The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester (1881 revised edition, Vol. I)
It was built in the year 1708, upon the public or king's road, of strong materials, joined together with mortar, the inside plastered and whitewashed, of 40 feet length and 30 breadth. Partly by its own members, the inhabitants of New Rochelle, who gave a number of days work towards it, partly b}' the contributions of the following charitable persons, members of the Church of England or well-wishers to it, settled in divers parts of this province, as you will see by the list here set down and recorded in our church book.
Fifty paces from the said church there is a glebe of three and a half acres of land, upon part of which stands the parish house or the minister's dwelling place, built of wooden materials, the inside plastered, consisting of two rooms on a floor, a garret and a small kitchen-house ; the other part of said glebe serves for a dwelling place.
The salary subscribed for the minister by the members of New Rochelle church amounts at present to £10 19s., money of this province, of which, through negligence or pretended poverty of the subscribers, there is little more than half part of it actually paid : so that the provisions of firewood which they make to their minister for the time being, is by much the better part of his salary -- though little in itself.
There is no other endowment belonging to the church that I know of. This is all what I can say upon that head.