Powered By Blogger

Welcome to Villa Speranza.

Welcome to Villa Speranza.

Search This Blog

Translate

Sunday, October 4, 2015

THE CITY POINT YACHT CLUB -- founded 1895 -- the oldest continuously-operating yacht club in the country -- on what was formerly known as Oyster Point -- at Bayview --. The name "City Point" was promoted to dissociate the point from the aesthetically unappealing (to some) oyster industry.

Speranza

"City Point" is one of New Haven’s first planned sub-urban developments.

The neighbourhood is bounded by 

-- Greenwich Avenue
-- Hallock Avenue 
-- South Water Street. 

"The City Point" was envisioned in 1840 by Gerard Hallock, who formerly owned the land. 

The City Point was officially established in May of 1868 by Gerard Hallcok's heirs on the former now largely land-locked peninsula or “point” -- formerly known as “Oyster Point”. 

This 1868 residential housing development incorporated the earlier oystering community established in 1847 when Hallock sold 2 acres of his land along the Oyster Point’s southern shore which later became South Water Street and the first block of Howard Avenue to William C. Barnes, the Oyster Point’s first oysterman.  

CITY POINT: It’s NOT “The Hill”.

The Oyster Point or City Point was originally part of New Haven’s un-developed “suburbs” on the western edge of town known as the Oyster Point Quarter or simply Oyster Point.

By 1824 this was considered to be bounded:

-- on the North by what is now Columbus Avenue.

 In 1848 a small stream in the Oyster Point Quarter was drained to create the New York and New Haven Railway cut now used by Metro North.

Tis eventually came to be regarded by some residents to be the northern boundary of Oyster Point.

Nevertheless some maps as late as 1870 still show The Oyster Point extending to Columbus Avenue or to the avenue’s neighbouring 1870-71 Derby Rail Road cut.

The Oyster Point was bordered:

-- on the East by New Haven Harbour, which originally extended along present-day Hallock Avenue and, at Lamberton and Cedar Streets, the shoreline veered somewhat east-ward along the former West Water Street, extending  to somewhat North of present-day Union Avenue.

The Oyster Point was bounded on the West by the West River salt marsh, partly fed by a small stream originating near Kimberly Avenue, approximately behind what is now number 400 Greenwich Avenue, between first and second streets.

Most of this area formed a “point” or narrow peninsula jutting out into New Haven's harbour.
from the 1846 coast survey, New Haven Harbour
Although Oyster Point and Oyster Point Quarter often were used interchangeably, most 19th century maps use the name "The Oyster Point" to describe the narrow PENINSULA bounded by the West River salt marsh and New Haven's harbour., i.e. the area today bounded by Greenwich Avenue, Hallock Avenue and South Water Street.

The name Oyster Point Quarter, on the other hand, usually was used to describe all of the area bordering New Haven's harbor’s original western shoreline, i.e. the area from Columbus Avenue southward.

In the 1830s Gerard Hallock, a New Yorker, purchased much of this land and in 1836 Sidney Mason stone (1803-1882) built Hallock’s cottage overlooking New Haven's harbour on what is now the rail yard side of Cedar Street, across from present-day Cassius Street.

This impressive cottage sat upon a semicircular outcropping supported by a massive 2,000 foot-long sandstone wall, making a great sight from New Haven's harbour.

It soon became, as it should, a navigational reference point for ships entering New Haven's harbour.

Although Gerard Hallock spent much of his time in New York, his 40 acre New Haven property soon came to be known as Gerard Hallock’s cottage.
From The Hallock-Holyoke Pedigree…a Revision of the Hallock Ancestry of 1866,
Amherst: 1906.

It was Gerard Hallock’s vision that his land South of  Spring Street would be developed into a neighbourhood of fashionable cottages.

Thus, undoubtedly reflecting Hallock’s influence, in the first-ever city directory “Patten’s New Haven Directory, for the Year 1840” is found a map of New Haven with a “contemplated” blueprint of The Oyster Point, filled with a grid of unnamed, non-existent streets, and the name “City Point” across the area.

This map of non-existent streets -- on which the traditional name “The Oyster Point” is completely absent -- continued to be used in city directories through the 1840s.

For many years locals would pass Hallock’s cottage on the way to The Cedars, which for over seventy-five years was a popular beach located approximately between the present-day intersections of Lamberton and Cedar Streets and Hallock Avenue, and Second Street.

Here men would swim au naturel and during the 1880s and ’90s one could rent boats and buy refreshments at the "Vue de L’Eau"  Pavilion operated by carpenter, builder and carriage maker Godfrey Grenier at 241 Hallock Avenue, near First Street.

Gerard Hallock decried the tactics of the war wing of the Republican Party.

Those who disagreed with him falsely labelled him a “Southern sympathizer” or “pro-slavery”.

After the Civil War broke out in 1861, the post-master general suspended the mail privileges of Hallock’s  Journal of Commerce on the grounds of “disloyalty”.

Thus, to preserve the newspaper, Hallock resigned as editor, left New York for good, and took up permanent residence in New England.

During the Civil War the all-Irish Ninth Regiment Connecticut Volunteers as well as the Connecticut Fifteenth Volunteers trained on land which Hallock volunteered for the purpose, approximately where Bay View Park now stands.

Hallock died in his New Haven cottage in 1866.

In 1847 oyster grower William S. Barnes  established his business at the southern tip of The Oyster Point on land purchased from Gerard Hallock.

By 1850 Barnes was joined by Richard W. Law, then Alexander Foote by 1854, with Eber Kelsey (of Kelsey Island fame) and Frederick Lane setting up shop by 1855.

Initially shucking and packing of oysters took place in the high-cellared, beach-front homes of the oyster growers.

The industry grew rapidly, so that by 1860 the original beach had been extended to accommodate a new privately-owned street – South Water Street – with the oyster-related activities now taking place in oyster barns.

These were built upon additional infill on the opposite side of South Water Street.

Industry-related buildings also sprang up on Sea Street.

Due to the industry’s rapid growth, the city drew up plans in 1872 to take over and widen South Water Street,  although this plan was not carried out until 1886.
The former 110 South Water Street, demolished in the 20th century. R. W. Law founded in 1847.

Early in the oyster industry’s history dug-out canoes were used when tonging for oysters.

Soon these were replaced by an oyster boat called a "sharpie", a unique New-Haven vessel.

One-mast sharpies were used for tonging, two-mast versions for dredging.

The  two-mast sharpies built at The Oyster Point by Riley Smith were distinguished from the Fair Haven versions built across the harbour by their brass bow piece.

The “Great Set”, i.e. oyster spawning, of 1899 produced record oyster harvests in New Haven Harbour and Long Island Sound through 1903.

Thereafter the oyster industry slowly declined due to star-fish, pollution, poor oyster bed management, the hurricane of 1938, and loss of workers due to World War II.

Changes in currents and salinity caused by construction of harbour break-waters in 1893 and filling of the West River salt marsh  in 1929 (to create the infamous Kimberly Field) also contributed to the decline.

The Nor’easter of Thanksgiving weekend in 1950 was the final blow for many oyster companies.

The City Point’s last oyster company, "Sea Coast", closed in 1962,  and in 1965 the Federal government declared Connecticut’s shell fisheries a disaster -- but perhaps they were typically exaggerating.

The history of one of City Point’s landmarks, the former Howard Avenue Methodist Church building, now home of New Light Holy Church, began in 1871 as a church conducted by Gilbert Eaton in his home on South Water St.

The Eatons initially had relocated from Long Island to Second Street in City Point, but soon moved to South Water Street.

According to local legend this was at No. 47-49 South Water Street, and some residents continued to call this house the former “sailors’ mission” well into the 20th century.

City directories confirm that one of the several City Point Eaton families lived at 47-49 S. Water in the 1860s-70s.

Also, according to local legend and parish archives, the first services were held in a newly-constructed oyster shop directly across the street, owned by the Thomas Oyster Co. -- this building is now relocated to Mystic Seaport museum.

By 1872 the group called itself “The Oyster Point Mission”, and shortly thereafter “The City Point Mission”.

In the City Directory of  1875, the City Point [Methodist Episcopal] Mission on S. Water Street is listed for the first time.

This address likely was the parsonage, because a church building or meeting house was constructed for the congregation by David Shelton in 1875 on a 50′ by 300′ lot which he had owned since 1872, and which was bounded by Hallock Avenue, Sixth Street and Howard Avenue.

The corner stone of the present edifice on Howard Avenue at Fourth Street gives this as the year of the building’s construction.
On Oct. 19, 1880 David Shelton, for the sum of $1000, sold to the congregation “The Church or meeting House” -- but not the land upon which it sat -- “with the following Furniture and fixtures therein, viz:

One Black Walnut Pulpit
One sofa
Fourteen Chairs
Fifty-nine settees or seats,
Ten Double Lamps and
about two hundred yards of Carpet on the Floor.

On July 15, 1881 he then sold the congregation the lot at the corner of Fourth St. and Howard Ave. for $600.

The 1881 City Directory gives both S. Water St. and Howard Ave. at Fourth St. as the Mission’s addresses.

This was the year of the building’s legendary two to three week move up Howard Ave., during which services purportedly were held while the building temporarily sat in the middle of the avenue.

In the 1882 City Directory the name then only appears in the church index as the Howard Avenue Methodist Church at Howard Ave. & Fourth St. (although the street index continues to call it City Point Mission at Howard and Fourth through 1887).
Howard Ave. Methodist/City Point Mission as it appeared between 1882 and 1890, shortly after the building’s relocation to Fourth & Howard.

This new location would have made the church more convenient for all The Oyster Point residents, and allowed for the construction of a parsonage in 1882 directly behind the church at No. 75 Fourth St.

In 1890 the front section and belfry were added.

This entailed moving the building yet again–albeit this time only ten feet back.

In 1897 the bell was installed.

Due to the many oyster industry employees who once belonged to the parish, it garnered the nickname “The Eel Pot”.

From the 1930s, until the parish merged with Grace Methodist farther up Howard Ave. in 1954 (thereby becoming Wesley Methodist), the church was well-known for its  Sunday oyster suppers held during December.

The oysters were donated each year by the Wedmore Oyster Co.

In 1959 the church building was sold to United Pentecostal Church, then Star of Jacob Church.

It has been the home of New Light Holy Church since 1973.

One year after Gerard Hallock’s death in 1866, his heirs sold his land between the Northern side of Lamberton St. and Spring St. to the New Haven and New York Railway.

The railway moved Gerard Hallock's cottage across the street to where nos. 4-16 Cedar Street now stand and immediately began filling in part of the harbour to build much of the present-day rail yard.

Stones from his semi-circular harbour front wall were used to build part of the present rail yard retaining wall.

Hallock’s land from the Southern side of Lamberton Street to  Sea Street was surveyed, mapped and divided into building lots by his heirs.

This new housing development was bounded by new streets -- Hallock Ave. and Greenwich Avenue -- and new cross streets were included:

First through Sixth Streets.

His heirs, being New Yorkers, naturally but  boringly (from a New-England point of view) adopted the numbered system for naming cross streets.

Finally, the grid of streets envisioned on the map of 1840 was to become a reality.
from an 1868 wall map of  New Haven

Thus, many residents began to  regard the Northern boundary of this new residential neighbourhood, rather than the rail road cut, to be the Northern boundary of The Oyster Point -- soon (when oysters were no more) to be renamed City Point–i.e. the Southern, even-numbered, side of Lamberton St. at Hallock Ave., nos. 20-32 Lamberton, continuing over to just before the intersection of Lamberton and Kimberly Ave., and angling down the rear yards of Kimberly to Greenwich Ave. at First St.

This approximately is the Northern boundary of City Point as defined by the New Haven Preservation Trust in its 1982 publication New Haven Historic Resources Inventory.

Thanks to the 1860 introduction of the horse-drawn streetcar (electrified in the 1890s) Kimberly Square soon developed into a commercial hub.

This provided convenient shopping for nearby residents of this newly laid out The Oyster Point residential neighbourhood.

Thus the ubiquitous “corner store”, once an essential part of urban neighborhoods, was and remains something of a rarity in City Point.

A few 19th century exceptions were no. 323-25 Howard Ave.,  built in 1895 as a grocery store and meat market, now Tracey Oil, 86 Second St., built in 1871 as a grocery store, now an apartment, and 228-30 Greenwich Ave., now a brick 2-family house.

Early 20th century additions included 382 Greenwich Ave., now an apartment, but the original 1925 location of Eddy’s, 151 Howard Ave., opened in 1925 as George Stavrides’ confectionary, candy store, now City Point Bubbles Laundromat, 99 S. Water St., Starbranch grocery, later Libson’s, 83 S. Water St./19 Howard Ave., Charlie Eaton’s grocery, 68-74 Second St., now an apartment building, but for many decades the Rustic Garden Restaurant, known for it’s dining booths concealed by beaded curtains, allowing patrons to dine in semi-privacy, and 353 Greenwich Ave.

The New York Smoked Fish Co., destroyed by fire in 1975 and the remains eventually replaced by a 19th c. house relocated from Kimberly Ave.
The post civil War economic decline and the fact that the street-car did not continue down Howard Ave. past Kimberly Ave. slowed development of the neighborhood.

The 1888 "Atlas of the City of New Haven" shows very few homes between Second and Sixth Sts.

The return of prosperity in the 1890s and the extension of the now-electrified streetcar to the end of Howard Ave. (the Q car, later the B car) resulted in a building boom, so that during this time most of the remaining building lots in the neighborhood were built upon.

By the 1880s the gas main had been extended into City Point, and for many years The Ahern Boys of Second St. had the job of lighting the street lamps at dusk and extinguishing them at dawn.
   Bay View Park
c. 1909 postcard

In 1890 the city acquired land for the development of a park to be built on the edge of New Haven's harbour, between Fifth and Sixth Streets.

The new park was championed by George Dudley Seymour (known as “Mr. New Haven”), a proponent of the City Beautiful movement, and designed by landscape architect Donald Grant Mitchell.

Mitchell’s 1891 plan dubbed the park "The Oyster Point Reservation", but by 1892 the name had been changed to "The Bay View Park".

By 1894 it included a central duck pond -- actually a tidal basin -- with two picturesque  rustic bridges leading to a small island, and a tree-lined harbour drive, built upon soil excavated to create the tidal basin.

Although the duck pond consisted of a single body of water, residents referred to the halves bisected by the island and bridges as "The North Pond" and "The South Pond".

Later a monument to the Civil War’s Ninth Regiment was added as well as a playground, ball field and comfort station.

Ice skating was introduced in 1906 by closing the tidal basin flood gates for the winter, as called for in Mitchell’s 1891 plan.

The 1937 stone sea-wall, which replaced the 1890s wooden bulk-head, still can be seen at the end of the present basketball court along Fifth St., and a remnant of the harbor drive [“Park Road”] remains between the Boulevard sewage pumping station and the newer part of the Sound School campus.

Unfortunately, in 1902 a concrete company was built between Howard and Greenwich Aves., directly across from Bay View Park -- the first of several assaults on Mitchell’s landscaped masterpiece -- and the great hurricane of Sept. 21, 1938 destroyed most of the park’s original trees.

Despite the park’s official name “Bay View”, sometimes spelt “Bayview”, residents long referred to it as “City Point Park”.

In the 1858 City Directory is found the first listing for The Oyster Point School on Howard Ave.: a one-room schoolhouse constructed to accommodate 34 pupils,  on a lot purchased by the New Haven City School District from Gerard Hallock on Feb. 6, 1858.

In the 1866 Directory it is then listed as the City Point School “at the foot of Howard Avenue” and, in the 1870-71 edition, at 20 Howard Ave. [the property which today is numbered 44 Howard].

This seems to be the first municipal use of the name City Point as an alternate to Oyster Point.

The 1877 City Directory lists this as one of the Washington District schools, along with the new Greenwich Ave. School which was built in 1877 at the corner of Greenwich & First St., where The Galvin Park is now located.

The 1877 Annual Report of the Board of Education states that the “City Point and Washington Branch Schools continued through the Fall and Winter Terms, and then became part of Greenwich Av. School, which was opened May 7th, 1877.”
   It perhaps is no coincidence that this first official use of the name "City Point" in 1866 took place the same year that  Gerard Hallock died.

The November 1867 map of building lots owned by Hallock’s heirs was filed with the Town Clerk on Jan. 24, 1868, and approved by the Court of Common Council [predecessor of the Board of Aldermen] on May 4 of that same year.

It is this author’s theory that the name City Point was coined by Hallock at least as far back as 1840.

The name "City Point" subsequently was promoted by his heirs as a marketing device to tout their building lots as a new fashionable suburban development and to dissociate it from the aesthetically unappealing oyster industry.

Changing the original proposed name of "The City Point"’s exquisitely landscaped 1890s park from Oyster Point Reserve to Bayview Park undoubtedly was part of this attempt to upscale the neighborhood’s image.

The 1870-71 New Haven Directory lists Second Street as being in City Point, and Greenwich Ave. as extending from Kimberly Ave. to City Point [i.e. to Sea St.]. South Water St. is described as being in Oyster Point, while the City Point School is described as being at No. 20 Howard Ave. in City Point.

Thus, by 1870 the names "The Oyster Point" and "The City Point" are being used interchangeably. 

And, as we already have noted, the neighborhood’s 1875 church chose the name City Point Mission.
By the 1890s the name City Point began to replace Oyster Point as the preferred name of the neighbourhood.

The 1893 Town and City Atlas of the State of Connecticut contains one of the first accurate, rather than “projected”, New Haven maps to use the name City Point in place of Oyster Point.

The map found in the front of the New Haven Directory of that same year has the name “Oyster Point” just off the shore of South Water Street, and the name “City Point” next to Bayview Park, where the sewer pipe emptying into the harbour lay.

It was not until 1926 that the New Haven Directory map used the name City Point in place of Oyster Point, while the U.S. Board of Geographical Names did not officially recognize the “new” name City Point  until 1939.
By the turn of the 20th century the old name Oyster Point came to be regarded as a derogatory reference to the area.

Deteriorating docks of the declining oyster industry along South Water St., the putrid untreated sewage pouring into the harbor from a pipe now covered by the new City Point pier at Sea and South Water Streets, and the foul smell of the city dump that once stood near the corner of Sea St. and Greenwich Ave. dominated the scene.

During the Great Depression an impromptu shanty town for the homeless appeared at the dump.

Up until World War I, City Point was like a little country village unto itself.

A dramatic increase in automobile ownership in the 1920s caused City Point to lose its quiet insular quality.

Nevertheless, a remarkable number of barns and carriage houses survive in City Point, reminders of its pre-automotive era, e.g.

-- behind nos. 393 & 133 Greenwich Ave., 196 Hallock Ave., 154 Howard Ave. (which once housed the neighborhood’s first Stanley Steamer automobile) & 297 Howard (an unusual brick version whose original owner was a brick mason), 57 S. Water St., and nos. 40 & 74 Sea Street (the latter, recently restored from near-collapse, perhaps being the neighborhood’s most flamboyant). Beside 98 South Water St. stands the neighborhood’s sole surviving oyster barn, where oysters were processed for shipping.

**************************************************************
In 1919, the quiet suburban neighborhood’s tranquility was further broken with the construction of the Seamless Rubber Co. factory, now One Long Wharf, on Hallock Avenue.

This entailed additional filling of New Haven's Harbour, requiring "The City Point Yacht Club" (founded by Gerard Hallock's heirs in 1895) to move from its dock between Second and Third Streets, to a dock almost directly across from Third Street at 169 Hallock Avenue.

********************************************************

By 1888 plans were made to extend the Boulevard to Sea Street and  to drain the West River salt marsh behind Greenwich Ave., where Kimberly Field (formerly called St. Peter’s Oval or simply The Oval) now stands.

Thus the  intersection of Sea St. & Greenwich Ave. would no longer be covered by high tide twice a day.

The 1911 New Haven Atlas shows this as having been completed, and the marsh land as being privately owned by Clark, Goodrich, Logan, Steven, and St. Peter Church.

However, by this time only the area behind Greenwich Ave. from Second to Third Streets actually had been drained.

This allowed for the extension of Second St. to Kimberly Ave. in 1906 and the construction of the Kimberly Ave. School that same year, the construction of St. Peter School in 1911, and the construction of a new street–St. Peter Ave.–in 1918.

Residents growing up in City Point in the 1920s to the 1970s recall that the Boulevard stopped North of the rail road tracks (even though the city directory beginning in 1895 describes the Boulevard as extending from Whalley Ave. to Sea St.).

To travel from Kimberly Avenue to the Boulevard one had to walk across the Grant Street Bridge: an elevated foot bridge built in 1907 that began at the end of Grant  St. and crossed over the rail road cut to Morris Street. 

Between Kimberly and Sea Street there was only a large sewer pipe which residents used as a foot bridge to cross the West River salt marsh.

The appended map of sewer lines in the back of the 1911 New Haven Atlas shows this pipe crossing the salt marsh, with the water extending northward between Kimberly and Greenwich just past Third St.

The map in the 1920 city directory shows a planned road here, but the area still under water.
In 1929 the mouth of the West River was dredged, eliminating the island that required two bridges to cross from Kimberly Avenue into West Haven, and the dredged material was used to fill the remainder of the West River salt marsh behind Greenwich Ave. from Third St. to Sea St., and to create a dirt road between Sea St. and Kimberly Ave.

Although officially considered a continuation of the Boulevardm even though a bridge extending the Boulevard over the rail road tracks was not built until 1978, residents referred to this dirt road between Kimberly Ave. and Sea St. as "Dump Road" due to the dump that immediately developed along the shore here. 

By the mid 1930s the area between Kimberly Avenue and Greenwich Avenue finally had drained sufficiently to create the athletic field,

More significantly, with the water on the Western side of City Point now gone, City Point was no longer a “point". 

Unfortunately, zoning regulations and wet-lands conservation laws, which would have prevented such environmental disasters, did not yet exist.

Perhaps to appease residents over the loss of the salt marsh, the city used fire hoses to flood the field every Winter for many years so that it could be used for ice skating.

This drainage of the salt marsh (called "The Mud Flats" by residents) also allowed for the 1931 construction of  the second Saint Peter Church on Kimberly Ave. which replaced the original 1903 church, now Brams Hall of the Betsy Ross Arts Magnet School, primarily to serve the area’s rapidly growing Catholic population. 

In 1901 the new parish’s Northern boundary was declared to be the rail road cut, with many of its members living not only within the traditional Hallock Ave.-Greenwich Ave. -South Water Street borders of City Point, but also within the Kimberly Ave. area.

With City Point’s Western border now less distinct, some residents of Kimberly Ave., Grant St.,  Plymouth St. and Cassius St. began to think of themselves as being City Point residents, particularly during the 1920s through the ’60s -- even though these streets never were part of the geographic “point” from which City Point had derived its name, nor were these streets part of the Hallock family’s 1868 housing development known as City Point.

Nevertheless this area–as well as Spireworth Village aka Trowbridge Square -- was part of what had been referred to as the Oyster Point Quarter during much of the 19th century.

Thus it was during this era that City Point was defined by some residents as being

“South of the rail road tracks”.

One even can trace the blurring of City Point’s boundaries back to the late 1870s when Greenwich Ave. was extended an extra block beyond the Point and Hallock property, from Kimberly Ave. to Lamberton St., thereby creating one side of Kimberly "Square", which, despite its name, is a triangle! 
At about this same time, the construction of the present rail road station on Union Avenue caused many residents gradually to  redefine the Hill neighborhood. 

The Hill (once known as Sodom Hill and later Mount Pleasant) originally had derived its name from the upward slope along Congress Ave., beginning at the now-extinct West Creek [where Route 34/The Oak Street Connector now is located], and was separated from the Oyster Point Quarter by a branch of West Creek that ran just North of, and parallel to Columbus Ave.

This later would be drained to create the Derby Rail Road cut.

The Hill’s other original boundaries included West St./Winthrop Ave. (or later, the West River) on the west, Oak St./Morocco St. [now Legion Ave.] on the north, and Hill St. [now Church St. South] on the east.

With the completion of the  present rail road station in 1919, many residents began to define the Hill as comprising all of the area radiating from the upward slope of Union Ave., and therefore incorporating the City Point neighborhood.

For many residents this initiated the gradual loss of City Point’s distinct neighborhood identity.

During the Great Depression and the rationing of World War II many home-owners simply did not have the money to maintain their properties.

As a result many of the lovely old homes in City Point and nearby neighbourhoods began to deteriorate.

Lack of tax revenues during this time did not allow the city to provide basic services such as street repairs.

Urban decay had set in.

After World War II the federal government gave returning veterans low interest mortgages with very low down payments to purchase housing.

However, the mortgages only could be used to purchase a new, not pre-existing, home.

Simultaneously the government began a massive high-way construction programme, while spending virtually nothing on railways and other mass-transit systems.

New Haven’s own deteriorated trolley system shut down in 1948.

The decline of the rail road soon followed, and by the 1970s New Haven’s train station was in total disrepair.

Ill conceived urban renewal programs during the 1950s and ’60s razed entire neighborhoods, with no provisions having been made for the displaced residents and businesses.

At this same time unscrupulous real estate agents engaged in the now-illegal practice of “block busting”: white home-owners were contacted and told that “coloreds” were moving into the neighborhood, so they had better sell lest their property become worthless.

All of these factors contributed to an explosion of suburban sprawl, with devastating ecological impact.

Vast swaths of high way were cut through historic neighborhoods, sucking the economic life-blood out of cities, exacerbating racial and economic divisions in our society, and making our nation–particularly its automobile-oriented suburbs–utterly dependent on foreign oil.

With the decimation of New Haven’s neighborhoods, the city was left with Real Property consisting of  over  45% tax-exempt properties (mostly institutions such as universities and hospitals that serve predominantly non-residents) and a housing stock that is only c. 30% owner-occupied, thus providing most residents with little incentive to care for neighborhoods which they do not “own”.

The 1949 harbor dredging and back-filling, and the 1950s construction of the Connecticut Turnpike eliminated the portion of the harbour facing Hallock Avenue.

The final step in the obliteration of the geographical point or narrow peninsula which once defined City Point. 

Bayview Park was split in two and its picturesque duck pond destroyed.

************************************************

Even our beloved City Point Yacht Club, the oldest continuously-opearting club in the country -- once located on a dock at Hallock Avenue. and Third Street, was forced to relocate over by the Kimberly Avenue Bridge -- and thus was no longer in City Point.

********************************************



In the 1980s condominiums (which due to their gated, insular design, hardly can be considered part of the neighborhood) were built on a former neighbourhood beach, which for a time had been the site of the City Point Athletic Club [“ACs”] baseball field.

Thus City Point’s once expansive public beaches were reduced to a tiny strip at the end of Howard Ave.: a fragment of Lane’s Shore, named after one of the old oyster companies.
As residents died or moved away, the collective memories of what defined the City Point neighborhood slowly disappeared, and for many residents the neighborhood soon lost its identity.

By the early 1970s The Connecticut Turnpike had become a demarcation of de facto racial segregation in City Point.

The area SOUTH of the Connecticut Turnpike was virtually all white, while the portion of City Point north had become predominantly African-American.

This contributed to a growing illusion that City Point only consisted of the area south of the highway, while everything north of the highway was “The Hill”.

Thus many City Point residents today -- particularly many living in that two-thirds of City Point north of the Connecticut Turnpike -- think they simply live in “The Hill” or “Hill South”.

The latter term is actually a large municipal administrative district originating from the 1980s, when the four Police Dept. quadrants were replaced with smaller “districts”–including “Hill North” and “Hill South”.

In recent years some have confused these districts with “neighborhoods”.

Recently the city placed banners throughtout the Hill North police district that proclaim “Hill North Neighborhood is my home”! -- even though these districts do not conform to traditional neighborhoods -- and indeed are too vast in area to meet any standard definition of the word “neighborhood”.

In 2001 the one-third of City Point south of The Connecticut Turnpike was made a “local historic district”.

Purportedly this was to preserve that area’s buildings from further modern alterations.

However, because New Haven has no effective means to enforce historic district regulations, the only actual impact of the district’s creation has been to reinforce the myth that City Point consists only of the area south of the highway.

Adding to the neighborhood’s loss of identity is the fact that the City Plan Dept. and Police Dept. maps show “The Hill” as encompassing everything from Legion Ave. down to South Water Street: City Point does not officially exist.

By the late 20th century a national New Urbanism movement took root which promotes the re-birth of city neighbourhoods that are pedestrian, mass-transit and shopping-friendly and not automobile-dependent.

This gradually has had an impact in City Point.

In the 1980s the abandoned, boarded-up houses in the neighbourhood were too numerous to count.

Today such houses are a rarity in City Point (and usually the temporary result of an unfortunate fire or foreclosure.

Likewise, nearby Kimberly "Triangle", which traditionally served as City Point’s neighboring commercial hub, has undergone a renaissance of its own, even boasting a large, modern supermarket.

In 1978 the long-contemplated bridge carrying the Boulevard over the rail road tracks finally was constructed., and at this time city planners coined the name Kimberly "Triangle" Neighborhood, in an effort to revitalize the area. 

In the early 21st century, St. Peter’s was demolished to make way for construction of the Betsy Ross Arts Magnet School and Second St. was returned to its original 1868 configuration.

Thus today residents of Kimberly Ave., Grant St.,  Plymouth St. and Cassius St. generally consider themselves part of the Kimberly Triangle Neighborhood or The Hill, rather than City Point, even though those four streets are South of the rail road cut.

There also has been a greater effort in recent years to fill empty lots in the City Point neighborhood with houses that blend better with the surrounding historic buildings.

For example, nos. 149 to 165 Hallock Ave. are obviously modern tract homes, but the steep roof pitch with gables facing the street, bright colours, front porches and architectural detailing (typical 19th century practices) make these houses welcome recent additions to the neighbourhood.

Unlike a town or ward, a neighbourhood is not a legally defined entity with precise boundaries.

Thus residents never will agree on what constitutes City Point.

The traditional East-West boundaries (Hallock and Greenwich Aves.) are generally uncontested because of the water that once defined these.

Indeed, the street grid on modern maps of New Haven still allows one to visualize the narrow point that formerly was bounded by these avenues.

On the other hand, the northern boundary always will remain controversial, because the perceived northern boundary of Oyster Point or the Oyster Point Quarter changed over time: from Columbus Ave., to the 1848 rail road cut, to the Northern edge of the 1867 map of new building lots, or even–in the opinion of those who know very little of the neighborhood’s history–to the Connecticut Turnpike. 
Adding to the controversy is disagreement among residents as to whether City Point should be considered an independent neighbourhood or one of several neighbourhoods that constitute The Hill (or “Hill South”), i.e. along with Kimberly Triangle and Trowbridge Square.

Considering the historical “migration” southward of City Point’s perceived northern boundary, as well as the fact that Gerard Hallock was instrumental in developing both Trowbridge Square and City Point, perhaps an acceptable compromise would be to describe City Point as '

“a distinct neighborhood within a larger area that today is called The Hill”.

In stating this compromised definition, the author must point out that the steep rise from the shore of downtown’s long-vanished West Creek upward along Congress Ave., a rise from which The Hill derived its name, was considered by New Haven residents and cartographers to be a distinct topographical feature from the steep bluff that once dropped from just North of Columbus Ave. over to Cedar St. and along Hallock Ave., down to New Haven's harbour.
But then, it also must be acknowledged that City Point is no longer a point.

Some prefer to think of City Point as a separate neighborhood, distinct from the Hill.

However, despite rumorus to the contrary, City Point residents currently have no plans to have it declared The Independent Republic Of City Point.
REFERENCES
Annual Report of the Board of Education of the New Haven City School District, for the year ending September, 1858 New Haven: T.J.Stafford, 1858
Annual Report …City School District, for the year ending Sept. 1, 1868 New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, 1868.

This is the first municipal report to list the former Oyster Point School as the City Point School– unfortunately with no explanation for the name change.
Annual Report …City School District, for the year ending Aug. 31, 1877 New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, 1877 
Atlas of the City of New Haven, Connecticut Philadelphia: G. M. Hopkins, 1888
Atwater, Edward, ed. History of the City of New Haven.
New York: H.W. Munsell & Co., 1887
Baldwin, Simeon Public Parks New Haven: Penderson & Crisand, 1881 [briefly mentions the history of The Cedars beach]
Barber, John W.
History and Antiquities of New Haven, Connecticut from Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time.
3rd edition. New Haven: Penderson, Crisand & Co., 1870
Benham’s New Haven Directory New Haven: J. H. Benham, 1858-59 [includes first listing of Oyster Point School], 1866-67 [now listed as City Point School], 1870-71, 1875

The 1870-71 edition lists the City Point School at 20 Howard Ave., near S. Water St., and lists Second St. as being in City Point and Greenwich Ave. as extending from Kimberly Ave. to City Point. The other numbered streets of City Point as well as Hallock Ave. are not listed, since they had not yet been built upon. South Water St. is described as being in Oyster Point. Thus, at this time the names Oyster Point and City Point were being used interchangeably. 

This also would bolster the claim by some residents that City Point begins on the even-numbered side of Lamberton St., between Hallock & Howard Aves., since this is the northern boundary of the 1867 map of building lots.]
Brown, Elizabeth Mills
New Haven: A Guide To Architecture and Urban Design 
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1976

The essay gives brief history of some of the houses in New Haven, including City Point.
Caplan, Colin M.
A Guide to Historic New Haven, Connecticut Charleston, S.C.: The History Press, 2007
Guided walking/driving tours for New Haven history buffs; includes history of many City Point houses.
Carroll, J. Halsted
Memorial of Gerard Hallock New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, 1866
A City Plan Dept. map of the Hill comprises all of the areas formerly known as Sodom Hill and The Oyster Point Quarter.]
Both the Kimberly Square and the City Point neighborhoods together comprise New Haven’s 2000 census tract no.1404. The City Plan Department’s copy of this map labels tract 1404 “City Point”, further adding to the traditional confusion and disagreement over what actually constitutes “City Point”.  The City Plan Dept.’s version of the census map also points out–quite correctly–that there are no “official” neighborhood boundaries in New Haven.]
City Yearbook of the City of New Haven, 1876 Hartford: Case, Lockwood & Brainard Co.
City Yearbook of the City of New Haven for 1932 New Haven: The S.Z. Field Co., 1933 

This edition includes a brief history of New Haven’s major bridges, and describes the 1929 dredging at the mouth of the West River–the beginning of the end of the West River salt marsh.

Court of Common Council [predecessor of Board of Aldermen], City of New Haven: Vol. 3, 1822-1833, p. 187 [3rd Sept., 1830; list of new streets in the Oyster Point Quarter: Putnum, Carlisle, Port-see, Columbus, Salem, Cedar, Liberty Sts., plus Spireworth Sq. (later renamed Trowbridge Sq.)] ; Vol. 4, 1833-1840, p. 268 [Nov. 12th, 1839; request to affix numbers to buildings in city so a directory can be compiled]; Vol. 11, p. 111 [May 4, 1868; plan of 1867 map of Hallock’s heirs approved]
Dana, Arnold G.
The Dana Collection aka New Haven Old and New   New Haven Museum and Historical Society

Invaluable collection of photos and newspaper clippings from New Haven’s past.

Doolittle, Amos, engraver Plan of New Haven 1824 [map]
Ernst, Margaret M. Donald Grant Mitchell and the Birth of the New Haven Park System: An Urban Adaptation of Rural Republicanism New Haven: New Haven Colony Historical Society, 1980
Galpin, Virginia M.
New Haven’s Oyster Industry: 1638-1987 New Haven Colony Historical Society, 1989
Goldberg, Cary, ed.
inside New Haven’s Neighborhoods: A Guide To The City Of New Haven   
New Haven: George E. Platt Co., 1982.

The essay ncludes reflections by residents on the racial divide created when City Point was bisected by Interstate 95. Over twenty-five years after this book was published demographic segregation within the neighborhood gradually is dissipating.

Hallock, Charles  The Hallock-Holyoke Pedigree and Collateral Branches in the United States, Being a Revision of the Hallock Ancestry of 1866 prepared by Rev. Wm. A. Hallock, D.D. Amherst: Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, 1906

“At one time, before the (Civil) war, he was active in the Southern (Church) Aid Society…under whose auspices and furtherance the slaves of the South would have been manumitted without war or bloodshed, as summarily and peacefully as were the slaves of Brazil… It was Mr. Hallock’s efforts to prevent forceful action that brought him to the inquisition of the anti-slavery politicians, who persisted in provoking a conflict, and thereby shortened his life.”

According to the death notice in the Hartford Courant, at the time of his death Gerard Hallock was New Haven’s largest landowner.

Hallock, William H. Life of Gerard Hallock New York: Oakley-Mason & Co., 1869

Gerard Hallock's son’s rather defensive biography of his late father, who often was mis-characterized as having been pro-slavery.

He in fact purchased the freedom of over 100 southern slaves. Devout Christian pacifist, defender of Constitutional law. Therefore felt “radical” abolitionism, i.e. use of coercion or northern Personal Freedom Laws (which defied federal Fugitive Slave Act) would cause anarchy, civil war and dissolution of Union. He believed–rather naively, we can say today–that the  “spread of the Gospel” eventually would result in the end of slavery, so founded the Southern Church Aid Society. His editorials criticizing the Lincoln administration’s unwillingness to negotiate with the South resulted in the Post Office refusing to deliver his New York Journal of Commerce, forcing him to retire to New Haven in 1861.]
Hartley, W. T., surveyor
Map of Building Lots in the City of New Haven Belonging to the Heirs of Gerard Hallock, Deceased  privately published, 1867 [The rail road continued to own the odd-numbered side of Lamberton St. just across from these new building lots into the 20th century.]
Hartley & Whitford, surveyors Map of the City of New Haven Philadelphia: Collins & Clark, 1851

This map clearly shows the original location of “Hallock’s Castle” and West Water St. below the bluff.

A one-block fragment of West Water St. still survives behind the New Haven Police Headquarters: an obscure reminder of how far north the harbour once extended.

Hill, Everett G. A Modern History Of New Haven And Eastern New Haven County 2 vols. New York: S. J. Clark Publishing Co., 1918
Hoose, Shoshana City Point New Haven: Schooner, Inc., c. 1979

Intended for students, the esssay includes reflections on City Point by residents; also documents how The Connecticut Turnpike had become a racial barrier by the early 1970s,

City Point south of I-95 was nearly all white, City Point north of I-95 had become predominantly black and therefore increasingly considered by many residents to be part of The Hill rather than City Point.
Howard Avenue Methodist Church Seventy-Fifth Anniversary 1950 [program of worship services and parish history]
Hughes, Arthur H. & Allen S. Morse Connecticut Place Names Hartford: The Connecticut Historical Society, 1976
Land Records, City of New Haven: Vol. 123, p.404 [deed transferring a parcel from G. Hallock to William S. Barnes, Oct. 25, 1847; apparently Barnes was the first oysterman on the point]; Vol. 126, p.415

[deed transferring a portion of the aforementioned parcel to Denison Hall, June 2, 1848]; Vol. 133, p.29

[deed transferring the aforementioned parcel from Hall to Richard W. Law, April 10, 1850; advertisements for Law’s oyster co. state that it was founded in 1847.  In an undated newspaper clipping given to this editor, Law’s grandson is quoted as saying the company was founded in 1850.]
Land Records, City of New Haven: Vol. 172, p.37 [deed transferring 50′ X 100′ lot on Howard Ave. in Oyster Point from G. Hallock to The New Haven City School District, Feb. 6, 1858]; Vol. 322, p.280 [deed trasferring the City Point School to Mary Elizabeth Coe (wife of William Coe), Mar. 2, 1878]; Vol. 330, pp.125,352 [lien against Mary Coe for “repairs or remodeling” of “the City Point School House, No. 3 Howard Avenue” for $125.25 due; Nov.5,1878,Jan.25,1879; deeds do not yet assign a number to this property, but directories call it No. 20 Howard Ave.]; Vol. 391, p.67 [$1,600 mortgage with New Haven savings Bank, Sept. 26, 1887–possibly to transform the old one-room school house into the 1880s-style residential structure that exists today, & likely incorporating at least the foundation of the former school house?]; Vol. 491, p. 98 [additional $5,000 mortgage taken out by Coe,  secured by this & two other City Point properties, Sept. 28, 1897]; [author unable to locate deed transferring property from Coe to J.Smith, despite hours spent cross-checking indexes; obstacles include nearly illegible script, similar descriptions of nearby lots, & no street address number on property deeds] Vol. 519, p. 540 [deed transferring ownership from Jeremiah Smith to Nellie Manville, May 11, 1899; Vol. 523, p. 159, Vol. 529, p.404 restore original lot dimensions]; Vol. 663, p. 476 [deed transferring same lot–now described as No. 44 Howard Ave.– from N. Manville to Chauncey L. Wedmore, May 18, 1911; first deed to give this property a street number in its description; house numbering system was changed on Howard Ave. at least once between 1888 & 1911]
Land Records, City of New Haven: Vol. 262, p. 578 [deed transferring ownership of lot bounded by Hallock, Sixth & Howard to David Shelton, Jan. 29, 1872]; Vol. 339, p. 374 [deed transferring church building from D. Shelton to Methodist congregation, Oct. 19, 1880]; Vol. 348, p. 48 [deed transferring lot at Fourth St. & Howard Ave. from David Shelton to Howard Ave. Methodist Episcopal Church, July 15, 1881]
Land Records, City of New Haven: Vol. 380, p. 471, March 3rd, 1886 “The City of New Haven has taken for the definite layout of South Water Street from the Easterly line of Greenwich Avenue extended, to the Southerly line of Sea Street a strip of land sixty feet (60′) wide, or so much of said strip as was not already dedicated to the use of a street from the owners fronting on said strip; namely from…” [The document then names nearly everyone who owned property on South Water Street in 1886. It then refers to Map No. 382 dated Aug. 5th, 1872. The planned extension of Greenwich Ave. from Sea St. to S. Water St., referred to above and shown in the aforementioned map as well as in the 1867 map commissioned by Gerard Hallock’s heirs,  never was carried out.]
Lattanzi, Robert M. Oyster Village To Melting Pot: The Hill Section Of New Haven Chester, Conn.: Pattaconk Brook Publ., 2000 [The upward slope from the former West Creek to the “suburbs” caused the area around present-day Congress Ave. to be named “Sodom Hill”, Mount Pleasant” and finally “The Hill”.]
Mitchell, Donald Grant Mitchell Collection aka Donald Grant Mitchell Papers (Mss 140) New Haven Colony Historical Society [includes his notes for developing Oyster Point Reservation/Bay View Park]
New Haven Directory (including West Haven) New Haven: Price & Lee Co., 1876, 1877, 1881, 1882, 1887, 1891, 1893, 1895, 1896, 1899, 1907, 1919 [1891 edition includes one of the first city maps showing the not-yet-named Bay View Park.] Several of the above sources (Brown, Caplan, Lattanzi) confirm that the Howard Ave. Methodist Church building originally stood at Howard & Sixth Street, but New Haven directories do not corroborate this, giving only the original S. Water St location, & later the Fourth St. & Howard Ave. location. This likely is because during the church’s temporary location on Sixth St., the parsonage still was located on S. Water St.]
Another great source (besides The New Haven Museum and Historical Society aka New Haven Colony Historical Society) for historic New Haven photos. Also historic property research]
New Haven Preservation Trust & Conn. Historical Commissionn, Anne F. Niles, ed. New Haven Historic Resources Inventory, Phase I: Central New Haven 1982 [This gives the northern boundary of City Point as the rear yards of 20-32 Lamberton, which is inconsistent with the fact that these addresses–originally a single building lot facing Hallock Ave., but later subdivided–are on Hartley’s 1867 map of new building lots. It was shortly after these building lots were drawn up that the name City Point gradually began to displace the name Oyster Point.]
A history of Trowbridge Square, one of the three neighborhoods, along with City Point and Kimberly Square, which comprised the old Oyster Point Quarter]
Osterweiss, Rollin G. Three Centuries of New Haven, 1638-1938 New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1953
Patten’s New Haven Directory, for the year 1840 New Haven: James M. Patten, 1840
Rackliffe, Pamela A. The Origin and Development of the New Haven Parks Designed by Donald Grant Mitchell: The First Three Decades (Masters Thesis) Storrs, Conn.: University of Connecticut, 1987 [The author alternates between spelling City Point’s park as one word “Bayview” or two “Bay View”. D. G. Mitchell’s plans for the park use two words “Bay View”.]
Shumway, Floyd & Richard Hegel New Haven: An Illustrated History Woodland Hills, CA: Windsor Publ. Inc. 1987
Townshend, Doris The Streets of New Haven: The Origin of Their Names New Haven Colony Historical Society, 1984
Town and City Atlas of the State of Connecticut Boston: D. H. Hurd & Co., 1893
United States Coast Survey From a survey made for the City of New Haven, Connecticut, Sheet No. 6[topographical map] New Haven: 1877 [interior of the city executed by the City Engineer’s Office]
Visel, Timothy C. New Haven’s lost natural oyster beds – Account of George McNeil, son of J. P. McNeil of The McNeil Oyster Company  paper given at the Sound School, New Haven, June 2010
Warner, Robert Austin New Haven Negroes: A Social History New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1940 [The 1949 dredging of New Haven Harbor & 1950s construction of the Connecticut Turnpike/I-95 buried all but a remnant of the ancient 3/4 mile Long Wharf which once began near the present Knights of Columbus Museum, and was last expanded in 1812 by New Haven’s “Black King” William Lanson, a prominent leader of New Haven’s free black community.]
Withington, Sidney The First Twenty Years of Railroads in Connecticut New Haven: Yale University Press, 1935 [The Derby Rail Road opened on Aug. 8, 1871, but the rail road’s “cut” through New Haven appears on the map in J. W. Barber’s 1870-71 directory, so that portion likely already had been constructed by 1870, info  re. the Derby Rail Road.]
Site includes information on Rev. Simeon Jocelyn who founded nearby Spireworth (later called Trowbridge) Square in 1830 where free blacks and whites would live together. When he proposed establishment of country’s first Negro College a white mob stoned his house. (Northerners generally were opposed to slavery, but did not support equal rights.) In 1833 state passed “Black Law” outlawing such schools (including Prudence Crandall’s in Canterbury, CT). Law repealed in 1838. In 1850s Gerard Hallock further developed the Trowbridge Square area. Also  regarding correspondence between Jocelyn and Crandall.]
SUGGESTED READING
Walljasper, Jay  The Great Neighborhood Book: A Do-it-yourself Guide to Placemaking New Society Publ., 2007

No comments:

Post a Comment