If you're ever standing on the shore of Long Island Sound during a storm, you may spot an old sailing ship riding the waves with a full crew and passengers on board. The ship is engulfed in flames and has a screaming white horse chained to the fiery mast. The sailors and passengers on board are not people at all, they're ghosts. You are seeing the legendary phantom fire ship that haunts the Long Island Sound.
"The Phantom Fire Ship" is told by the American folklorist M. A. Jagendorf in his The Ghost of Peg-Leg Peter and Other Folk Tales of Old New York. Jagendorf's stories capture the history, myths, and motifs with which New Yorkers identify themselves. The fourteen stories' settings range from New York's early Dutch colonial days to the twentieth century. Like other American tall tales, they explain the origins of geographic features and place names in the New York City landscape. They celebrate New York ideals such as the freedom of religion and conscience, capitalistic progress and wealth-building, egalitarianism and the self-made man, and the fast pace of life of New York. These are all big words and big ideas about a big city. But the stories, of course, are written for children. This book makes the reflective adult reader consider the ways in which children's literature can transmit the values and origin myths that adults attach to a place from one generation to the next.
"The Tale of the Three Footsteps" explains why there are more rocks in the Bronx than there are in Queens on Long Island. In a battle over ownership of Westchester County and Bronx, the Indians chase the Devil with tomahawks and arrows out to the end of Throg's Neck. In his escape, the Devil jumps across the water to Long Island. Upon landing there, the Devil picks up all the rocks lying around him and throws them back at his antagonists. That is why there are few rocks on Long Island.
Peter Stuyvesant (From: Wikipedia) |
Passing from the supernatural to historical, Jagendorf next tells "The Courageous Quaker of Flushing," a biographical story of the Quaker John Bowne. The Quakers were a pacifist religious sect
John Bowne answering to Peter Stuyvesant. (From: Scribner's Magazine, now on Wikipedia) |
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Anthony is dragged to down into the creek. The best illustration in the book! The illustrator was Lino S. Lipinsky. |
Washington Irving's version of the story is so close to Jagendorf's that I have to question the decision to rewrite Irving's well-written tale. Why would you try to rewrite a classic storyteller's work? A correspondent of Westchester County historian Frederic Shonnard states that Irving was the earliest source of the story. Whatever the origin, one has to laugh at the wonderful absurdity of this story. Imagine, a devil fish in the Hudson River! The hilarity is only increased when one discovers that a moss bunker fish (or menhaden) is usually less than fifteen inches long.
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From: Frederic Shonnard, A History of Westchester County, Westchester, N.Y.: New York History Company, 1900: 147. (accessed 14 March 2015 in Google Books) |
Mrs. Robert Murray entertaining British officers while Putnam escapes. (From: NYPL Digital Library) |
Despite the historical basis of the story, Jagendorf reports a fantastic and absurdly comical dialogue between Mrs. Murray and George Washington--who dines with her earlier on the same day as Howe's visit. "'The British are on the march,' said Mistress Murray. [Washington replies] 'I know that well, madame. But we'll escape and we'll win. At the moment we need just a few more hours. Old Putnam and his men are hard on the march to join the army that's up on the shores of the Hudson River. When he joins them, all will be safe.' [Murray responds] 'True indeed, General. Thee knowest well, he who fights and retreats a way, lives to fight another day.' They all laughed.' [my italics]" They all laughed? They all laughed!?! First, I highly doubt that Washington took the time to visit with Murray that day as his army frantically retreated. Second, Washington was extremely angry about the poor discipline of his army during the battle and retreat. This was hardly a moment to relax for a spell of polite conversation and light jokes.
Cornelius Vanderbilt (From: National Portrait Gallery) |
"Commodore Vanderbilt's First Boat" is a mostly true story that takes on mythical proportions because its themes of entrepreneurship and the self-made man form part of New Yorkers' self-identity. Jagendorf tells the story of how Cornelius Vanderbilt, the teenage son of a Dutch farmer, bought his first boat. He borrowed $100 from his mother on the condition that he plow and sow an eight-acre plot of land owned by his father within three weeks time. Vanderbilt convinced his friends to help him with the work by promising them rides in his boat. When he buys the boat, he begins a ferry service from Port Richmond on Staten Island. Through hard work in ferrying passengers to Manhattan, he earns enough money to pay his mother back with $1000 added on to the original sum. Vanderbilt eventually became a wealthy man by expanding his shipping business.
The major facts of Vanderbilt's story are accurately told by Jagendorf. However, there are a few points to clarify. Jagendorf's story is entirely set in Port Richmond. Actually, Vanderbilt's family moved away from Port Richmond to Stapleton (another village on Staten Island's north shore) when he was one year old. His first boat purchase probably occurred there, not in Port Richmond. Also, Jagendorf uses an unusual spelling for the type of ferry boat Vanderbilt bought: piragua. The more common spelling for this boat is "periauger." It is a flat-bottomed sailing boat with two masts.
A periauger. (From: Wikipedia) |
Mose is not Jagendorf's creation alone--there are many, many other stories of him. Mose the folk hero is based on a real person: a red-headed Bowery firefighter of the early nineteenth century named Moses Humphrey. Mose the folk hero of tall tales has hands as big as Virginia hams and can lift streetcars out of his way when rushing to a fire. Mose made an appearance in the world of children's literature in the wake of the FDNY's heroism on September 11, 2001. In 2002, Mary Pope Osborne published New York's Bravest, in which Mose rescues a baby from a burning building.
Most of Manhattan is laid out with a perfect grid of streets. This is due to the foresightedness of city planners, who surveyed the whole island from 1807 to 1811 and charted a neat arrangement of numbered streets and avenues. The city at that time covered only the lower tip of the island. But it was expanding at such a rapid pace that city planners knew it would only be a matter of time before the entire island was occupied. This is why lower Manhattan today is a confusing tangle of mostly one-way streets, but the rest of the island is much easier to find one's way around on. The city planners could easily survey future streets through uninhabited fields and forests, but they needed to respect parts of the island that already had streets and people living there, such as Greenwich Village. The irregularities of the street grid are due to houses, streets, or farms that existed before the 1800s.
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The intersection of Broadway and the Bowery (site of Union Square) in 1831. (From: ecotippingpoints.org) |
As for the historical record, there is little doubt that street planning in the area south of Union Square was affected by Brevoort's resistance. The question is: how was it affected? Jagendorf's story states that "no street went through his farm [presumably during Brevoort's lifetime?]." Although his story title refers to a special elm tree, it does not explain the tree's impact on street-planning. But Frank Bergen Kelley, in his 1913 edition of the Historical Guide to the City of New York (see p. 106), notes that it was only Brevoort's favorite elm tree that was preserved by planners, not the whole farm. According to this guide, the tree was located between the present-day Broadway and Fourth Avenue on what would be 11th Street--only 11th Street skips this block. Traveling west to east, it ends at Broadway and continues on the other side of Fourth Avenue. This skipped block, the guide explains, was the true impact of Brevoort's resistance: his elm tree was saved! The tree was probably somewhere in the vicinity of today's Grace Church. Kelley's is the more likely explanation of Brevoort's impact. Laid out by Native Americans long before the Dutch arrived in Manhattan, Broadway predates Brevoort's farm and was not among the streets being surveyed in 1807. One can easily see on a map Broadway's curving (and imperfect) course through the Manhattan street grid today.
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This is a detail of a map created by the city planners in 1828. Interestingly, 11th Street is unbroken here. (From: "Plan of the city of New York and of the island: as laid out by the commissioners, altered and arranged to the present time," NYPL Digital Collections) |
In "The Greatest Hoax in New York City," Jagendorf describes a massive hoax played on New Yorkers by two jokers named Lozier and de Voe. One afternoon at the Centre Market (Grand & Centre Streets), they alarm a gathered crowd with the news that Manhattan Island is slowly sinking into the harbor. This is due to the weight of dense settlement of the southern tip compared to the sparse population density on the rest of the island. But, not to worry! Lozier and de Voe have a solution. Manhattan should be cut in half. The lower half should be towed out into New York Harbor, turned 180 degrees, and pushed back for reattachment to the upper half. In this way, the heaviest part of the island would be in the middle, imparting greater stability and buoyancy. But this solution requires great manpower--thousands of men. Men for sawing the island, rowers for the boats towing the island into the harbor, blacksmiths to build the heavy chain needed to keep the island from floating out into the ocean, carpenters to build houses for all the workers, farmers to provide food for the workers. Lozier and de Voe begin hiring workers for the project. But on the appointed day to begin work, neither Lozier nor de Voe can be found. Slowly it dawns on workers that they have been duped by the two jokesters.
Jagendorf was not the first to share this story. The hoax has become an urban myth, inspiring a book-length investigation by the New York historian Joel Rose. From the standpoint of historical accuracy, there are a number of problems. The earliest documentation of the hoax comes a full thirty years after the supposed event in 1823-1824. In a history of public markets in the eastern United States, The Market Book (see pp. 462-464), Thomas de Voe shares the first known account of the hoax. De Voe explains that it was told to him by his uncle. There have been no other witnesses to corroborate de Voe's story; moreover, no contemporary newspaper or media reports of the hoax exist. It is difficult to believe that the hoax actually happened, given that no other testimony of the trick ever surfaced.
R.H. Macy (From: Wikipedia) |
The basic facts of Macy's biography are well-established. But there is one point of disagreement, depending on who is telling the story: the origin of the red star in the Macy's logo. You have seen Jagendorf's explanation. However, the Macy's website's history section tells another tale. When R.H. Macy was a teenager on Nantucket, he signed on as a whaling ship sailor for four years. As a sailor, he had a tattoo of a red star inked to his arm. He thought of the red star as a symbol of success. Thus, the Macy's logo might have been the result of a superstitious attachment from his youth.
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Brian G. Hughes, New York jokester. (From: The Hatching Cat) |
"The Irish Luck of Brian Hughes" relates the true story of the wealthy jokester Brian G. Hughes. Playing small-scale jokes on family and friends was not good enough for Hughes. The whole city was subject to his hoaxes. For example, New Yorkers once woke up to find the steps to the Metropolitan Museum of Art strewn with empty picture frames and tools--placed there by Hughes overnight. An immediate panic arose about which paintings had been stolen. In another trick, Hughes bought an alley cat and had it expensively groomed. He called the cat Nicodemus, the "last of the Dublin Brindle breed," and entered it into the National Cat Show. The anecdotes shared by Jagendorf of Hughes's tricks are all true. Hughes was without doubt a one-of-a-kind New Yorker. In New York, everything is done on a big scale, so why not jokes too?
New Yorkers are all always in a rush--so the myth goes. "The Clock Must Not Stop" is, Jagendorf claims, a true story of how the New York Life Insurance Company built what was at the time the tallest building in Manhattan--nine stories--and put a gigantic clock on top. Although designed and manufactured by a master clockmaker, the clock breaks one day after installation. The chief concern of the New York Life Insurance Company's president is that his company will lose the respect of the public by keeping a broken clock on the new building. The clockmaker suggests that the building superintendent sit next to the clock and turns the clock hands manually each minute until the clock machinery was repaired. The clockmaker and superintendent are heroic for their deeds in maintaining public respect for the New York Life Insurance Company.
The Former New York Life Insurance Building, completed in 1899. (From: Wikipedia) |
I could not verify many other details of Jagendorf's story. He names the master clockmaker in the story as Mr. Henry Abbot, "the most famous clock engineer of the city." I was unable to find any records of a clockmaker by that name. In the story, Jagendorf claims that the large clock was manufactured in Boston. The clock on the 1894-1899 building was indeed manufactured in Boston, but by E. Howard Company, not Abbot. Finally, I could not find any evidence that the 1894-1899 clock broke soon after installation. I am reluctant to attribute this story to Jagendorf's fanciful imagination. He claims to have verified the story in the archives of the New York Life Insurance Company. I could not find any contact information for the company's archivists. It is worth noting that not even a monograph history of the New York Life Insurance Company contains any record of a company building at Broadway and Liberty. Hmm... what were you thinking, Jagendorf?!
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The original hope tree on Seventh Avenue. (From: ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com) |
The point of this book is not to recount history. Even when Jagendorf accurately chronicles history, it is in the style of a folktale. Jagendorf's folktales attempt to capture the essence and identity of New York. Isn't a story all the more powerful if it contributes to the city's mythology and is true? But clearly, not all of it is true. I enjoy Jagendorf's free mixture of fact and fiction. What fun it is to sort out! But I suspect that Jagendorf missed out on a major component of New York's identity: its incredible cultural and racial diversity from the very beginning. Couldn't some great stories be told about how many languages you hear spoken on the streets of Queens? Still, this book is thoroughly enjoyable to read. I highly recommend it for all children and adults who are interested in New York City's history and culture.