Bowling Green:
The Birthplace of New York
By Richard B. Marrin
http://www.baycrossings.com
Bowling Green started as a Leni Lenape
Indian Council Grounds. It was there, when Dutch Governor Peter
Minuit, in 1626, purchased Manhattan for $24 worth of merchandise. It is
New York City’s birthplace.
The location came to be called Capske Hook by the Dutch, a term derived
from a Native American tongue meaning “rocky ledge”. To its north, was
an Indian trail: a natural ridge along the spine of Manhattan that became
the island’s major trade route. Called Heere Staat (High Street), we now
know it as Broadway.
The site was opposite Fort Amsterdam,
erected by the Dutch in 1625 to protect them from attack. In its only
test, it was surrendered to the British in 1664 and renamed Fort George.
Near where the Museum of the American Indian is today, it was demolished
in 1788; its rubble becoming the landfill that created Battery Park and
the extended shoreline
.
In the early days, Bowling Green was the parade ground, where soldiers
marched and drilled. Then called Marckyveldt, it made an ideal market
place as well. The Dutch sold cattle there from 1638 through 1647. In
1675, the Common Council of New York designated the “plaine afore the
forte” for an annual market of “graine, cattle and other produce of
the country” — an original farmer’s market. It still occasionally
serves as a public market today.
Second Century: a not so Public or Quiet
Park
In 1733, the Common Council leased a
portion of the parade grounds to three prominent neighbors for a
peppercorn a year, promising to create a park that would be “the delight
of the Inhabitants of the City” and add to its “Beauty and Ornament
“. According to Gotham, by Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace, the
improvements included a “bowling green”: on the site with “walks
therein”.
This makes Bowling Green the oldest existing public park in New York City,
technically public, at least. History suggests Bowling Green, with its
walks, trees and neatly painted fence, was then more for the elite to
escape the commotion of the waterfront, than for a longshoreman’s lunch
hour.
By the 1760s, a visitor would find the
fashionable residences of New York’s prominent citizens: the Van
Cortlandts, Livingstons, Delanceys, Bayards and De Peysters in the
immediate vicinity of Bowling Green. The Governor’s mansion stood nearby
at Whitehall Street. In 1744, as a measure against the muddy streets, the
streets were laid with the cobblestones, still there today.
But, at times, Bowling Green would explode
with throngs of the Common Man, sometimes celebrating, other times
protesting. For example, on November 1, 1765, the day the hated Stamp Tax
became effective, a mob marched down Broadway, carrying an effigy of the
Royal Governor. They threw rocks and bricks at Fort George, dared the
Governor to come out. Then, it was off to Bowling Green, a few yards
away. There, the mob burned the effigies as well as the Governor’s
coach.
Later, when the Stamp Act had been
repealed, the colonists thought a bit more kindly of King George III and
in gratitude, erected in Bowling Green, a statute of him on horseback. In
1770, the statute was dedicated and a year later, an iron fence was built
around the park to protect it.
When it became obvious that George III meant to punish the colonists and
assert greater control over the colonies, the mob’s gratitude turned to
hate. And where best to express that sentiment? At Bowling Green, of
course.
When, in July, 1776, the Declaration of
Independence was read to George Washington’s troops, they reacted by
marching with the Sons of Liberty to Bowling Green and the six-year-old
monument to the tyrant George III. The fence was knocked town and the
statue toppled. King George’s head was cut off and put on a spike. The
rest of the statue was chopped up and shipped to a Connecticut foundry to
be made into some 40,000 Patriot bullets.
However, the Americans could not retain control of New York City. Later
that summer, they torched much of it and retreated to New Jersey. During
the rest of the war, New York was an occupied city. General Howe, British
Commander in North America, chose Bowling Green as his
residence/headquarters, amid the remaining prosperous merchant families
still loyal to the Crown. Cricket was played in Bowling Green Park during
the British occupation!
On November 25, 1783, long celebrated in
New York City as Evacuation Day, the British finally gave up their last
presence in the United States of America and minutes later George
Washington re-entered in triumph.
Return to Elegance
After the Revolution, Downtown New York
City was the place to be. A stretch of Broadway, running north a mile from
Bowling Green, was lined with the homes of rich merchants and
professionals. It was the center of society and fashion. Improvements in
the 1790s included, sidewalks of brick and fieldstone and Lombardy Poplars
planted to replace those burned as firewood during the war. Fort George
was razed and Broadway extended to a bulkhead that ran between Whitehall
and Battery Place. Elegant townhouses were built around Bowling Green in
the early 19th century and the park was privatized as the exclusive domain
of its wealthy neighbors.
The public did not get full access to the
park until 1850, when the merchants in the middle of a busy, noisy
waterfront became commuters, moving uptown or to Brooklyn Heights or
Hoboken. Their private homes were converted into shipping offices and
later with the invention of the elevator, into skyscrapers.
In the early 1900s , the park was disrupted
by the construction of the IRT subway beneath it and its bowling green was
removed to Central Park. The park was spruced up for the 1939 World’s
Fair but fell into neglect until the mid 1970’s, when it was again
restored. More renovation was done again in 1990.
If you are one of those people who must
touch to believe, go to the foot of Broadway and check out the fence that
girds the park. It is the same one erected in 1771. The top of each
twelfth spike looks as if something had been twisted off it. That is
exactly what happened, in 1776. The Mob that was to become a Nation ripped
off metal crowns, symbolizing the British monarchy, adding them to the
rubble of George III to be transformed into bullets. In doing so, you are
touching history.