAPTER II SOME COLONIAL NOOKS The owner and master of
the “Elsa” was one of those rare and welcome comrades who promise less
than
they perform; and when he lured us from our resting-place at Greenport
for a
summer voyage in the wake of Captain Kidd, he did not tell us that the
homeward
sail was to give us pleasant introduction to Fisher's and Shelter
Islands, two
sea-girt nooks, where linger delightful memories of the colonial era. Nine miles in length and
varying from half a mile to a mile and a quarter in width, the first of
these
islands lies like a breastwork at the entrance to the Sound. Its
history, like
that of Gardiner's Island, is bound up with that of a distinguished
American
family, for it was granted in 1668 to John Winthrop, the younger,
eldest son of
John Winthrop, governor of Massachusetts, and himself governor of the
colony of
Connecticut. John Winthrop, the younger, built a manor-house on his
island
estate, and dwelt there until his death, in 1676, at the age of
seventy.
Fisher's Island descended to his eldest son, and when the latter died
without
male heir, in 1707, became the property of his aptly-named brother Wait
Still
Winthrop, chief-justice of the colony of Massachusetts Bay, in the
possession
of whose descendants it remained for a hundred and sixty years. More recently it has
passed into other hands, and is divided at present into several farms.
However,
one relic of the Winthrops remains, their handsome old manor-house, —
now much
enlarged from its original size, — with its thick stone walls and huge
dormer-windows breaking the gray-shingled monotony of its high gabled
roof. Nor
does the island lack other reminders of a bygone time. Amid the long
sea-grass
and by a small rock, blackened with soddened sea-moss, which marks one
of the
loneliest spots on its south shore, lies the grave of a man there
washed up,
who lost his life in attempting on a dark night nearly nine-score years
ago to
swim across the Connecticut River. According to tradition the young
pastor — for
it was the Rev. Samuel Pierpont, of the First Church, of Lyme — was
returning
to his bride. He did not find the ferryman, and anxious both on his own
account
and that of his wife, he essayed to cross by swimming. His life went
out in the
night and the darkness, and weeks later his body was washed ashore on
Fisher's
Island, where naught now disturbs his lonely sepulchre. Time was when the nearest
neighbor to the southward of the Winthrops, of Fisher's Island, was the
lord
and owner of Sylvester's, now called Shelter, Island. It was in 1652
that
Nathaniel Sylvester, one of a wealthy royalist family driven from
England by the
undoing of the first Charles, brought Grissell Brinley, his bride, to
Shelter
Island, which he and his brother had lately purchased for “sixteen
hundred
pounds of good Muscovada sugar,” building there a comfortable
manor-house,
which a little later became a place of refuge for the Quakers driven
from
Massachusetts by the authorities of that colony. George Fox was twice a
guest
of the Sylvesters, and preached to the Indians from the door-steps of
their
hospitable home. That is how it came to be
called Shelter Island, descending in the third generation to Brinley
Sylvester,
of Newport, who elected to dwell in the place of his fathers and built
a new
house on the site of the original homestead. This house, erected in
1737, and
known as the Sylvester Manor, is now owned and occupied by the widow
and
daughters of the late Eben Norton Horsford, who are lineal descendants
of
Nathaniel and Grissell Sylvester. It is reached by a mile drive from
the
western shore through a rolling country and over well-shaded roads. On
each
side of the entrance to the house are two small brass cannon glinting
in the
sunshine, and on the wide door is a heavy brass knocker. Lift this and
a
cordial welcome is assured you, for its owners delight to show the old
house
and its treasures to the visitor, — a piece of the cloth of gold
presented by
Captain Kidd to Madam Gardiner, the snuff-box that Lord Fairfax gave to
Washington, veneered and inlaid furniture, spinning-wheels, coffin-like
clocks,
and many other things quaint and deeply interesting in their quaintness. And so, after a day
divided between Fisher's and Shelter Islands, we came back to
Greenport, and
idled there until the summer was ended and the time for our return to
the
workaday world was at hand. But Long Island throughout its length and
breadth
is rich in reminders of colonial and Revolutionary days, and thus it
was that
we planned a leisurely homeward journey, which, beginning at the
Hamptons, gave
us pleasurable glimpses of St. George's Manor, Patchogue, Huntingdon
Harbor, Jericho,
Oyster Bay, and Roslyn, and came to an end at Flushing. Settled in 1640
by men
from Lynn, Massachusetts, the three Hamptons, South, Bridge, and East,
had
early and frequent disputes with the Dutch, who came down the island
from New
Amsterdam. First joined to the Hartford colony, they were later made a
part of
the domain granted by Charles II. to his brother, the Duke of York,
their
energetic protest against this transfer passing unheeded. “But,” in the
words
of the author of the ancient records of Southampton, “it requires
something
more than the patent of a king and the order of a governor to change
the
wishes, the thoughts, and the dispositions of a people, and from that
day to
the present Southampton has continued to be an integral part of New
England to
all intents and purposes, and in all modes of thought and action, as
much as
any portion of the land of steady habits.” Seated in the lap of a
wide, wind-swept plain, against the southern edge of which the ocean
pounds
with never-ceasing roar, Southampton's first prosperity came from the
sea. The
whale-fishery began early, and often the whales came so close to the
shore that
the fishermen could capture them from boats. Sometimes they became
stranded and
were cut up by their captors. In 1687 there were a dozen whaling crews
of ten
men, each doing business on this plan, and over two thousand barrels of
oil
were secured in that year. Following the introduction of mineral oils,
however,
the whaling industry declined as rapidly as it had risen, and during
the first
three-quarters of the present century idleness and quiet brooded over
the
moss-grown old hamlet by the sea. Now the tide of modern wealth has set
in upon
it; the old and the new jostle and mingle delightfully in the
Southampton of
to-day, and in a walk along its main street, lined all the way with
splendid
elms, one comes upon venerable landmarks like the old Sayre House,
built in
1648, and handed down from father to son for ten generations, touching
elbows
with smart summer cottages of the most recent pattern. The palace of a
new-made
millionaire keeps company with the old Pelletreau House, where Lord
Erskine
made his head-quarters during the British occupation in 1779; a
golf-link and a
club-house are within sight of the ruins of the three forts which that
nobleman
cause to be erected, and along the shores of old Town Pond, transformed
by
recent comers into Lake Agawam, and over the Ox Pasture and Great
Plains roads,
thoroughness opened in the middle of the seventeenth century and
flecked with windmills
brought from Holland, the visitor drives by a hundred modern villas,
the
creation of yesterday. To the south of the town are the dunes for which
this
coast is famous, and beyond them the rollers break upon the beach with
a roar
that can be heard a mile away. Three miles west of
Southampton village the level moorland rises into the hills of
Shinnecock, so
named from the Indians who were the original owners of all the lands.
In 1703
the Shinnecock region was leased back to the Indians by the settlers
who had
previously purchased lands from the tribe and was used as a reservation
until
1859, when the hills were sold to a local corporation and the remnant
of the
tribe took up their abode on the Shinnecock Neck, where they still live
to the
number of about two hundred. These are a mixture of Indians and negro,
the last
full-blooded member of the tribe having died several years ago. The
women till
the soil and find employment among the cottagers and villagers, but the
men hug
the shady side of the house or hill, smoke, watch the women at work,
and say
nothing. The government furnishes them with a school-master and a
preacher, but
small influence have they to win the Indian from his contempt of labor,
his
pipe, and his taciturnity. The only thing taught him by the white man
for which
he has a liking is a keen relish for strong drink, and when in his cups
he is
said to be an ugly creature. In the main, however, the Shinnecocks are
a silent
and inoffensive people, gradually fading off the face of the earth. Yet life among them has
not been without its strange, mysterious tragedies. At the close of a
summer
day seventy-odd years ago a small sloop coming from the northward
anchored near
the shore of Peconic Bay. The only persons on the sloop who could be
seen by the
Indians fishing close at hand were a white man and a negro. After
darkness had
settled over the bay a light flickered from the cabin windows of the
sloop, and
a voice, that of a woman, was raised in song. In the early morning
hours a
noise was heard in the direction of the boat and a woman's screams
floated out
over the water. Then the listeners on shore heard the sound of the
hoisting of
an anchor, and a little later in the early morning light the sloop was
seen
speeding out to sea. Just before it disappeared a man standing in the
stern
threw something white overboard. Among the watchers on
shore was one Jim Turnbull, an Indian known as the Water Serpent. After
a time
Turnbull swam out to the white object still floating on the water. As
he drew
near he saw it was the body of a woman lying face downward. When
Turnbull
turned the body over he recognized the face at a glance. The woman's
throat had
been cut and a dagger thrust into her heart. Then he conveyed the body
to the
beach and, aided by his companions, buried it near the head of Peconic
Bay. The
clay following the woman's burial the Water Serpent disappeared. He was
absent
for several weeks, and when he came back to his home in Shinnecock
Hills gave
no hint of his wanderings. Years later, however, when he was about to
die, his
lips opened and told a fearful story. During a winter's storm a
few months before the murder in Peconic Bay the Water Serpent and
several other
members of his tribe had been wrecked on the Connecticut shore. The
Water
Serpent, alone escaping death in the waters, was found lying
unconscious on the
beach by a farmer named Turner, who carried him to his home near by,
where the
farmer's daughter, Edith, a beautiful girl, nursed him back to health.
An
Indian never forgets a kindness, and the Water Serpent was no exception
to the
rule. He did not see his young nurse again until he found her body
floating in
the waters of Peconic Bay. Following this discovery, he quickly made
his way to
the home of the girl, and found that she had eloped with an Englishman,
a
former officer in the British army. The Water Serpent told his story,
and two
of the girl's brothers went with him to her grave. They opened it at
night,
identified the body, and carried it away for burial beside that of the
girl's mother. The Water Serpent had seen
the Englishman and remembered his face. With the farmer's sons he took
up the
search for the murderer, and finally traced him to a farmhouse near the
village
of Stamford. One day the Englishman was missed from his usual haunts,
and
months afterwards his body was found, in a thick piece of woodland,
with a
dagger plunged through the heart. It was the same dagger that the Water
Serpent
had found in the heart of Edith. One of the winsome
excursions open to the visitor to Southampton leads by way of
Bridgehampton,
smallest and least interesting of the Hamptons, to the ancient whaling
port of
Sag Harbor. The whaling propensities of the farmer-mariners of Long
Island led
them in their search for the big fish to cruise farther and farther
each year
from the shore. From building boats and towing the dead whales back to
shore to
be “tried out” they began to build ships and make voyages to the South
and
Arctic seas. This business centred at Sag Harbor, and at one time there
were
nearly fourscore whalers sailing from the little port. Everybody in Sag
Harbor
had shares in whaling vessels. A round three hundred men worked on her
wharves
and all the other men of the town went to sea. In 1847 a million
dollars' worth
of oil and whalebone was the spoil of the Sag Harbor fleet. Then came
the quick
decline in the whaling interests that followed the discovery and use of
petroleum. Fire swept away a portion of the town; the finding of gold
in
California drew many of its adventurous seamen to the West, and the
glory of
Sag Harbor departed. The last whaling vessel was sold in 1862, and
to-day its
wharves are deserted and its streets are silent. What with its want of life
and trade and its handful of ancient mariners now fallen into the sere
and
yellow leaf, Sag Harbor belongs to the past, and the same is in a
measure true
of Easthampton, two miles east of it, until recently one of those
fortunate
towns that could not be reached by rail. Easthampton has a history
dating back
to 1650, and its single elm-shaded street abounds in relics of an
earlier time.
Many of the houses are of the last century, and one of them sheltered
in
boyhood John Howard Payne, author of “Home, Sweet Home.” In another
Lyman
Beecher lived while pastor of the old village church. Cooper is said to
have
laid the opening scenes of his “Sea Lions” near Easthampton, and the
place is
rich in other strange and stirring memories. On an April day in 1840
there came an unusual visitor to Easthampton's solitary inn. The
new-comer was
a man of fifty, handsome, courtly, reserved, and both he and the
servant who
accompanied him spoke with a marked Scotch accent. They were assigned
quarters
by the innkeeper, and with him they remained five years. Then the
servant went
away, and the master found a home with a leading family of Easthampton.
His
means were ample and remittances reached him regularly through a chain
of
banks. The life he led in the quiet town was in every way a sweet and
lovely
one. He was the constant patron of the poor, the warm friend of all the
boys in
the village, prompt and foremost in every good work, and a regular
attendant at
church, contributing freely to the building of a pretty little chapel
at
Easthampton. And yet for more than
thirty years this singular man led the life of a hermit. But once in
that time
did he pass the limits of Easthampton, and that was to visit
Southampton, only
a few miles away. During all these years his identity remained unknown
to those
about him. John Wallace was the name he gave when he came to
Easthampton, and
John Wallace is the name you will find carved on the white slab that
stands
above his grave in the village cemetery. At rare intervals he would
come from
the post-office holding a letter in his hand and remark to the members
of the
family with whom he lived, “This is from my lady friend in Edinburgh.” And this was the only hint
he ever gave of his former life. He was eighty-one years old when he
died on a
stormy night in December, 1870. After he was gone his landlady wrote a
letter
describing his end, addressed it to “Mr. Wallace's Lady Friend,
Edinburgh,” and
despatched it through the New York bank by which the old man's
remittances
reached him. Months later there came a reply, brief, formal, and
unfeeling,
signed “Mr. Wallace's Lady Friend.” Years after, quite by accident, the
mystery
of the dead man's life came out. In 1840 the high sheriff of a great
Scotch
county was a certain man residing in Edinburgh. He was a bachelor of
middle
age, of upright life, benevolent impulses, the ever-generous friend of
those in
distress, and widely known and universally beloved on account of his
good
works. Of a sudden a grave crime was charged against him. One evening
the lord
high advocate visited a friend of the sheriff and told him that at ten
o'clock
next morning a warrant would be issued for the sheriff's arrest. That
night the
sheriff disappeared from Scotland, and a few weeks later John Wallace's
long
and lonely penance in the little village on Long Island had begun. Now
it is
ended, and he sleeps as peacefully in the Easthampton burial-ground as
he would
in the soil that gave him birth. Their isolation was long
the principal charm of the Hamptons. Now, however, the railroad,
bringing the
summer visitor in its train, has robbed them of this, and for a
survival of the
Long Island of colonial times one must go, as we did, to St. George's
Manor, at
the eastern end of the Great South Bay, which, for seven generations,
or since
the original grant from King William in 1693, has been the home and
stead of
the same family. The tract of land which this grant conveyed to Colonel
William
Smith, commonly called Tangier Smith, owing to the fact that he had
once been
governor of Tangier, Africa, under the British crown, originally
comprised some
forty thousand acres, lying between Moriches on the east and Patchogue
on the
west, the ocean on the south, and the Sound on the north. The manor has
since
shrunk sadly in size, but Smith's Point, as the slightly wooded
headland
closing the east end of the bay is called, has doubtless changed but
little in
two hundred years. Here during all that time the Smiths have had their
home. In
front of the manor-house, which faces the water, may still be traced
the ruins
of a fort erected by the British during the Revolution, and on the lawn
reposes
a giant iron caldron used to try out blubber in the days when whales
were often
sighted off-shore and a watch was regularly kept for them. The
manor-house
itself, facing the water, and the third upon the spot, was built in
1810, and
is a fine specimen of the generous houses of that time. A spacious hall
runs
through it, with square and lofty rooms opening on either side. Much of
the
furniture is modern, but some of the pieces date from the last century,
and a
few things remain that came from England with the first lord of the
manor, two
hundred years ago. Close at hand is a burial-ground where rest all the
heads of
the Tangier Smith family since 1700. Some of the men were soldiers,
some
sailors, some lawyers, some men of affairs, but all returned to end
their days
on the manor. Successive divisions have now reduced it to a tract of
seven
thousand acres, yet its present masters can drive four miles in one
direction
without leaving their own woods, and there they lie, with their wives
and such
of their children as remained in the family nest. Some of the
headstones in the
little graveyard tell stories of their own, as, for instance, one to
the memory
of a young wife who died at the age of fifteen. Among the neighbors of
the Smiths
were the Floyds. William Smith, third of the name and line, was one day
talking
with his neighbor Floyd as to the proper amount of money the four girls
of the
Floyd family ought to inherit. Judge Floyd said he had put them down in
his
will for one thousand pounds apiece, a large sum in those days, — much
too
large, in the opinion of Judge Smith, who declared that women had no
idea of
the value of money. One of the daughters of
the house of Floyd overheard the conversation, and it resulted in such
friction
between the young people of the two families that when young John Smith
came a
courting Miss Betsy Floyd her mother refused to hear of the match, and
Betsy,
like a dutiful daughter, obeyed. When Judge Floyd died it was found
that he had
taken the advice of his neighbor and had left his daughters nine
hundred pounds
each instead of the one thousand pounds they had expected. This widened
the
breach. At the advice of his father young John gave up Betsy for the
time being
and married Lady Lydia Fanning, daughter of Lord Fanning, governor of
Prince
Edward's Island, and brought her home to St. George's Manor. It was
this young
wife who died in May, 1777, at the age of fifteen, when her son,
William Smith,
was only a few weeks old. The bereaved widower's thoughts turned to
Betsy for
consolation, but she would still have none of him, and so he married
one Mary
Platt. Meantime, Betsy Floyd became the wife of Edward Nicoll. When the
wedding
took place Mrs. Floyd sent word to John Smith that she was now sure
that he
would never get her Betsy. But she was wrong, for both Mr. Nicoll and
the
second Mrs. Smith having died John laid siege to the widow Nicoll and
finally
married her. The William Smith born in 1777 was the great-grandfather
of the
present owners of the manor. From St. George's it is a
roundabout drive of ten miles to Patchogue, a village famous for its
oysters
and dear to the sentimental pilgrim as the last home and burial-place
of Seba
Smith, — a fellow of infinite jest and most excellent fancy, the friend
and
welcome comrade of Lincoln, and, under the nom de plume of Major Jack
Downing,
the best-known humorist of his time. Smith spent the closing years of
his life
in Patchogue, and died there in 1868 at the age of seventy-six. His
grave lies
in an abandoned burial-ground near the edge of a wood at the back of
the
village. The storm-worn marble slab above it tells the passer-by that
he was
the author of “Way Down East” and many other works, and that “He was
well
beloved,” but no stone marks the grave beside his own, where eight
years ago
the body of his wife, the once famous and beloved Eliza Oakes Smith,
was laid
to rest. Yet in the old Knickerbocker literary period of New York no
woman was
counted so brilliant or more beautiful. She was the central figure of
coteries
that had for their spirits such men as Bryant, Willis, Poe, Ripley,
Irving, and
Longfellow, while women like Mrs. Sigourney, Anna Estelle Lewis
(Stella), Anna
Cora Mowatt, and the Carey sisters regarded Eliza Oakes Smith as their
most
talented confrčre. She was the soul and life of every great literary
gathering
in those times, and the brilliant salon of Madame Vincenza Botta had
not a more
charming habitué. She was the first woman in this country to appear as
a public
lecturer, and among the first to speak from a pulpit. In 1841 her fame
was at
its zenith, and her book of “The Sinless Child” carried her name to
other
lands. But men pass away and tastes pass with them, and long before her
husband's death she had disappeared from public view. After that she
lived for
a time in a small and secluded cottage at Patchogue. Then she moved to
North
Carolina, and her death in 1892 was notable chiefly because it reminded
a busy
and careless world that such a woman as Eliza Oakes Smith had ever
lived. And so, pondering over the
fickle thing called fame, we left Patchogue behind us and made our way
by rail
to Babylon and thence by wheel through the Half-Way Hollow Hills and
Huntingdon
town to Huntingdon Harbor, on the north side of the island, during the
opening
years of the Revolution the rendezvous and base of operations of the
British
general Tryon, whose troops burned and looted the towns along the
Connecticut shore,
and memorable also as the scene, in September, 1776, of the betrayal
and
capture of Captain Nathan Hale. The story of that brave and hapless
young
patriot is a familiar one, but never lacks willing listeners. It was
after the
disastrous battle of Long Island that Hale, cognizant of Washington's
sore need
of information as to the strength and probable plans of the enemy,
offered in
order to obtain the same to enter the British lines in disguise. What
instructions, advice, cautions, Hale received from his chief there are
no
records to tell us. We only know that he suddenly disappeared from the
patriot
camp, passed up the Connecticut shore, changed his uniform to civilian
garb,
crossed to Huntingdon Harbor, and then made his way to the enemy at
Brooklyn
and New York, — never to return. He had finished his work and was
preparing to
cross again to the Connecticut shore when he was seized and held by the
crew of
a yawl which he had mistaken for the boat which was to have been sent
to take
him away. Without delay he was delivered to the British authorities at
New
York, by whom, having frankly declared his rank and the object of his
visit to
the enemy's camp, he was condemned as a spy and shot, saying as he
faced the
muskets of his executioners, “I only regret that I have but one life to
lose
for my country.” Seven miles to the east of
Huntingdon Harbor, beside a sharp bend in the Sound, nestles Oyster
Bay,
flanked by orchards and threaded with shady lanes, another island nook
which
saw stirring days during the Revolution, days of confusion, of bustle,
and
shrewd blows, the memory of which contrasts sharply with its sleepy,
uneventful
present. The old Townsend homestead, which dates from 1740, and stands
amid a
thick growth of trees in the centre of the village, was during the
British
occupation of the island the head-quarters of Colonel Simcoe and his
band of
Queen's Rangers, who danced and flirted with the handsome daughters of
its
master and carved their names and those of the girls on the windowpanes
of the
old house. These panes of glass are among the relics cherished by the
present
occupants of the Townsend homestead, built in such enduring fashion
that it
promises to outlive another century, and on the hill to the west of the
village
one can still trace the fortifications thrown up and then abandoned by
the
long-gone British troopers. The harbor from which Oyster Bay borrows
its name
was the scene of a stirring naval fight in November, 1779, between two
American
privateers and a large, well-armed British brig, in which the foreigner
was
badly worsted. A little way to the south
of Oyster Bay and out of sight of the sea is Jericho, a slow-going
hamlet of
only a few hundred souls, where one finds one's self amid the lifelong
surroundings of sturdy Elias Hicks, in many ways the most remarkable
man
American Quakerism has yet produced and the leader in the most serious
schism
that has marked its history. Hicks was born and reared in the town of
Hempstead, but in 1771, when he was twenty-three years old, he took to
wife a
Quaker maiden of Jericho, which became and remained his home until his
death in
1830, at the ripe age of eighty-two. His youth, he tells us in his
journals, was
one of indifference to the faith in which he was born, but the coming
of his
twentieth year witnessed a great change in his thoughts and mode of
life, and
seven years later he entered the Quaker ministry, laboring therein with
untiring diligence for more than half a century. It is recorded of him
that he
travelled above ten thousand miles on foot, visiting in this way Canada
and
almost every State in the Union and preaching in the open air more than
one
thousand times. A poor man all his days, he asked nor would accept no
compensation for his services, and when not preaching labored on his
farm in
the outskirts of Jericho. The doctrines which Hicks cherished and which
he
expounded with so much vigor and power may have slight significance for
the men
and women of another generation, but the fact lives that this
lion-hearted old
man early opposed negro slavery, fought it in the Society, wrote and
preached
against it, and was chiefly instrumental in securing the passage of the
act
that on July 4, 1827, gave freedom to every slave within the limits of
the
State of New York. Therein he wrote for himself a nobler epitaph than
could
have been graven by the hand of man. From Jericho, with its
memories of Hicks, it is scant eight miles to Roslyn, long the home of
William
Cullen Bryant, and for that reason destined in future years to become
dear to
every worshipper at the shrine of genius and pure renown. It has a
history
running well back into the last century, but was a village of only a
few
hundred souls when Bryant first visited it in 1843, and making it his
place of
summer abiding, soon grew to regard it as the most beautiful spot he
had ever
seen. Love of nature was his absorbing passion, and to this taste
Roslyn
ministered with gentle prodigality, furnishing the inspiration for many
of his
sweetest poems. Though he yearly made his pilgrimage back to his New
England
home at Cummington, in the Hampshire Hills, Roslyn grew to be the place
he
loved best in all the world, and in his latter years he hurried to it
early in
the spring and lingered there until late in the fall. The Quaker homestead to which Bryant gave
the name of Cedarmere and in which he dwelt for thirty-five years, is a
roomy,
rambling structure, in the colonial style, with broad piazzas, quaint
extensions, and heavy oaken timbers as stanch and perfect as when they
were put
in place a hundred and ten years ago. It stands on a bench in the
hillside,
flanked on the one hand by a lake and brook and on the other by a
garden
teeming with flower-beds and fruit. Before and below it the glimmering
harbor
spreads its ever-changing, charming panorama. Inside Cedarmere are
wide, open
grates, huge-throated chimneys, and antique balustrades, while a broad
hallway
runs the entire length of the house, which has altered little since
Bryant knew
and loved it. Reverent hands keep it from neglect, and each day finds
some
visitor knocking at the old-fashioned door for a ramble over the poet's
home.
His grave is in the village cemetery, whose burial-stones whiten the
slope of a
neighboring hill. The lot is large and hemmed in by trees, with a plain
granite
shaft in the centre. On one side of the shaft is recorded the death of
Fanny
Bryant, the poet's wife, who was “the beloved disciple of Christ,
exemplary in
every relation of life, affectionate, sympathetic, sincere, and ever
occupied
with the welfare of others.” On the other side there is simply the
poet's name
and birthplace, and the time of his birth and death. No epitaph is
given and
none is needed. Cedarmere,
Home of William Cullen Bryant.
Our journey through
and
around Long Island ended, as we had planned that it should, at
Flushing, to-day
a town of handsome modern homes, but haunted by the spirit of its Dutch
and
Puritan founders and of the Huguenots and Quakers who followed after
them. It
was in 1672 that that immortal zealot, George Fox, came to Flushing,
sent by
Penn, who saw among the Long Islanders, many of them, for conscience'
sake
self-exiled from England, a promising field for the simple faith of the
Friends. John Bowne, a well-to-do tradesman, was his first convert. Fox
made
Bowne's house his home during his stay in Flushing, and in one corner
of it is
still shown the lounge on which he rested after his impassioned
outpourings in
the open air. Later Bowne's indiscreet hospitality led to his
banishment to
Holland, but he turned his punishment to good effect by pleading the
cause of
the Quakers and returning with an order for the tolerance of the
persecuted
people. The house, whose doors
Bowne opened to the apostle of his new-found creed, still stands upon
the site
its builder selected for it in 1661, and though built of wood has
remained
unaltered to the present day. Nor through all the changes of more than
two
hundred years has it ever left the possession of its first owner's
family,
being now the property of a lineal descendant of John Bowne. After
serving as a
meeting-place for the Friends for more than a generation, Bowne's house
was
relinquished for the occupancy of a more substantial building erected
in 1696,
now the oldest Quaker meeting-house in the State, and perhaps in the
country.
This structure was the home of the brethren for upward of a century and
is yet
standing practically unchanged on its original site near the main
street of
Flushing. When Fox came to the village a number of Huguenot families
had been
settled there for several years. Few, if any, of their descendants
remain, as
the emigres soon returned to the Old World, leaving behind them,
however, a
graceful reminder of their stay in an industry which has since been
distinctive
of the town, for to them is due the credit of establishing the first
nurseries
in America and the planting of the trees which form the chief beauty of
the
village streets. Nor is Flushing wanting in
memorials of the Revolutionary era. The house occupied by Washington
during the
patriot operations on Long Island has since been demolished, but the
Garretson
House, which was built, tradition has it, in 1642, and is still
standing in Main
Street, was used during the Hessian occupation as a hospital for
soldiers,
while old St. George's Church across the way served as the stable for
the
horses of the detachment quartered in the neighborhood. Thus does the
past
touch elbow with the present in shady, leafy, and delightful Flushing. |