Constitution Island
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About this ebook
Ronnie Clark Coffey
Ronnie Clark Coffey is a teacher, author, historical researcher, and lecturer. A longtime resident of the Hudson Highlands, her personal history with Harriman State Park began as a young camper at Lake Cohassett. She is a member of the Palisades Parks Conservancy and the Historical Society of the Palisades Interstate Park Region. Coffey is the author of three other Arcadia books: Highlands, Bear Mountain, and Constitution Island.
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Constitution Island - Ronnie Clark Coffey
Coffey
INTRODUCTION
At an S-shaped bend of the Hudson River, 50 miles north of New York City, lies a rugged island, separated from the eastern shore by a salt marsh. Today it is known as Constitution Island, hinting at one of the many roles it has played in history. It is a place with many stories to tell.
Evidence of Native American habitation, such as spear points and hammer stones, have been unearthed throughout the island, attesting to human activity going back about 6,000 years. These 280 acres served them for hunting and fishing. Pottery shards tell us that cooking and eating took place here; so the dense oak forest undoubtedly sheltered their sharing, storytelling, and laughter.
Dutch sailors traveling up the river in the 1600s broke the Hudson River into sections, or reaches,
for reference. This one was known for dangerous currents and winds and was called Martelaer’s Rach or Martyr’s Reach. The island came to be known as Martelaer’s Rock or Martelaer’s Island. When England took control of Dutch lands in New York State, the island became part of a land grant to the Philipse family who maintained ownership through the 18th and early 19th centuries.
In those days, the Hudson River was the major navigation highway of the colonies. All day long, square-rigged sloops darted around larger, slower ships, delivering goods and passengers. This lively commerce united the colonies with wheat and corn, news, and ideas. As thoughts of revolution turned from words into actions, the Continental Congress ordered fortifications to be built in the Hudson Highlands to protect this vital highway. Because of its strategic location at a narrow bend of the river, the patriots chose Martelaer’s Rock as the site of the first fortification to guard the Hudson-Champlain route. It was called Fort Constitution, which gave the island a new name, Constitution Island. Batteries and a blockhouse were constructed. As expected, the British came up the Hudson in 1777. After a fierce daylong battle in the Hudson Highlands, British forces captured Forts Clinton and Montgomery two miles south of the island. Then they occupied Constitution Island as well.
After three weeks, the British left the island, and the Americans reclaimed it. A revised strategy designed by engineer Thaddeus Kosciuszko put the larger forts at West Point with smaller redoubts at Constitution Island, forming a formidable defensive system. Barracks were built for soldiers. A massive chain was installed across the river to increase its defenses. The great chain was in use until the end of the war in 1783. A young soldier named Joseph Plumb Martin, who helped construct the forts on the island, later described his experiences in a memoir titled Private Yankee Doodle.
At the conclusion of the war, the island remained in the Philipse family for two more generations and was used by tenant farmers. In 1836, it was sold to a wealthy lawyer from New York City named Henry Warner. Warner had learned about the island during visits to his brother, Thomas Warner, a chaplain and professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Henry and Thomas dreamed of erecting an elegant tourist hotel and commissioned noted architect Alexander Jackson Davis to draw up the plans. Meanwhile, Henry added rooms to the farmhouse already on the island to serve as a summerhouse for his family who resided in an elegant townhouse at St. Mark’s Place in New York City.
This family consisted of Henry, a widower, his sister Fanny, and his two daughters, Susan and Anna, five years younger. The girls had been raised with all the comforts of upper-middle-class society—servants, dressmakers, private tutors, dancing school, church attendance, horses, carriages, and a busy social life of visiting and receiving friends. A vacation home was just another luxury. Then the economic panic of 1837 began its gradual devastation of Henry’s financial status, ending in his need to sell his New York City home and other investments and move his family permanently to Constitution Island in 1838. At first, the family maintained a fairly comfortable lifestyle that enabled them to spend the winters in New York City. But soon it was necessary to sell off possessions and reduce spending as they sank from privilege into poverty. Necessity became the mother of creativity. Anna invented a game to sell. Susan did something rare for a woman of that time; she wrote a book to earn money. Susan’s first novel, The Wide, Wide World, was an enormous success, leading her to write more books. Anna too began to write. Occasionally they collaborated but most often wrote their own works. Their literary output totaled about 100 books. Anna also wrote hymn lyrics, the most famous being Jesus Loves Me.
Writing paid the bills but never made them rich. Ineffective copyright laws and unwise money management conspired against them.
Religion had always played an important part in the sisters’ lives. After Henry’s death in 1875, Susan began teaching Bible classes across the river to West Point cadets. In the winter, classes were held on the post, but in summer, the cadets rowed to Constitution Island to have class. Susan died in 1885, and Anna continued the Bible classes for the next 30 years. Through these classes, both women had a deep and lasting affect on their students. They remained in touch with many graduates, sending them comforting letters and gifts of books as they served their country in faraway posts.
Because of this strong connection to the military academy, it was the ardent wish of the two sisters that their island would become a permanent part of West Point—a place