Lunch in Yonkers, NY – A Couple of Murals

Yonkers seems to have a lot of murals. Here are just two of them.

Above: Detail of a mural by Dutch artist, Eelco van den Berg overlooks Mill Street Courtyard in downtown Yonkers. The public space was designed around a newly recovered portion of the Saw Mill River.


A contemporary wall mural by street artist Fumero on the side of the Herald Statesman building in Yonkers, New York.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

Lunch in Yonkers, NY – Spanish American War Monument

Sculpted marble block with a bronze plaque depicting soldiers (I missed this plaque) and topped with a bronze statue of a soldier carrying a gun.

The front of the base shows an eagle and an inscription which reads:

Erected by the City of Yonkers
To
Her Soldiers, Sailors and Marines
Of the Spanish American War, The
Philippine Islands Insurrection
And Boxer Uprising
1928

I don’t recall having seen a monument to the Spanish American War before.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

Lunch in Yonkers, NY – Philipse Manor Hall State Historic Site

One of my main reasons for going into Yonkers early was to take a look at this building. I’d passed by it in a car a couple of times and was amazed to see a pre-revolutionary war building right next to the more modern buildings of today’s Yonkers. Unfortunately, I was to be disappointed. The building is temporarily closed for what appear to be extensive renovations. It’s completely fenced off and it’s almost impossible to take pictures. However, I decided to pluck up my courage and went a little bit into the building site – to a prefabricated structure where I assumed the people responsible for the work would be. I asked if I could take some pictures, and they told me that I could as long as I stayed closed to their office and didn’t wander into the work site. It was from this position that I took the above picture.

The New York Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation site describes the building as follows:

On November 28, 1776, the same year that 56 Americans signed the Declaration of Independence, well over 200 colonial New Yorkers placed their signatures on a “Declaration of Dependence.” These signers were Loyalists, citizens who remained faithful to their sovereign, George III, King of Great Britain. Prominent among the signatures was that of Frederick Philipse III, Lord of the vast Manor of Philipsburg and resident of the elegant mansion known today as Philipse Manor Hall. Frederick Philipse III and his family lived in luxury, well supported by rents from the many tenant farms on his property. Times were changing, however, and while others rebelled against Great Britain, Frederick III defended the Crown. His Loyalist beliefs were so strong that General George Washington ordered him arrested in 1776. Philipse and his family later fled to British occupied New York City and then to England, where the last “Lord of the Manor”, broken in spirit and health, died in 1786. His land and his mansion were confiscated by the New York State Legislature and sold at public auction.

In 1868, after passing through the hands of many owners, the house became Yonkers Village Hall and, in 1872, the first City Hall. By the 20th century, city growth threatened the Manor Hall’s future until it was acquired by New York State in 1908 with the generous help of the Cochran Family of Yonkers. Today, Philipse Manor Hall serves as a museum of history, art and architecture, as well as host to community organizations, meetings, educational programs and special events. Highlights of the Hall include its 18th century, high style Georgian architecture, a 1750s papier mache Rococo ceiling, and an impressive collection of presidential portraits, including the six Presidents from New York State.A Community Gallery has been created at Philipse Manor Hall to display materials which support the Manor Hall’s programs and services and relate to the local community.

Additional information can be found here.

“Standing the east grounds of the Manor Hall in Yonkers is the Soldiers and Sailors Monument erected under the auspices the Soldiers and Sailors Monument Association. The monument cost approximately $13,000 to build Standing the east grounds of the Manor Hall in Yonkers is the Soldiers and Sailors Monument erected under the auspices the Soldiers and Sailors Monument Association. The monument cost approximately $13,000 to build and the money was raise by subscriptions from local individuals and organizations.

Its granite shaft is 9 ft. square at the base and the overall height of the monument is 46ft. high. On May 30, 1888, at a Memorial Day service, William Allen Butler, a Yonkers lawyer and poet, suggested a monument to remember the Yonkers soldiers who had fought to preserve the union during the Civil War. His vision was realized three years later, on September 17 1891 when the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument was dedicated on the grounds of Philipse Manor Hall

The statuary consists of five pieces, representing the Infantry, Artillery, Cavalry, and Navy and there is an 8 Ft figure of a Flag-Bearer on top. Each one was from entirely new and original designs. The figure of the sailor and was designed by Lt. Washington Irving Chambers of the USS Petrel and the remaining three statues were designed by James Edward Kelly of New York City. Each of four bronze lower statues are 7 ft. feet high and were sculpted by Mr. Lorado Taft and cast by the American Brass Company of Chicago.

As was typical of monument unveilings there were several speeches by local politicians, appointed officials, other dignitaries and prominent military veterans. The New York Times of September 18, 1891 reported that an estimated 20,000 people attended the ceremony and the parade which includes several bands and units of the National Guard and of the Grand Army of the Republic. The article concluded with an account of the evening’s celebratory events:

“At night, there was a beautiful illuminated parade of yachts on the river. There were about 60 boats of the Corinthian Club towed in three divisions by steam launches. They were all decorated from stem to sterm with colored lanterns and were setting of Greek fire and rockets with a profusion that was bewildering. The enchantment of the scene was added to by the big electric flash light of the [USS] Boston which kept playing in and out among the illuminated yachts, After the boat parade there was a hop at the yacht club house.”

The upper statue of the Color-Bearer measures eight feet to the head, and eleven feet to top of the flagpole. He stands with cannon and balls at his feet and is in the act of drawing his sword to defend the flag. It was sculptured from Ryegate, Vermont granite. The Infantry Statue is on the east façade of the monument and the soldier demonstrates the “fix bayonets” position. The inscriptions immediately below him read as follows: “PATRIOTISM TO HONOR THE MEN OF YONKERS WHO FOUGHT TO SAVE THE UNION. SLAVERY ABOLISHED.”

This dismounted cavalryman stands on the south façade of the monument. Below him are the following inscriptions: “VALOR MY PARAMOUNT OBJECT IS TO SAVE THE UNION. -LINCOLN” and “LET US HAVE PEACE -GRANT”

This sailor stands on the west façade of the monument with his sword ready to engage the enemy in hand-to-hand combat. The inscriptions below the sailor reads: “COURAGE THE UNION MUST AND SHALL BE PRESERVED. -JACKSON.” and “THE UNION SAVED.” This statue of an artilleryman stands on the north façade of the monument and has the following inscriptions below him: “ENDURANCE THE UNION IS THE PALLADIUM OF OUR SAFETY AND PROSPERITY – WASHINGTON” and “CREDIT MAINTAINED”” (New York Almanack).

Unfortunately I couldn’t show it in all it’s glory as the bottom part was covered by one of the numerous fences.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

Lunch in Yonkers, NY – Gold Star Mothers Memorial

American Gold Star Mothers Memorial is a monument in downtown Yonkers, NY, dedicated to the Gold Star Mothers. They are the mothers who lost a son or a daughter during their military service in the US Armed Forces. The initiator for the Gold Star Mothers organization was Grace Darling Seibold, who lost her son in WW1. Seibold gathered a group of mothers who lost a child during the war, for mutual support and to assist hospitalized veterans. They named their group after the Gold Star that families hang on their window honoring the deceased veteran. The national organization was officially founded in 1928 and was chartered by the US Congress.

At the center of the memorial is a statue of a woman sitting on a chair. She is cradling the folded American flag that covered her child’s coffin in her hands, the same way she held her child as a baby. She is gazing at the sky, feeling “the mixture of pride and grief.” On her background are the American flag and the Gold Star Mothers’ flag. To her left, on a black granite stone, a sign reads:

“GOLD STAR MOTHERS
“They also serve who only stand and wait”
John Milton.”

Under the text are the symbols of six armed forces of the Department of Defense. To her right, an image from a funeral is presented on a black granite stone.

The sculpture was created by the New Windsor artist Richard Masloski and was unveiled on October 15th, 2006, in downtown Yonkers, in front of the train station, where many mothers saw their child taking to the battle and never coming back.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

Lunch in Yonkers, NY – The Riverfront Library

“The Yonkers Public Library in Yonkers, New York, consists of three branch libraries. The main branch is the ‘Yonkers Riverfront Library’ which overlooks the Hudson River and New Jersey Palisades. Yonkers Riverfront Library is located in one of the former Otis Elevator buildings and it is across the street from the Yonkers train station. The new main library was opened in 2002, contains an area of 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2) and 4 stories.

The library also consists of the Grinton I. Will branch and the Crestwood branch. All three libraries offer a variety of services, including computer and internet access, movie, audio book and CD check-outs, as well as traditional book loans. The library offers free computer classes, from beginner to advanced, and is a source of free public programming all year round, including concerts and movies, classes, homework help, research help and informational workshops.

The Yonkers Public Library is a founding member and the largest member of the Westchester Library System (WLS), a consortium of 38 libraries serving the residents of Westchester County. The Yonkers Public Library operates with a budget of over $9 million, 105 staff members, and a collection of nearly 700,000 books and other materials. The Director of the Library is Jesse Montero and the President of the board of trustees is Nancy Maron.
History

The Yonkers Public Library was chartered by the state of New York on February 9, 1893. Having been formed in 1883 by the consolidation of five public school libraries, the Library called various sites home between the years 1883 and 1904. Yonkers Mayor Leslie Sutherland, joined by writer John Kendrick Bangs and educator Charles E. Gorton, formed a committee in 1900 to request funds from Andrew Carnegie for the construction of a permanent library building. 17,000 volumes of books were kept in the Nisbet Mansion in Washington Park until the building was completed.

Carnegie responded in March 1901, with a donation of $50,000, asking only that the City of Yonkers provide a suitable site for the library building and that it agree to expend $5,000 annually on the building’s maintenance. Several sites for the new library were proposed by members of the Yonkers Board of Aldermen, including the site in the southwest corner of Washington Park that was eventually selected. Designed by local architects Edwin A. Quick & Son, and constructed by the local firm of Lynch and Larkin, Mr. Carnegie’s library building opened to the public on the corner of South Broadway and Nepperhan Terrace on July 9, 1904. Support for this newly built library came from Ervin Saunders. Saunders, an executive of a machinery manufacture at Saunders & Sons, Incorporated, bequeathed $50,000 to the Yonkers Public Library before his death in 1909. There was a stipulation that all of the money had to be spent on the purchasing of nonfiction books.

The Carnegie library building served the Yonkers public for almost 80 years. Doomed by the decision to expand Nepperhan Avenue into an arterial, the building was closed and eventually demolished in May 1982, to the dismay of many. (Photos of the old Carnegie Library are available for viewing through the Library of Congress, from the American Memory Project). Having been evicted from its old home, the main branch of the Library took up quarters in the former Genung’s Department Store at 7 Main Street in Getty Square. Opening there in May 1981, the main branch remained there for over 20 years. Its current home, since September 2002, is 1 Larkin Center. Now encompassing four floors, the spacious Riverfront Library shares the former, and thoroughly retooled, Otis Elevator Works building with the headquarters of the Yonkers Board of Education.” (Adapted from Wikipedia)

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II