Around the Neighborhood – Around Scarborough Station – Stone Wall and Garden Walkway

This picture was taken from Scarborough Station Road in Briarcliff Manor, NY looking into Beechwood, a Hudson River estate in Scarborough-on-Hudson, in Briarcliff Manor, New York.

The estate was most notably the home of Frank A. Vanderlip and his family, and is a contributing property to the Scarborough Historic District. The house and property were owned by the Vanderlip family from 1906 to 1979. The property is now a 37-condominium complex as the result of a development project that began in the 1980s.

Contemporarily, Beechwood is known for being a filming location of the 1970 film House of Dark Shadows, and a filming location and the primary setting of Savages, a 1972 Merchant Ivory film. In June 2016, Money Man: Frank Vanderlip and the Birth of the Federal Reserve premiered there. The film documents Vanderlip’s life and was filmed at Beechwood.

The first portion of the main residence dates to 1780, and includes the original kitchen’s fireplace. Benjamin and Ann Folger were among the earliest residents, and named their residence “Heartt Place”. In the 1830s, Folger deeded the estate to a self-proclaimed prophet, Robert Matthews, who believed himself to be the resurrected Matthias of the New Testament. Matthews persuaded his followers to fund an expansion to the house, which he had named “Zion Hill”. During this time, Isabella Baumfree (Sojourner Truth) was a housekeeper to him. After he spent the money his followers and Folger had given him, Matthews became violent. Further on, he was tried for murder, and acquitted for lack of evidence. Matthews was later found guilty of assaulting his grown daughter, and he served a short jail term.
The property containing the mansion had been in the Remsen family for decades. Anna Remsen Webb was one of the inheritors of the estate. In the 1890s, her husband’s half-brother Henry Walter Webb substantially added to the estate from numerous properties, including the Remsen estate and William Creighton’s estate (Creighton had named his house “Beechwood” after he purchased it in 1836). Henry Webb attached the name Beechwood to the entire estate and house. He renovated and expanded the mansion, hiring R. H. Robertson to double the size of the house. Robertson designed the expansion in the Colonial Revival style, to be compatible with the neoclassical Federal style of the original but more ornate.

Frank A. Vanderlip and his wife Narcissa Cox Vanderlip purchased the 23-acre (9.3 ha) property from Webb’s widow in 1906, and bought more property to make the estate a total 125 acres (51 ha). He hired William Welles Bosworth soon after to further enlarge the house and to design a wing for his library and the lawns of the estate. In 1907, while Vanderlip was vice president of the First National City Bank (later Citibank), he had two fluted smoked granite columns from the headquarters 55 Wall Street shipped to Beechwood (55 Wall Street was being remodeled and the columns were re-spaced, with two left over). He had the columns placed two-thirds above ground in Beechwood’s entranceway off of Albany Post Road (now U.S. Route 9), an entrance which was later closed due to increasing traffic volume on Route 9 (the current entrance is off Scarborough Station Road). Vanderlip also made a cage for his children’s pet rabbits using a discarded wrought-iron elevator, also discarded from the bank. Among the guests the Vanderlips hosted at the house were Woodrow Wilson, Henry Ford, Sarah Bernhardt, Annie Oakley, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John D. Rockefeller, and Isadora Duncan. The Wright Brothers even landed a plane on the property. In 1910, Vanderlip bought the nearby mansion Woodlea, although his wife prevented the family from moving, due to her preference of Beechwood over the grandiose Woodlea. Vanderlip then collaborated with other wealthy estate owners to create Sleepy Hollow Country Club, which he sold Woodlea to in 1912. In 1924, Vanderlip purchased 57 acres of Rockwood Hall’s riverfront property to add to his estate. Actress-model Mary Louise Weller rented the estate in June 1973. In 1979, Vanderlip descendants sold the Beechwood property. Three condominiums were built during a transformation of the mansion in the 1980s. A later expansion resulted in a total of 37 condominiums on the property’s 33 acres

Taken with an Olympus OM-D E-M10 and Panasonic Lumix 20mm f1.7

Film Camera 2021 -1 Canon EOS A2/Canon 5 – Results

When I acquired the camera I noticed that it still had an apparently full roll of film in it so I decided to just go ahead and shoot it. Since I had no idea how long the film had been in the camera I didn’t have very high expectations. I wasn’t disappointed. The roll showed all of the characteristics of a long expired film: decreased sensitivity, very low contrast, and increased grain.

Still I hadn’t been looking for great pictures. I was more interested in testing a newly acquired camera to see if it was working and how well in performed. In that sense I think my outing was a success.








All pictures taken in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Sleepy Hollow, NY.

Film Camera 2021 -1 Canon EOS A2/Canon 5

I’m going to follow my usual practice of linking a more detailed review rather than trying to do my own. After all why repeat what’s already been done by others. So for a detailed review see: CANON EOS 5/A2(E) QD (Quartz Date). Mine does not have the eye auto focus, and I don’t miss it. I’ve tried it on my Canon EOS Elan IIe and didn’t like it at all. After a brief trial I turned it off. It seemed to me that it was more of a gimmick then anything else. Nor does it have the data back. I don’t miss that either. Otherwise the camera in the review and the camera I have are the same.

I came across this camera for a very reasonable price. I didn’t really want another camera body, but I was interested in the two lenses that came with it, thinking that I could use them on my other camera bodies.

I came across another review that said:

And when the EOS A2 came out, there was no doubt that this was the modern version of the prosumer or advanced amateur Canon A-1. And while the A2 is a solid camera, an excellent way to get into 35mm film photography for a Canon Digital Shooter (Providing you have a line of EF Mount Lenses), the A2 is another ‘k-car’ camera. It does the job, but it’s just boring. It takes great photos, but it does nothing else of note.

It’s now several months since I used the camera and have to say that I can’t remember anything outstanding about it. It’s a small, relatively light camera that was a pleasure to use. I was keen to try it out and shot an entire 36 exposure roll in a short period of time at Sleepy Hollow cemetery. Everything just worked without me having to think about it a lot. Isn’t that about the best thing you can say about a camera.

The second review I mentioned went on to say:

Just because a camera is boring, doesn’t mean it’s a bad camera. The Maxxum 5000 is both boring and bad, but the EOS A2 is boring, but a solid machine that produces decent [photographs]. Despite looking like a Minolta, the A2 is solid in hand, excellent ergonomics in landscape orientation… with all the controls well laid out and easy to operate even for a Nikon shooter…The camera operates how you would expect it to and produces fantastic images, with a great meter, and a solid line of EF lenses to back it up. And as an accessible camera the A2 shines, if you shoot a Canon digital EOS camera and have EF lenses you can grab an A2 and run with it, and it won’t let you down. It also makes for a great second fiddle to your pro body.

I’m very pleased with my purchase.

Taken with a Sony A6000 and Canon 50mm f1.4 LTM (I think).