,/ ^0 Cfje 3Roser iWorris f^ouse anU ^ejit <^ne l^unHrcli anU JjJrtierti Street €itp of j^etD for ft Historical Ifektc!) T^rsputth nnhtt tt;e ^uspittB of %\ft Wa^U^ton lleaDquarters agsociation, 95p (JKra. George BJ.) (Q^airtnan of tl)e l^tis^torical ]I{ej6^earcl) Committee (Betober. MDCCCCVIII i v' \ COPYRIGHT, OCTOBER, 1908, BY THE WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS ASSOCIATION NEW YORK Founded by Daughters of the American Revolution ^ Revised Editions copyrighted october 1910 — april 1913 A345500 of tfje 3^asf)tnstott fleatiquarters association /fV| EMBERS of the National Society, Daughters of the American y^^ Revolution, of New York City, consisting of representatives from the Washington Heights, Knickerbocker, Manhattan, and Mary Washington Colonial Chapters, convened, at the request of the Washington Heights Chapter, on February 14, 1903, at the residence of Mrs. Samuel J. Kramer, Regent of that Chapter, to assist in a movement for the purchase of Washington's Headquarters on Wash- ington Heights, by the municipal authorities. At this meeting an organization was effected and named the General Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolution of the Borough of Manhattan for the preservation and custody of Washington's Headquarters on Washington Heights. During the administration of the Hon. Seth Low, Mayor of New York, the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, on May 29, 1903, gave a hearing, and agreed, by unanimous vote, to purchase the property; and on July 29th, the purchase was authorized. Negotia- tions were conducted by Hon. N. Taylor Phillips, the Deputy Comp- troller, and the sum paid was $235,000. The city took possession of the deeds in October of the same year. Formal acceptance of this property by the city occurred on Monday December 28, 1903, when, under the auspices of the Park Board, the tablet at the west of the front entrance to the house was placed. Commissioner William R. Willcox presided, and the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew, United States Senator from the State of New York, delivered the oration. The following societies were represented: National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution; Empire State Society, Sons of the American Revolution; Sons of the I Revolution; Colonial Dames of America; Colonial Dames of the State of New York; American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society; Woman's Auxiliary to the American Scenic and Historic Preserva- tion Society; New York Historical Society; and the Washington Continental Guard. . In 1904, by Legislative enactment, the Park Commissioner, Hon. John J. Pallas, was enabled to accord the custody of this house, known as the Jumel Mansion, to the General Committee of the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution. This Committee resolved itself into an Association, and became incorporated March 17, 1904, under the name of the Washington Headquarters Association, New York, Founded by Daughters of the American Revolution, with Mrs. Sam- uel J. Kramer, the organizer of the movement, as its first president. The first public celebration of Washington's birthday, by the city of New York, was held here, February 22, 1905, by the Park Depart- ment, under the auspices of the Washington Headquarters Associa- tion, which was the first organization of women so honored. The opening of the house as a public museum occurred on May 28, 1907, under the administration of the Hon. George B. McClellan, Mayor, and Hon. Moses Herrman, Park Commissioner. II o ei 2 P< 5 s 5 < 1:^ Q i^ Q 5^asf)ington's flealiquarterfi Zbc riDorrle period 1765—1775 ^IT^HIS beautiful old Colonial and most historic Mansion in the city ^^ of New York, built by Lieutenant-Colonel Roger Morris, Loyalist, for his wife, Mary Philipse, about 1765, stands near the orig- inal site of an old farmhouse known as the Jan Kiersen house, which had been standing more than fifty years, and is believed to have been the first dwelling erected on Harlem Heights. Kiersen took posses- sion of this property March 1696 ; but it was not until March 7, 1700, that a deed with the consent of the freeholders, was granted him, with permission "to take a half-morgen of land from the Common woods, on which to have a house, barn and garden." * On January 29, 1763, according to deed of conveyance, the heirs of Jan Kiersen sold this commanding site to James Carroll, who, in turn, after advertising it weekly, from May 9th to June 13th, 1765, ** sold the property to Lieut. -Col. Roger Morris; and soon thereafter was begun the erection of this stately mansion. The date of completion is said to have been carved on the key-stone of an arch in the main hall ; but it is not now visible. Morris was the third son, born January 28, 1727, of Roger Morris, of Netherby, in the North Riding of Yorkshire, England, by his first wife, the fourth daughter of Sir Peter Jackson, Knight. Having obtained a Commission in the British Army, Morris was ordered to the American Colonies, where, for his conspicuous services. he soon rose in rank, and was appointed to the Staff of General Brad- * The only early deeds on record in the Register's office showing James Carroll's ownership of lands in New York City, is this Harlem plot, where now stands Washington's Headquarters, and another plot on Nassau Street. *■* THE NEW YORK GAZETTE or WEEKI,Y POST-BOY. Thursday May 9, 16, 23, 30, June 6, 13, 1765; publishes this advertisement : To BE Sold A. pleasant situated farm on the Road leading to King's Bridge, in the Township of Harlem of York Island, containing about 100 acres : about 30 acres of which is Wood land, a fine piece of Meadow Ground, and more may easily be made : and commands the finest Prospect in the wliole country ; the I ^ Jumels, but this was seized at the barrier as they were leaving Paris, and Monsieur and Madame Jumel were held for six hours in the Con- ciergerie as prisoners, until they were released through the intercession of the American minister. They had also many pieces of furniture and paintings belonging to the Empress Josephine ; a set of drawing- room furniture once the property of Charles X ; an old chandelier, the property of Moreau ; and relics which had belonged to various Kings of France, Louis Napoleon, and very many other distinguished people. The chandelier, now in the Council Chamber, is like the one at Fontainebleau. The African cypress trees, twenty of which were standing, 1909, in a semi-circle about what remained of the old fish pond at the corner of I 59th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue, were presented by the Khedive of Egypt to Napoleon in the last days of 18 14, when his dynasty was closing. The roots of each little tree were surrounded with native earth, encased in canvas bags. In this condition the trees, some 400 in number, lay neglected on the ground in one of the gardens of the Tuileries for several months, when they were secured by Stephen Jumel, who sent them to this country and had them planted here. Stephen Jumel died in May, 1832, as the result of a carriage accident. In 1825, according to a statement made by a member of Mme. Jumel's family, Lafayette was entertained in this- house and slept in the north-west chamber, which was thereafter called the Lafayette Room. Louis Napoleon was a guest in this house in 1837. When he went to France to head the movement that finally placed him on the throne, he was supplied with money advanced by Madame Jumel. Joseph Bonaparte was also entertained here as a guest in 18 19 and 1820. Arriving in the absence of his hostess, his first meal in the house was a dinner of pork and cabbage served by the cook in the south-west basement kitchen, designated in Colonial days as the slaves kitchen. It was during his visit that the entrance to the Council Chamber was enlarged and supplied with folding doors in place of the original door of ordinary width. Prince Jerome Bona- parte, and the Prince de Joinville were also guests of Madame Jumel. It has been frequently stated that Madame Jumel entertained here Louis Philippe, the Citizen King of France, and the great Talleyrand; but proof is, that the visits of these distinguished men to this house ante-dated her time; for Louis Philippe, during his twenty-one years of XV exile, was in America only from 1796 to 1800; and Talleyrand, in his Memoirs, refers to his visits in New York, as having been during the winters of 1794 and 1795. He says, *'I availed myself of the op- portunity thus offered, to meet the chief personages connected with the American Revolution, especially General Alexander Hamilton, whose mind, character and ability, places Hamilton on a par with the most distinguished Statesmen of Europe". It was doubtless at this time that Talleyrand visited this historic Mansion. Enoch Crosby, the original of Harvey Birch, in J. Fenimore Cooper's Novel "The Spy" — written in 1821 — spent a night in this house. J. Fenimore Cooper was appointed United States Consul to Lyons, France, in 1826. In 1 791 Madame Jumel saw the assembling of Congress, and in 1793 she saw the second inauguration of Washington. In 1824 she was in France, and that yeat attended the Coronation ball of Charles X. One of the last distinguished persons to sit at her table in the old dining room was General William T. Sherman, of the Civil War. Madame Jumel, with her sumptuous tastes and wealth, entertained lavishly. A person who was present at one of her receptions says that at that time, all around the base-board of the Council Chamber were small foot-high mirrors which reflected the graceful sweep of the ladies' gowns; and that Madame Jumel on state occasions received her friends seated on a dais in the room. She was also in those days a very conspicuous figure on the Bloomingdale Road with her Colonial yellow coach^and postillions. On Jul)'' 1st, 1833, Madame Jumel was married to Aaron Burr, by the Rev. David Bogart. The ceremony took place in the tea room, which is at the left of the entrance to the Mansion. Rev. Bogart was the same clergyman who had performed the wedding ceremony for Burr and his first wife, Theodosia Bartow, widow Provost, just fifty- one years before, lacking one day. Madame Jumel died on Sunday morning, i6th July, 1865, and her funeral took place from this house on the i8th. During the morning the remains were exposed to view in the Council Chamber, and short- ly after one o'clock were removed to the Church of the Intercession, 1 58t.h Street and Broadway. She is buried in Trinity Cemetery, 1 54th Street and Broadway. Madame Jumel, her family allege, was born in Providence, R. I., April 2, 1777, daughter of John and Phoebe (Kelly) XVI Bowen. At the time of her marriage, then, to Aaron Burr, she was fifty-six years of age, and at her death aged eighty-eight; but accord- ing to obituary record, she was four years older — hence born 1773. Aaron Burr was the third Vice-President of the United States, from 1801 to 1805. Nelson Chase, who studied law in the office of Aaron Burr, and became an eminent practitioner at the New York bar, married Mary Bownes, a niece of Madame Jumel, in 1832, and they made their home in this Mansion. He was a man of literary tastes and enter- tained here James Parton, Nathaniel P. Willis, George Bancroft, Benson J. Lossing, and many other literary lights of his time. Charles O'Conor, for many years the leader of the New York bar, who was a frequent visitor, said of Mr. Chase that he was the best read man in the United States. Mrs. Julius Henry Caryl, the only daughter of Nelson Chase, was born in this house, and it continued to be her home until 1887, when the property was sold for $100,000. She now resides at Caryl, near Yonkers, and has the most complete knowledge of the history of the Mansion of any person now living. Her recollections of the rooms in the old house are of inestimable value. It is stated by Mrs. Caryl that the entrance hall was originally wains- coted like the rooms on the main floor, but that, about 1820, during the long absence of the Jumels in Paris, the wainscot was removed. It is also stated by her that the walls of the dining room were a dark green, about the color of a lily leaf, and finished at the top with a band of gold, three fingers wide. Mrs. Ferdinand P. Earle, wife of Brigadier-General Earle, Com- missary-General on the Staffs of Governors Hill and Flower, and a member of the Empire State Society, S. A. R., was the last individual owner of this Mansion, which was purchased by the City of New York from Mrs. Earle in 1903, for $235,000, through the intercession of the General Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolu- tion of the Borough of Manhattan which subsequently founded the Washington Headquarters Association. Mrs. Earle organized the Washington Heights Chapter in this house, February 18, 1897. General Earle died here January 2, 1903. The tablet and bas-relief bronze of Washington on the east side of the front entrance, was placed by the Washington Heights Chapter, June 2, 1900. xvn Notes— Historians dilTer as to the exact movements of- Washington on November i6, 1776. I^ossing says in his "I