Online Encyclopedia

TOTTENVILLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 92 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TOTTENVILLE  , a former

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village of Richmond county, New York, U.S.A., and since 1898 a
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part of New York City . It is on the
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southern
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shore of Staten Island in New York
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Bay and on Staten Island Sound, about 20 m . S.W. of the south extremity of Manhattan Island, and is the
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terminus of the Staten Island Rapid Transit railway . Marine engines, terra-cotta and boats are manufactured here, and there are
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oyster
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fisheries . The " Billopp House " here (still
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standing) was the scene of the
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conference, on the 11th of September 1776, between Lord Howe, representing Lord North, and Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and
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Edward Rutledge, representing the
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Continental Congress, with regard to Lord North's offer of conciliation . This house, originally called the "
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Manor of Bentley," was built by Captain Christopher Billopp (1638—1726), who sailed from England in an armed vessel, the " Bentley," in 1667, and, by circumnavigating Staten Island in 24 hours, made it, under the ruling of the duke of York, a part of New York . From the duke of York he received 1163 acres of
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land, including the
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present site of Tottenville . The village was long known as Bentley, but in 1869 was incorporated (under a faulty charter, revised in 1894) as Tottenville, apparently in honour of Gilbert Totten, a soldier in the War of Independence .

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