The wall built by Thomas Greig. It was later the entrance to the Seven Oaks Estate. Photo courtesy of Ed G. and Kevin M.
Robert Greig’s brothers Thomas and Bennett Greig wanted to create a high class hunting and fishing club on Mill Pond (later called Stege’s Pond). They had rice growing on the upper end of the pond to benefit the large population of wild ducks.
Thomas Greig died in 1886, a few months after completing the stone wall to the west of Mill/Stege’s Pond and the lovely stone arched bridge with the water falls at the south end of the pond. The stone wall was later the entrance to the Seven Oaks Estate.
Stone arched bridge on Stege Pond courtesy of Cynthia.
Seven Oaks Brochure courtesy of Kevin M. and Ed G.
Seven Oaks, owned by George and Elizabeth Beck, was another huge, beautiful boarding house. It was set back some distance north of Mill/Stege Road and west of Mill/Stege’s Pond. It was north of the Greig Home.
The Greig family home courtesy of Ed G. and Kevin M.
The massive Greig home built in the early 1890s, was south of Mill/Stege’s Pond and Road. Robert, Kate, Isabelle, and Bennett Greig lived in the huge Greig House. Robert’s sister Jane, his sister-in-law Julia and her daughter lived there also.
The Greigs owned over 100,000 acres in Highland, Lumberland, Tusten, and Bethel. They bought the land in lots of 400 acres or larger for the water rights because they believed steam power was the wave of the future.—Ed G. as told to Kevin M.
Seven Oaks and the Greig House Map courtesy of Gary Smith.
The Beck and Greig families, both from England, lived less than a mile north of Eldred Corners near Mill Pond (later called Stege’s). Their houses were not far from Board Road which went north to Bethel, New York, some 13 miles from Eldred Corners.
The Greigs had owned knitting mills in Manchester, England, and lost all their ships running the blockade during the Civil War. In 1869, they paid all their debts and sailed for New York.
Both the Greigs and Becks lived in Eldred by 1870 as their locations were shown on the 1870 Beers Map. Neither home is in existence today.
The next 2 or 3 posts have photos related to the Beck’s and Greig’s homes that are courtesy of Ed G. (a descendant of the Griegs) and Kevin M. who sent me Ed’s family photos.
New York Herald building around 1895. Photo by J.S. Johnston. Photo: Library of Congress: LC-USZ62-68731.
The New York Herald Headquarters at Broadway and 34th Street was designed by McKim, Mead, & White in 1890. The building was completed by 1895.
James Gordon Bennett Sr. had founded the Herald in 1835. His son James Bennett Jr. took over when James Sr. died in 1872.
The building was a Renaissance Revival building, designed after Fra Giacondo’d Palazzo del Consiglio in Verona. It was demolished in 1921.
Pneumatic tubes, speaking tubes, and a telephone system connected the offices. On the roof along with about 24 bronze owls with blinking eyes (electric lights), was a flock of carrier pigeons who brought the latest distant news events.
The New York Herald under James Bennett Jr. financed Henry Stanley’s expedition to Africa to find David Livingston.
New York’s Herald Square was named after the New York Herald newspaper. Times Square, named after The New York Times (the Herald’s rival), is north of Herald Square.
The New York Tribune acquired the New York Herald after Bennett Jr.’s death in 1924, and created the New York Herald Tribune.—wikipedia.org., nytimes.com.
The main building on Ellis Island around 1905. Photo: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division: Detroit Publishing Co., LC-D4-18676.
On January 1, 1892, the U.S. Immigration Station on Ellis Island at the mouth of the Hudson River in New York Harbor opened. Previously, the states were responsible for immigrants.
The first structure on Ellis Island burned down in 1897. A new building opened in late 1900. Over 12 million immigrants had entered the U.S. through Ellis Island when it closed in 1954.
Lon Austin's 1937 Christmas Card to his brother Ell.Inside Lon's card to Ell Austin.
With the card was the following letter from Lon Austin (80) to his brother Ell Austin (82), which mentions their sister Aida Austin (76).
There had been some strong family friction with Ell Austin over the Austin property, though it is still unclear what the situation was.
This letter, a number of letters between Ell and my grandfather Mort, and the next letter I post (from Aida to Ell) indicate that things had resolved when the siblings were older.