Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Spuyten Duyvil Creek, Manhattan/Bronx

KingsbridgTopo1776_crop

A
1776 map showing the northern tip of Manhattan and Spuyten Duyvil
Creek, which is crossed by both Kingsbridge and Dyckman's Bridge.
(Taken from map image linked below).

KingsbridgTopo1776_full


   
Upper Manhattan and the Bronx were seperated by only a narrow tidal
strait until the end of the 19th century. This narrow, meandering, but
fast-flowing strait was the Spuyten Duyvil Creek (various alternative
spellings are also valid). New York's waterfront sees about a five-foot
variation between low tide and high tide, and as the tide came in and
out there was often a difference in water level between the Hudson
River and the East River, which is affected by the slow and massive
tidal movements of Long Island Sound. This differential created
dangerous currents.
    In his (fictional) book The Knickerbocker History of New York,
Washington Irving tells an apocryphal story of how the strait got its
name, and how violent the water could be. (The character in this
passage is Antony Corlear, a trumpeter sent by 17th-century governor of
New Amsterdam Peter Stuyvesant to warn residents that the British were
coming.)

It was a dark and stormy night when the good Antony arrived at the creek

(sagely denominated Haerlem river) which separates the island of


Manna-hata from the mainland. The wind was high, the elements were in an


uproar, and no Charon could be found to ferry the adventurous sounder of


brass across the water. For a short time he vapored like an impatient


ghost upon the brink, and then, bethinking himself of the urgency of his


errand, took a hearty embrace of his stone bottle, swore most valorously


that he would swim across in spite of the devil (spyt den duyvel), and


daringly plunged into the stream. Luckless Antony! scarce had he buffeted


half-way over when he was observed to struggle violently, as if battling


with the spirit of the waters. Instinctively he put his trumpet to his


mouth, and giving a vehement blast sank for ever to the bottom.




The clangor of his trumpet, like that of the ivory horn of the renowned


Paladin Orlando, when expiring in the glorious field of Roncesvalles, rang


far and wide through the country, alarming the neighbors round, who


hurried in amazement to the spot. Here an old Dutch burgher, famed for his


veracity, and who had been a witness of the fact, related to them the


melancholy affair; with the fearful addition (to which I am slow of giving


belief) that he saw the duyvel, in the shape of a huge mossbonker, seize


the sturdy Antony by the leg and drag him beneath the waves. Certain it


is, the place, with the adjoining promontory, which projects into the


Hudson, has been called Spyt den Duyvel ever since; the ghost of the


unfortunate Antony still haunts the surrounding solitudes, and his trumpet


has often been heard by the neighbors of a stormy night, mingling with the


howling of the blast.




Nobody ever attempts to swim across the creek after dark; on the contrary,


a bridge has been built to guard against such melancholy accidents in the


future; and as to moss-bonkers, they are held in such abhorrence that no


true Dutchman will admit them to his table who loves good fish and hates


the devil.


During
the era of the drowned Van Corlear, the normal way across Spuyten
Duyivil Creek during high tide was a ferry, operated until 1673 by
Johannes Verveelen. (During low tide it was often possible to wade
across, whether for travelers on foot or farmers bringing livestock to
the city—probably the origin of the name “Fordham” in the Bronx). But
in 1693, Manhattan got its first bridge, a wooden toll-bridge structure
run by the Philippse family, and built over the old fording spot so
that those crossing the Spuyten Duyvil were forced to pay the toll. The
charter mandated that the king of England and his representatives,
British soldiers, could cross for free, and so it was known as the
King’s Bridge.
    Around 1713, the Philipse family replaced the
wooden span with a new, 24-foot-wide bridge with a wooden deck laid
over rough stone supports. It would remain the only bridge across the
Harlem River until about 1758, when locals built the aptly-named Free
Bridge to avoid tolls on Kingsbridge. Amazingly, the Kingsbridge
structure built in 1713 lasted until 1917—after which it was destroyed
and buried in the landfill around Marble Hill, over the protests of
local historians.  But with a lifetime of more than two centuries, this
humble stone-and-wood structure remains the longest-lasting bridge that
New York City has ever had.

    Spuyten Duyvil Creek was far too
shallow for larger boats or ships,
and ship traffic between the upper Hudson and Long Island Sound had to
take
a 25-mile detour around lower Manhattan. In 1895, the Harlem River Ship
Canal was opened after nine years of
work by the Army Corps of Engineers, connecting the Hudson and Harlem
Rivers with a navigable channel for ships across the very northern end
of Manhattan. At the opening ceremonies, it
was said that “the opening of the Harlem Ship Canal was a greater event
than the opening of the Erie Canal.” Spuyten Duyvil Creek was filled
in; the historic Kingsbridge was demolished and buried in the landfill.
Today the curves of Spuyten Duyvil creek are apparent in the curving
border of New York County (Manhattan), which extends around the Marble
Hill section of the Bronx-side mainland of the Ship Canal.

See posts related to Spuyten Duyvil Creek



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