History of Westchester County

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Abstract
In presenting this "History of Westchester County" to the i)ublic, the Editor believes,
uo apology is necessary. It is a new and trustworthy history of the county, founded upon the
best authorities, and the most authentic documents and authoritative records. In no sense of the
word is it built up out of, or repeated from, any previous one on the same subject, or any of its
branches.

The plan of the work is to a large extent novel — the grouping of so many representative
writei-s, to tell so interesting a storj' as that of the origin, career and significance of Westchester
County, has no parallel in the history of any other county in the United States. To present the
principal historical phases of the several towns, and the county's life and development, together
with the traces of previous occupation and the natural history of the county, the various chapters
were assigned to writers, most of them well known in their respective spheres, and some of them
of national reputation, who, from study and association, were in a measure identified with their
subjects. Their treatment of these topics is such that what they have written may be taken as
the best comprehensive expression of existing knowledge, put together with that authority which
comes from special study. In the diversity of authors there will, of course, be variety of opinions,
and it hsis not been thought ill-judged, considering the different points of view assumed by the
various writers, that the same events should be interpreted sometimes in varj'ing, and perhaps
opposite, ways. The chapters may thus make good the poet's description, —

"Distinct as the billows, yet one as the sea," — and may not be the Avorse for each offering a reflection, according to its turn to the light, without
marring the unity of the general expanse. The Editor has endeavored to prevent any unnecessary
repetitions, and to provide against serious omissions of what might naturally be expected in a
history of its kind. In more than one instance he has been constrained by his deference to local
authority upon strictly local subjects, and by yielding to the testimony of experts in matters which
they alone are supposed to know thoroughly, to hold back his own judgment in regard to certain
subjects, and permit the local writer and the expert to tell the whole story their own way. The
result has sometimes been clash, confusion and contradiction ; for there is nothing about which
local authorities and experts differ so much among themselves as those particular events and things
in regard to which they collectively consider it the height of presumption for "outsiders" to
disagree with them. Where the subject happened to be one of moment and importance, the
author has cut the Gordian knot and stated things to suit himself ; but in indifferent or trivial
concerns he has simply stood aside and let each writer give his own version.

Some space has been given to biographical sketches of leading and representative men, living
and dead, who have borne an active part in the various enterprises of life, and who have become closely identified with the history of the county 
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