Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Montebello, New York
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Historical markers== ===Bayard Lane=== "Turning off the Haverstraw Rd, almost opposite the house of [[United States Senate|Senator]] [[Royal S. Copeland]], into a dirt avenue, one is faced by a waste-land of scrub oak and sassafras with a lonely shack near the entrance." This is how a visitor described the Bayard Lane community, a small "Utopia" homestead project, made up of a group of self-sufficient, self-sustaining colonists in 1936.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> Beyond the initial appearance lay the successful homestead project, the brainchild of [[Ralph Borsodi]], nationally known author, [[economist]] and [[philosopher]]. It was his vision to develop a domestic lifestyle that was productive, independent and economically practical for the New York City commuter. Borsodi, a wiry, shock-haired little man who wore [[horn-rimmed glasses]] and paid "little attention to his clothes", began his new style of country living, later labeled as "[[agrarianism]] for commuters", in 1919. He, along with his wife and two sons, moved from New York City and rented a small unimproved [[farmhouse]] near Suffern. While Borsodi commuted to work in the city, they began their initial family experiments. Within a 15-year period, he and his family, tested their theories and dreams of self-subsistence and [[economic freedom]] while enjoying the beauty of nature.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> Authoring several books on economics, Borsodi's work, ''This Ugly Civilization'', published in 1929, brought him national attention. Four years later, his bestselling book, ''Flight from the City'', appeared as the country was mired in the depths of the [[Great Depression]]. Firing the imagination of struggling families, many with low-paying inner city jobs and an aimless future, the book described a way to seek out a good agrarian lifestyle and graphically detailed his own family's experiences and accomplishments at homesteading in Suffern. In 1935, Borsodi launched Bayard Lane, a small experimental cooperative community on a rolling unimproved tract of {{convert|40|acre|m2}} at the foot of the [[Ramapo Mountains]].<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> The property was acquired by the Independence Foundation, a nonprofit cooperative and self-governing group of which Borsodi was a trustee. The other members were Samuel D. Dodge, Clarence E. Pickett, Dr. Harold Rugg, Beveridge C. Dunlop, W. Van Alan Clark, Mrs. Elizabeth Macdonald, Mrs. William Sargent Ladd and Dr. Warren Wilson. They divided the estate into {{convert|1|to|2|acre|m2|adj=on}} homesteads occupied by individual families. The homes were owned individually, the land cooperatively. The Foundation indentured the land to the homeowner through a corporation representing them. Fourteen families who knew Borsodi or who had heard of his project were willing to try the experiment after those interested in the idea had been "philosophically initiated the previous January", ''[[The New York Times]]'' reported.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> Ground was broken for the first house (Marquart residence, #14 Bayard Lane) on June 23, 1935. Using the [[Ernest Flagg]] method of construction, they built attractive, economical, sturdy homes of native [[fieldstone]]. Each house had all the modern conveniences of the day. It was said, they "will be standing at least a hundred years after they are paid for." Homes could be constructed by various building craft guilds under a special arrangement with the Independence Foundation. A professional staff would provide architects, estimates, record keeping and construction. The benefits to the homeowners were considerable. They could do as much of the work themselves as they wished, calling in help whenever needed. The Foundation would also offer loan contracts. To prevent substandard, unattractive buildings, construction plans were reviewed by a committee.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> The School of Living was literally and figuratively the centerpiece of Borsodi's experiment in homesteading, headquartered at 21 Bayard Lane in 1938. Dedicated on [[Independence Day (United States)|Independence Day]] to the "economic independence of the American people", the School of Living was to develop research and promote the Borsodi philosophy of balanced and healthy living in which the home and the land were productive instruments. The school taught the essentials of do-it-yourself [[agrarianism]], including [[caning]], [[poultry]] raising, [[animal husbandry]], [[masonry]], [[carpentry]], and use of tools and household equipment.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> Borsodi's "Bayard Lane Utopia" appeared to be a great idea on paper, and initially it appeared to be successful and was prominently featured in a variety of national publications. A group near Ossining, New York, hoped to start a similar project ([[Stillwater, Ossining]]) with the help of the Independence Foundation, and made overtures to Borsodi. But as the United States entered the [[Second World War]], the economy shifted and society began to change. A new wave of patriotism swept the country, leading Bayard Lane residents to distance themselves from Borsodi's self-sufficient principles and cooperative living. Eventually, Borsodi resigned from the Foundation, and in time, many of the original families living in this small enclave moved away.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> In 1992, two historical markers were erected along [[U.S. Route 202]] to recount the legacy left by the nearly forgotten experimental community whose new style of country living received national attention in the 1930s, and gave hope and inspiration to struggling families of the Depression.<ref name="villageofmontebello.org"/> ===Cobblestone Farm=== A notable landmark in the village of Montebello is Cobblestone Farm. The setting for this magnificent estate is an attractive {{convert|35|acre|m2}} of well-groomed land on Viola Road. It was once the home of White Laboratories founder and vice president Henry von L. Meyer, Sr. In 1907, Meyer carefully chose {{convert|200|acre|km2}} from the abundant, rural Ramapo landscape, for the creation of an elegant county estate and working farm. Among the rolling hills, century-old trees, and beautiful mountain vistas, he carved "one of the model showplaces in Rockland County", as reported by ''[[The New York Times]]''. Part of this extensive property today is dotted with private homes as well as the site of [[Suffern High School]]. The farm's centerpiece was a cobblestone [[barn]]/[[carriage house]], built with the stones cleared from the fields, hence the name Cobblestone Farm. Handsome stone walls outlined the estate's boundaries. Additional outbuildings were constructed to form an attractive ensemble of farm buildings, including a massive timberframe dairy barn with caretaker's cottage. Several ponds were formed, and one-third of the acreage was put under cultivation. Thousands of vegetables and flowering plants were raised and donated to local charities and hospitals. The estate's owner was a descendant of an old Colonial family from [[Long Island]]. His cousin, [[George von L. Meyer]], was [[Secretary of the Navy]] under President [[Theodore Roosevelt]] and served as an ambassador to several countries. Henry von L. Meyer was a prominent businessman, and after a number of years in the paper manufacturing business, he entered the drug manufacturing field and became vice president of Health Products Company in New York City. He later founded White Laboratories in [[Newark, New Jersey]], which manufactured many nationally known drug products such as Feenamint, [[Aspergum]] and a number of [[cod liver oil]] concentrates. After moving to the [[Suffern, New York|Suffern]] area, Mr. Meyer became connected locally with a number of leading business institutions. He was a chief stockholder in the [[Lafayette Theatre (Suffern)|Lafayette Theatre]], the Ramapo Valley Independent newspaper, and the Ramapo Cider & Vinegar Company, and was a vice president of the Suffern National Bank. Henry Meyer and his wife Laura Hard Meyer had two children, Henry von L. Meyer Jr. and Sarah Meyer. The family was well known for their philanthropic interest in the county. For many years they were involved in the State Charities Aid Association, the Rockland Volunteer Aid Society, and the [[Boy Scouts of America]], and were founding members of the Rockland County Conservation Association. Perhaps their greatest charity work was associated with the Rockland County [[Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals]]. Ardent supporters of the society, the Meyers donated thousands of dollars annually and worked actively for the organization, including erecting a branch shelter at their farm to care for homeless animals. ===Indian Rock=== [[image:IndianRock.JPG|thumb|right|alt=Indian Rock in the Village of Montebello, New York|Indian Rock in the Village of Montebello, New York]] Indian Rock is a large [[glacial erratic]] boulder of [[granite]] [[gneiss]], formed in the [[Proterozoic]] ([[Precambrian]]) era, 1.2 billion to 800 million years ago. It is estimated to weigh ~17,300 tons. The source area for the boulder was nearby in the [[Ramapo Mountains]]-[[Hudson Highlands]]; it is difficult to know for certain exactly where it was picked up by the glacier, but most likely not more than 5 to 10 kilometers from its current location. The boulder rests upon [[glacial outwash]] which in turn lies atop [[Triassic]] sedimentary [[red bed]]s (sandstone and shale) of the [[Newark Basin]] (circa 145 million years old). The rock was carried to its current location by the internal flow of the continental ice sheet during the last glacial maximum, circa 21,000 years ago. The base of the continental glacier scoured the bedrock terrain across which it moved, thus plucking large and small blocks of rock from their position in the Ramapo Mountains and Hudson Highlands. Indian Rock got as far as Rockland County before being liberated by the ice and deposited along with gravels shifted by glacial meltwater. Although Indian Rock may appear to be several rocks piled together, it actually originated as a single boulder ({{convert|18|ft}} by {{convert|9|ft}} by {{convert|15|ft}}). Weaknesses within the rock caused by [[foliation (geology)|foliation]] and naturally occurring fractures serve as avenues for moisture infiltration. With repeated freeze-thaw cycles, this moisture expands to exert forces up to 20,000 lbs/inch2 along the planes of weakness, thus wedging the rock apart. [[Glacial polish]], [[glacial striation|striations]] and grooves commonly found on erratics of this size have for the most part been effaced by the normal process of decomposition called weathering.<ref>Comments offered by P. Jay Fleisher following observations on Sunday, December 7, 2008</ref> When The Kakiat Indians were abandoning their ancestral hunting grounds in the early eighteenth century, they stopped at Indian Rock and laid their last offerings and partook in a final feast in the land of their birth and traveled westward for a brief period of time where they would be unmolested by the white man. ===Landmarks and places of interest=== * Fant Farm, 253-257 Spook Rock Road. The house and barns date to c.1850. * Montebello Village Hall, 1 Montebello Road, (east end of Montebello Road). The Stanley and Blanche Morse House, now the Montebello Village Hall, was built c. 1920. Attributed to the architect George Fowler, it is an interpretation of the Tudor or English Cottage Style. The building was designated a Montebello Historic Landmark on December 17, 2008. * Residence, Tudor Revival (c.1923), 1 Lake Road, (west end of Montebello Road)
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Montebello, New York
(section)
Add topic