3/25/2010 7:45:00 PM
Our Lady of Hope Auditorium
WWW junipercivic.com
home about us community links latest news press releases the juniper berry neighborhood history membership contact us
DeWitt Clinton’s Old Home

by Brooklyn Eagle, January 31, 1897
Governor DeWitt Clinton lived in a mansion in Maspeth
His Old Colonial Home at Maspeth – Its Former Glories and Changed Surroundings


On the corner of Flushing and Maspeth Avenues, only a stone’s throw from Newtown creek, in the village of Maspeth stands an old fashioned mansion which cannot but interest every admirer of colonial architecture.

It is the house in which DeWitt Clinton courted his first wife, Maria Franklin, daughter of a Quaker merchant, who died after Clinton became the governor of New York State. The house was originally the home of Joseph Sackett, judge of the court of common pleas, who died twenty years before the Revolution. It afterward passed into the hands of Walter Franklin, who became Clinton’s father-in-law. The third occupant was Colonel Isaac Corsa, of the French War, who was with the Clinton brothers at the capture of Fort Frontenac. Corsa was a Loyalist in the Revolution and was married to Sarah Franklin, sister of Walter Franklin, and was consequently Clinton’s uncle. During the Revolution, General Warren of the British forces was quartered in the mansion. Corsa died at Flushing in 1807.

A short distance away is a house once occupied by Samuel Jones, a very influential New York lawyer and politician of his time, and under whom DeWitt Clinton studied law. Jones subsequently became controller of the state. The Clinton House is a wooden gambrel roofed mansion, with clapboards below and shingle above. It has four high chimneys, which rise from brick overheads built at the commencement of the structure. Three sides of the house are adorned with verandas and the upper story lies partly under the roof.

It was there that Clinton lived after his unsuccessful contest for the presidency and when his political prospects were by no means bright. Clinton had many warm friends, however, and some of the leading men of the state and nation were accustomed to visiting him at his Maspeth home. While living there he developed the Erie Canal project which earned for him unbounded popularity and was largely instrumental in putting him in the governor’s chair despite the opposition of Daniel D. Tompkins, Rufus King and other leaders of that time.

A story connected with the house is that Clinton was downcast after his defeat and for the presidency and the attacks of his enemies and that he came to Maspeth to live in retirement, but prominent friends visited him on a cold winter’s night and awakened in him a desire to re-enter public life. Whether this be true or not, it is certain that Clinton formulated some of his greatest projects while living in Maspeth and that he left his country home to become the executive of New York State.

The old homestead some years ago was converted into a place of amusement and is now known as Clinton Park. Until the advent of the Raines law it was a favorite place for Sunday dances. Now, however, the once famous Clinton mansion, where the best society of New York City was once royally entertained, is used as a tenement for poor Polish families. The old house has sadly changed as have its surroundings. Thirty years ago the neighborhood of DeWitt Clinton’s old home in the vicinity of Newtown Creek was known as the English Kills, and less than half a century ago the creek was a stream of pure water abounding with fish, while a hunter could find lots of game.



MORE NEIGHBORHOOD HISTORY

CITY LORE; The Trees That Don't Grow in Brooklyn
SECLUDED among loam hills in central Queens, before the advent of urban zoning and brick row houses, sprawled a storied peat bog known locally as Juniper Swamp. The bog, used in the 1920's by the gangster Arnold Rothstein as the site of a phantom village built to dupe potential property buyers, earned a niche in the archives of quirky city history.
Read More
A Father’s Grief, a Father's Rage
Eighty years ago next month — on Feb. 13, 1927 — Joey Caruso, age 6, died in a tenement apartment in the broad swath of New York then known simply as South Brooklyn. That same day, 27-year-old Dr. Pendola, who like Joey was of Sicilian heritage, died in the same apartment. The child succumbed to disease. The doctor was the victim of cold-blooded murder. And the man who killed him, first by strangling him, then by slashing his throat so severely that his head was nearly severed from his body, was Francesco Caruso, Joey’s father.
Read More
Old Christmases
When Clement Clarke Moore composed the immortal Christmas poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" at his home in New York City, he was in all probability thinking of the home of his grandparents in Newtown Village.
Read More
The Cemetery Belt
Why does Queens have so many cemeteries? Answers go back to mid-1800s Manhattan
Read More
Three popular places where Brooklyn Germans love to spend their Sundays
The peculiar attractions of Middle Village and Cypress Hills and the picturesquely rural scenes of East Williamsburgh
Read More
Bringing Order Out of Chaos in Street Naming and House Numbering
How the Great Borough of Queens, New York City, Composed of Sixty Former Villages, Changed the Names of Most of Its Streets and Gave New Numbers to All of Its Houses
Read More
Thaddeus Kosciuszko - A Polish Son of Liberty, Hero of the American Revolution
Of the many distinguished military men who came from abroad to fight for the independence of the American colonies, Kosciuszko was the very first. In August 1776, only a month after the Declaration of Independence had been signed, the 30-year-old military engineer arrived in Philadelphia from Poland.
Read More
The Confederate Dead in Brooklyn
Alexander Hodges, was tall for a Civil War soldier, standing six feet two inches. William Tilley was a fifty-five year private in the Fourteenth South Carolina Militia. David Amos, First Tennessee Heavy Artillery, was captured at Fort Morgan, Alabama.
Read More
© Juniper Park Civic Association 2006-2007. All Rights Reserved. The opinions expressed may not necessarily be the opinions of the Juniper Park Civic Association or its members. Powered by Battery Interactive.