Back fields clearing complete

William “Punch” Johnston III completed his clearing work in the back fields last week — a work of true artistry.  In addition to uncovering about 40 acres of the farm that lay beneath vine-shrouded deadwood, Punch set aside 287 marketable boulders that we will barter for building and grounds projects.  The ‘son’ of Johnston & Son, nearing retirement, Punch achieved a goal long held by his father, to see this land back in agricultural production, and to open up a view from the north to the Windmill.  Dotted with mature oaks and pines, these upland fields will next be raked with a large tractor-pulled fork, to be loaned by Ray Smith, disked and then pasture seeded.  The price tag — $500 less than the USDA grant reimbursement total, and far below cost.  Thank you, Punch.

Punch Johnston III at Sylvester Manor

Manor House to be donated to nonprofit farm

Eben Fiske Ostby, owner of Sylvester Manor, announced at the opening of his family’s archives at New York University that he will be donating the historic Manor House and grounds to the nonprofit Sylvester Manor Educational Farm, with an aim to completing the transfer by year’s end.

“This is an especially exciting time for me and for the organization as we put in place the next chapter in the Manor’s history — one which includes both my family and the people of Shelter Island,” Mr. Ostby said.

In 2012, Mr. Ostby donated over 83 acres of land to the educational farm, a transfer that allowed the nonprofit to receive the proceeds of community preservation funds in exchange for protecting the fields forever as farmland. Mr. Ostby’s offer to donate the bulk of the remaining property to Sylvester Manor Educational Farm will bring another 140-plus acres and all of the historic structures — including the 1810 windmill, barns and 1737 Georgian Manor House — into nonprofit ownership. The family plans to retain a small acreage, which will not be fully subdivided from the manor lands, to continue the 360-year legacy of Sylvester descendants on the property.

To lead the effort to transfer the property and prepare for the demands it will create, certified planner Sara Gordon, formerly of the Peconic Land Trust, will join the manor’s staff as Strategic Director, working alongside Executive Director Cara Loriz.

“Since I inherited Sylvester Manor several years ago,” Mr. Ostby explained, “we have established a nonprofit to take on the mission of the farm, the manor house, and its role in the community. I believe that the nonprofit is now strong enough to handle ownership of the property, so our next priority is to transfer the manor and its land to this organization. We’re working on the execution of this and are hoping to conclude the ownership change this year.”

He spoke at a preview of an exhibit of historical records preserved at the manor and donated by Mr. Ostby to NYU. Entitled “Sylvester Manor: Land, Food and Power on a New York Plantation,” the exhibition will be open until July 15 on the first floor of NYU’s Bobst Library on Washington Square in Manhattan.

Sylvester Manor Educational Farm was incorporated in 2009 and received its nonprofit determination from the IRS in late 2010. Its mission is to cultivate, preserve and share Sylvester Manor’s lands, buildings and stories, inviting new thought about the importance of food, culture and place in our daily lives. Sylvester Manor works to meet community needs through educational programs, preservation efforts and access to truly local food.

Sylvester Manor House

Mr. Ostby’s offer to donate the bulk of the remaining property to Sylvester Manor Educational Farm will bring another 140-plus acres and all of the historic structures — including the 1810 windmill, barns and 1737 Georgian Manor House — into nonprofit ownership.

East Hampton Star Article on NYU Exhibition

Show Celebrates Sylvester Manor: On display at New York University beginning on April 10

By Carrie Ann Salvi | March 26, 2013 – 11:21am | From the East Hampton Star

A brass-gilt button with a Dutch tulip from a 17th-century men’s coat was just one of the thousands of artifacts found at Shelter Island’s Sylvester Manor farm by Stephen Mrozowski. He returned to the farm last week to determine the location of hundreds of workers who may be buried there. Photo: Carrie Ann Salvi

A brass-gilt button with a Dutch tulip from a 17th-century men’s coat was just one of the thousands of artifacts found at Shelter Island’s Sylvester Manor farm by Stephen Mrozowski. He returned to the farm last week to determine the location of hundreds of workers who may be buried there. Photo: Carrie Ann Salvi

Waving an arm toward the historic Sylvester Manor House on Shelter Island last week, Dr. Stephen Mrozowski, a professor of archaeology, spoke of the charred corncobs he’d found buried there alongside clamshells, the remains of 17th-century Indian clambakes — just an appetizer in the banquet of his findings during excavations from 1998 through 2006.

Alice Fiske endowed a study of the historic property after the death in 1992 of her husband, Andrew, a 13th-generation descendant of Nathaniel Syl­vester. Since then, Dr. Mrozowski, director of the Andrew Fiske Memorial Center for Archaeological Research at the University of Massachusetts, has unearthed “hundreds of thousands of artifacts,” he said, among them African-style pottery with European design elements, Dutch building materials, European coins, English and Dutch pipes, multiple building foundations, and one Dutch brick believed to have been part of the original circa-1660 manor house. His findings will be on display at New York University beginning on April 10 in a wide-ranging exhibition called Sylvester Manor: Land, Food, and Power on a New York Plantation, curated by Jennifer Anderson.

Originally 8,000 acres, the manor grounds once encompassed much of Shelter Island, and the 1652 homestead and plantation has remained in the hands of the same family ever since, one of the few in the United States to make that claim. Today, Bennett Konesni, the founder and creative director of the Sylvester Manor Educational Farm, represents the 15th generation of manor stewards. He has established, on the 243 acres that remain, an educational experience that celebrates sustainable food, local history, and arts, with nonprofit programs offered on the grounds surrounding the 1735 manor house and historic windmill.

There are thought to be up to 200 graves on the grounds, the final resting place of Manhansett Indians, enslaved Africans, and European indentured servants, who helped to supply food, timber, and materials to the West Indies — including supplies for the Sylvester family sugar plantations in Barbados — as part of the colonial “triangle trade,” in which slaves were bought on the African Gold Coast with New England rum and then traded in the West Indies for sugar or molasses, which was brought back to New England to be manufactured into rum. Last week, at the request of the board of the educational farm, Dr. Mrozowski and a team from N.Y.U. performed ground-penetrating radar surveys to help determine the locations of the gravesites.

The working plantation became a gentleman’s farm in the 18th century. After the Civil War it became the country estate of E.N. Horsford, a scientist said to have revolutionized industrial food production through the introduction of chemical fertilizers. His daughters, meanwhile, revived the colonial gardens, remnants of which can still be seen on the grounds along with the Georgian manor house, 18th and 19th-century outbuildings, and a rare 1810 Dominy windmill. Mrs. Fiske, who died in 2006, restored the gardens, including trees believed to have been brought to America as cuttings in the 17th century.

Music has also played a part at Sylvester Manor, both past and present. Today, the educational farm holds an annual “Plant and Sing” festival in October and sponsors contra dances and concerts at the Shelter Island School. The most recent, a bluegrass concert by Della Mae, a Boston bluegrass band, was a sellout.

Mr. Konesni can often be seen singing and playing a fiddle or banjo himself, as can his wife, Edith Gawler, who performs folk tunes both locally and professionally. The couple will open a show on April 6, along with the Sylvester Manor Worksongers and Cindy Kallet and Grey Larsen, well-known folk musicians. Traditional Irish music, Scandinavian fiddle duets, old-time fiddle and guitar tunes from southern Indiana, and new original music will be performed at the farm for a fee of $15, $5 for students.

The following week, on April 10, an opening reception for the N.Y.U. exhibition will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, 70 Washington Square South. Correspondence with Thomas Jefferson is included in the show, as are land deeds signed by Nathaniel Sylvester with Native Americans — among them Wyandanch, sachem of the Montaukett tribe — in the 1660s. The exhibit will also celebrate two books about Sylvester Manor: “The Manor: Three Centuries at a Slave Plantation on Long Island,” by Mac Griswold, and “Slavery before Race: Europeans, Africans, and Indians at Long Island’s Sylvester Manor Plantation, 1651-1884,” by Katherine H. Hayes.

The exhibition is free and open to the public. Reservations for the opening reception are required, and can be made through rsvp.bobst@nyu.edu. Information about guided tours of Sylvester Manor can be found at sylvestermanor.com.

The Architectural Component of the Historic Structures Report is Complete!

smA key step in preserving the history of Sylvester Manor was accomplished this week with the completion of the Architectural Component of the Historic Structures Report. Prepared by Robert Hefner, the East Hampton Village Historic Preservation Consultant, this document is a formal analysis of a building: its unique history, its place in architectural history, and complete description of the building, its architecture and current state.

According to Bob Hefner, “Sylvester Manor was the first Georgian house on eastern Long Island and is important in the context of the early Georgian houses of New England”  Its hipped roof, with chimneys at either end of the ridge, connect Brinley Sylvester’s house directly to Newport, where he had strong family ties. The report is a detailed analysis of this house in the context of other Georgian houses, and then goes on to describe the major renovations that were subsequently undertaken. Having this report gives us a deeper understanding of the unique qualities of this structure, and will assist us in preserving it.

See for yourself!

Click here to read the Architectural Component of the HSR
Click here to see the accompanying illustrations

In the SI Reporter: Archaeologists at Sylvester Manor

Article from the Shelter Island Reporter written by  , on 03/19/2013 8:26 AM

Early Monday morning in the bare, bitterly cold woods of Sylvester Manor, two men were up on a hill searching for the past.

Stephen Mrozowski stared at the ground as John Steinberg dragged a squat metal box with one wheel attached over the thick leaf cover, looking at a monitor hung from his neck. They were on a wide patch of ground under white pine trees within a slatted wood fence that looked in places like an old comb missing some teeth.

“Oh, yeah,”  said Dr. Steinberg, an archaeologist. “Yeah, Steve, look at this.”

Dr. Mrozowski, an anthropologist/archaeologist from the University of Massachusetts, looked at the monitor, which was undulating with waves of lines. “Yes,” he said.

The rig Dr. Steinberg was attached to is a machine called ground-penetrating radar, or GPR, technology akin to radar or sonar. Dr. Mrozowski explained that electronic beams were sent into the ground to see if anything bounces back.

The two scientists, part of a team from the Andrew Fiske Memorial Center for Archaeological Research in Boston, were out in the Island woods surveying what is from all reports a burial ground holding graves from as long ago as the 17th century.

Anecdotal evidence says there could be as many as 300 souls interred on the fenced hillside not far from North Ferry Road. The story goes that African slaves, free black men and women and Manhansett Indians who worked at or were associated with the Manor are buried here.

Dr. Mrozowski pointed out a massive stone at the foot of the hill. Words inscribed on the stone 125 years ago are now withered by time and just legible: “Burial Ground of the Colored People of Sylvester Manor.”

The white pines standing like sentinels on the hill were planted around 1900 in the belief the sweet-smelling needles would keep the air clean and disease-free around the burial site.

The team from Boston was careful to say that something was down below, but it was too early to tell exactly what. The positive response from Dr. Steinberg’s portable GPR equipment could be picking up large rocks and not graves and human remains, Dr. Mrozowski said.

John Steinberg and Dr. Steve Mrozowski run the ground penetrating radar over a section of the cemetery.  They will have more answers in the coming week. At this point they are excited about the results of the readings. They will be working until Wednesday as long as the weather cooperates.

PHOTO BY JENNIFER RUYS | John Steinberg and Dr. Steve Mrozowski run the ground penetrating radar over a section of the cemetery. They will have more answers in the coming week. At this point they are excited about the results of the readings. They will be working until Wednesday as long as the weather cooperates.

Using GPR was a non-invasive — as opposed to digging — method of finding if there are graves and then mapping them, Dr. Dr. Mrozowski said.

He’s been all over the world searching for ancient cultures, revealing tangible remains that bring us closer to the people who lived and died long ago.

He’s been on Shelter Island before. Between 1998 and 2005, as  director of the archaeological team, Dr. Mrozowski spent summers excavating Sylvester Manor’s grounds, unearthing a cultural mix of Native American, African, Dutch and English lives. In scholarly journals he’s noted that the archaeological record at Sylvester Manor is a natural laboratory to study the interactions of the various cultures that were here in the 17th and 18th centuries.

As the morning wore on it got colder, but the arrival of UMass grad students brought some warmth to the site with their chatter and energy as they raked leaves down to the bare earth.

Later in the day, a dozen Shelter Island School students came by on a field trip for their course, “History of Shelter Island,” led by teacher Peter Miedema.

But earlier, with just the archaeologists  patiently working the GPR and silently moving across the area, there was an air of mediation as well as scientific research along with a natural instinct of respect that is felt in cemeteries.

But for a cemetery, there was something missing. Wouldn’t head stones be marking the graves?

Dr. Mrozowski explained that for the class of people who would have been buried at Sylvester Manor three hundred years ago, the only markings for their lives and deaths would have been simple rocks.

He began pointing them out, colored brown and gold, partially covered with leaves, dotting the hillside.

AMBROSE CLANCY PHOTO | Stephen Mrozowski, an anthropologist/archaeologist from the University of Massachusetts, at Sylvester Manor Monday morning.

AMBROSE CLANCY PHOTO | Stephen Mrozowski, an anthropologist/archaeologist from the University of Massachusetts, at Sylvester Manor Monday morning.

Old-field Restoration Underway

The newly acquired field near Manhanset Road is getting a make-over as land is cleared to remove the non-native invasive plants.  The work is being done through a grant from the USDA funded Natural Resources Conservation Service, which is dedicated to soil conservation and wetlands protection.

Islander Punch Johnston has been working since mid March and will likely clear about half of the 57 acre section of plants such as bittersweet without disturbing the top soil.
Once the clearing is complete a pasture mix will be planted and mown frequently in order to kill the roots of the invasive plants. In the future the land could have a diversified operation including fruit trees, berries, organic herbs and hay.

“The two primary soil types present in these fields are Montauk fine sandy loam and Bridgehampton silt loam.  Both of these soil types are classified as prime farmland.  Good soil is a blessing, resource, and responsibility.  SImply put, these fields are soil any home gardener would be happy to have in his or her yard.  They both hold the potential to produce good pasture, hay, fruit trees, berries, and vegetables.” – Julia Trunzo, Farm Manager

Volunteer Profile: David Draper

In Memoriam. A the age of 72, David Lee Draper passed away on Wednesday, May 8, 2013. We are forever grateful of the time he spent here, volunteering at Sylvester Manor. 

“I wouldn’t be here every day if it wasn’t fun,” says David Draper, the volunteer archivist at Sylvester Manor.  He’s been coming to the Manor House almost every weekday since January 2012 to catalogue the collection of books and documents dating back to the 1600s.  So far he’s catalogued 3,200 books with perhaps another 1,000 left to go.  He’ll get started on those when there is enough shelf space to store them.

The job is a complicated one because there’s a lot of nuance to the work.  Draper takes an eclectic approach to chasing down information about the books he’s discovered in the collection.  He notes basic information about the book such as its publishing date and the author, but the fun part of the job is tracking down details.  For example, often there are inscriptions or dedications and he digs around until he figures out the connection to

Sylvester Manor.

The most exciting books he’s found are dated from the 1600s before the Sylvesters arrived on Shelter Island. It’s hard to tell with certainty if they were actually printed in those years or if they were reprinted later.  They are the real treasures of the collection, which covers subjects from natural history, agriculture and science to  philosophy, religion, politics and the law.  Of course there are also works of literary fiction for pleasure.

A considerable number of books are signed by authors.  The inscriptions are interesting  because many of the authors were family friends. “I find stuff inside books all the time, such as a photo of a Norwegian violinist Ole Bull.  It turns out he gave Cornelia Horsford a half-sized violin when he was here.”  Bull was as famous in his day as Itzhak Perlman is

David Draper at Sylvester Manor holding a photo of Eben Norton Horseford, Lord of the Manor in the mid 1800's

David Draper at Sylvester Manor holding a photo of Eben Norton Horseford, Lord of the Manor in the mid 1800′s

today.

There’s also a copy of a letter Cornelia’s father, Eben Norton Horsford, sent to Emperor Napoleon III dated 1868 about war rations and how to feed troops.  Professor Horsford wrote a book about the subject during the Civil War, and he sent the emperor a copy.

Recently Draper found a book titled “Dottings Round the Circle” with a dedication to Andrew Fiske, who accompanied the author, Benjamin Curtis, on a trip around the world.
“First efforts to see if it was Gertrude Horsford’s husband of that name were not definitive. The ages and time frame were right, as was the connection of both men to the Boston area. But that’s circumstantial. Later the same day a Harvard College Class of 1875 secretary’s report crossed the desk. And lo and behold, the two men were classmates and it was the grandfather of the late Andrew Fiske, of Sylvester Manor, to whom the book was dedicated,” says Draper.

Draper arrived on Shelter Island in 2007 after a career that took him from teaching in New Jersey to doctoral studies at Syracuse University to banking in Florida.  He describes himself as an ‘informed amateur’ when it comes to archiving.  His interest in Shelter Island history began when he worked at the Shelter Island Public Library indexing the Shelter Island Reporter.  While  there he scanned and transcribed the library’s handwritten minutes dating back to 1885, when the library was founded with a $500 donation fromProfessor Horsford. The original minutes went to the Historical Society for safekeeping, where Draper agreed to scan a collection of Civil War letters and memorabilia.

In 2011 Draper was a public relations volunteer for Plant & Sing, and couldn’t resist returning to the Manor House with its rich and fascinating history.

 

Rescheduled: February Open Hours

Sylvester Manor Educational Farm Open Hours

Special Open Hours Rescheduled

for Saturday, February 23rd from 2:00 – 4:00 pm

Open Hours Special Topic: Sylvester Manor Slave History In recognition of Black History Month, February’s Open Hours at Sylvester Manor will include a self-guided tour exploring the lives of slaves at this historic provisioning plantation. Visitors will introduced to the daily lives and tasks of the manor’s enslaved laborers, visit the historic burial ground and learn about a Sylvester slave descendant who became the first African American poet published in America. A guided tour is also available beginning at 3pm.  Enter at the white gate across from IGA and follow the signs for parking.

Sylvester Manor in Print

books-42 books-43 books-44
This rich history of Sylvester Manor is being showcased this spring in articles, books, and photographs featuring the Manor.

March

Preservation Magazine, the quarterly magazine of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, will feature an article about Sylvester Manor by Nate Schweber, with photos taken during Plant & Sing by Steve Gross and Sue Daley. 

April

SLAVERY BEFORE RACE: Europeans, Africans, and Indians on Shelter Island’s Sylvester Manor Plantation, 1651-1884, by archaeologist Katherine Howlett Hayes, NYU Press.

FARMHOUSE REVIVAL, coffee table book by Steve Gross and Sue Daley, Harry N. Abrams.

NYU Spring Lecture Series to Highlight Sylvester Manor

On Wednesday, February 6th at 12:30pm Dr. Michael LaCombe, Associate Professor at Adelphi University and author of Political Gastronomy: Food and Authority in the English Atlantic World, will take part in a lecture being hosted at New York University’s  Fales Library.
Michael LaCombe Sylvester Manor Talk

The lecture is part of an ongoing series being hosted at NYU by the “Sylvester Manor Working Group,” which was formed to inventory and preserve 10,000 historic records donated by Manor owner Eben Ostby to the Fales archive.

Also part of the project, is an exhibit at the library titled “Sylvester Manor: Food and Power on a Northern Plantation,” which will open on April 10th.

Check back for more information on programming related to this partnership.

Film Screening: The Sugar Connection

sugar connection updated-36

The documentary film The Sugar Connection: Holland, Barbados, Shelter Island shows Long Island’s participation in the 17th century global trade by the Sylvester family of Shelter Island.  Directed by Suffolk County Archaeological Association Executive Director Dr. Gaynell Stone, the film chronicles seven years of archaeological excavations at Sylvester Manor led by Dr. Stephen Mrozowski of UMass Boston, whose team unearthed over 500,000 artifacts, complimenting the thousands of family papers and primary documents archived by the family.

Monday, February 11, 2013 1pm at the Farmingville Town Hall at One Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY.  This screening is presented through a collaboration of the Town of Brookhaven and the Suffolk County Archaeological Association.  The program is free of charge, but please RSVP to brussell@brookhaven.org or at 631.451.8038.

Friday, March 1, 2013 7pm at the Shelter Island Public Library at 37 North Ferry Road, Shelter Island, NY. This screening is presented through a collaboration of Sylvester Manor Educational Farm, The Shelter Island Public Library, and The Shelter Island Historical Society.

Junior Garden Club plants daffodils at Sylvester Manor

On an unseasonably balmy Tuesday, December 4th, Sylvester Manor hosted the Youth Division of the Shelter Island Garden Club in a daffodil planting along Manwaring Road. About 18 young gardeners, Carol Russell of the Shelter Island Garden Club, SM volunteers Janet Roach and Pat Lutkins and SM staff had a great time getting down and dirty to beautify the roadside in front of the farm stand parking area, which will burst into a profusion of yellow blooms come April. We are very grateful to Jerry Siller of Grady Riley Gardens for providing discounted bulbs for the event – thanks, Jerry!

SMDaffodilsGardClub1
 

Carol Russell, a stalwart of the Garden Club and dear friend of Alice Fiske, explained to the gathering that daffodils had always been a particular favorite of Mrs. Fiske, who planted them not only at Sylvester Manor but all over the island for the community to enjoy. She also shared that Alice would smile at the thought of children planting at the Manor, as she had for many years been chair of the Junior Garden Club and was passionate about fostering a love of gardening in the youth of Shelter Island. 

We are so grateful to Carol Russell and the Shelter Island Garden Club, and Margaret Doyle, Sylvester Manor Arts & Education volunteer, for organizing the event, to Steve (the show must go on) Eaton for leading us all on his ukulele in a delightful song about daffodils and springtime, and volunteers Janet and Pat, whose enthusiasm kept us all going.

Enjoy our beautiful daffys as you head to the farm stand come April!

SMDaffodilsGardeNclub2

SMDaffodilsGardenClub

A tour for Scholars at the Manor

On Monday twelve scholars from New York University and nearby institutions toured Sylvester Manor and grounds to see first hand the site that generated the NYU Fales Library archive. Mac Griswold led the tour, and for many it was their first visit to the property.  They represented a cross section of disciplines, including 17th, 18th, and 19th century Atlantic history, architecture, agriculture and native whaling.  They are very appreciative of the archival gift from Eben Ostby and were pleased to visit the property.  They understand the importance of this gift in ways that non-scholars cannot appreciate.

Participants were served a lovely Sylvester Manor Squash Soup and local greens, and participated in work songs led by Bennett, Edith and Steve. Maura organized the event.

The tour comes in advance of the NYU Exhibition “Sylvester Manor: Food and Power on a Northern Plantation” which opens at the NYU Fales Library on April 10, 2013 (Mark your calendars!). It’s based on the extensive family papers as well has historic objects and archaeological materials excavated at the site.  According to the curator Jennifer Anderson, “Together these unique documents and artifacts offer a fresh perspective on this important, but little-known historic site, reminding us that our urban lives are still enriched through a deeper engagement with the land and its human heritage.”

What would we do without friends?

Bobbly, Ray, and the New Tractor

 A great thank you to Ray Smith, of Ray Smith and Associates, who has donated this Massey Ferguson front end bucket loader to Sylvester Manor.  It will be invaluable for all the jobs needing to get done on our property.  Ray has lovingly maintained the trees on Sylvester Manor for many years. He was first hired by Ali FisKe, as he just started his career. In the photo, he is with Bobby Walden, assistant groundskeeper.

Thank you Ray!