Home / Bolton, Reginald Pelham. Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis. Indian Notes and Monographs, Vol. II, No. 7. New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, 1922. / Passage

Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis

Bolton, Reginald Pelham. Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis. Indian Notes and Monographs, Vol. II, No. 7. New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, 1922. 262 words

The neck was probably an appurtenance of the natives of the Gerritsen Basin station, and its grantor, Guttaquoh, was perhaps the sachem of that settlement. Through these tracts the Gravesend Neck road connected the early settlements of Lady Moody and her companions, with the home and mill of Hugh Gerritsen at the Strome beach. It is so natural a line of travel, though it paralleled the Mechawanienck trail, that it can hardly fail to have been the successor

INDIAN NOTES

THE CANARSEE

of a native pathway extending westward from the beach to the stations at Gravesend (pi. xxv).

With the Narrioch tract the natives also passed title to Mannahanning, or "land on an island," being the contiguous area of what is now known as Coney Island. It may be noted that this name was originally applied only to the western extremity, which in those early days was a separate island. The remainder was further divided into two parts by a marshy area which was submerged at high tide. This extended east of Luna Park, where a small inlet set in from Coney Island creek on the line of Overton place. The eastern island was at first known as Gysbert's eylandt, and both were known as late as 1824 as Schryers hook.

The island was doubtless reached from the mainland by a path which led direct from the site of Gravesend village (105) by what became later the old Shell road. This crossed the creek at a point where there was a little dry islet, and the road was marked on the Goodrich