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NEW ROCHELLE

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 536 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NEW ROCHELLE  , a

city of Westchester county, in
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southern New York, U.S.A., on Long Island Sound, 162 m. from the
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Grand Central Station, New York City . Pop . (189o) 9057, (1900) 14,720, of whom 4425 were
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foreign-born and 777 negroes; (1910 census) 28,867 . It is served by the New York, New Haven &
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Hartford Railroad, and by electric
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railways to New York City and neighbouring places . The city is primarily a residential suburb of New York City, and has some
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fine colonial residences, and several beautiful residential parks, notably Rochelle, Neptune, and Beechmont Parks . Its large foreign-born population is comparatively
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recent and comparatively isolated . Among the prominent buildings of the city axe a public library, the high school, a theatre (owned by the Knights of Columbus), a Masonic Temple, the City
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Bank and several churches, of which the most notable, perhaps, are the Baptist, Methodist, and St Gabriel's (
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Roman Catholic), which is the gift of members of the Iselin
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family, to whose
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interest in
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yachting is due in
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part the prominence of the New Rochelle and Larchmont Yacht Clubs . The Ursuline College of St Angela (1904) and the
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Merrill School (Igoe), both for girls, are in New Rochelle . The
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principal
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building of the first is Leland Castle, built in 1858-186o by Simon Leland and finely decorated with frescoes and coloured
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marbles . A
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People's Forum, growing out of the
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work of the People's Institute of New York City, was established here in 19o3-19o4 . In the road between New Rochelle and White Plains is the monument to Thomas Paine, provided for in his will, on the
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farm which was confiscated from a Tory by the state and was given to him at the end of the
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American War of Independence . On the Sound, in Hudson Park, is a monument commemorating the landing-place of the first Huguenot settlers .

Immediately S. of New Rochelle, in the Sound, is Glen Island, an amusement resort; belonging to the Glen Island

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group, E. of Pelham 2 ianor, is Travers Island, with the out-of-
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town clubhouse and grounds of the New York Athletic Club . On David's Island, a a m . S.W. of New Rochelle, is Fort Slocum, a
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United States Army
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post . The suburban villages of Larchmont and Pelham (and Pelham
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Manor) lie respectively N.E. and W. of New Rochelle . The important
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industries are the manufacture of scales and of other
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instruments of precision, and printing and publishing—the Knickerbocker Press of G . P . Putnam's Sons, New York, is here . The site of New Rochelle is part of a
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purchase by Thomas Pell in 1654 and of a grant to him by Richard Nicolls in 1666; it was sold in 1689 to Jacob Leisler . The first settlement of importance was made in 1688 by
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Huguenots, some of whom were natives of La Rochelle . New Rochelle was incorporated as a
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village in 1847, and as a city in 1899 . See R. and C . W .

Bolton,
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History of the Several Towns, Manors and
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Patents of Westchester County (New York, 1881), and J . Thomas Scharf's History of Westchester County (2 vols.,
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Philadelphia, 1886) .

End of Article: NEW ROCHELLE
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