A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. I — Passage 54
[Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)] 94 HISTORY OF THE "In the year 1672 (says Dnnlap) orders arrived to Governor Lovelace to put the Province in a state of defence. Upon this occasion a small fort was to be erected at Antony's Nose, or near it, on the north river."a A tribe of Indians named the Wabingi occupied the highlands called by them Kettatenny Mountains. Their principal settle-ment, (designated Wickapy,) was situated in the vicinity of An-tony's Nose.'' Four miles south of Peekskill lies Yerplanck's Point. This place, called by the Indians Meahagh, was bounded on the east by the lands of Appamagpogh and the creek Meanagh, on the south by the same creek, on the west by the Hudson, and on the north by the creek Tammoesis. Prior to 16S3 the territory of Meahagh belonged to Siecham, sachem of Sachus and other Indians, who sold the same to Ste-phanus van Cortlandt, At the death of Stephanus it passed by will to his eldest son Johannes, and afterwards descended by mar-riage to Philip Terplanck, from whom the neck acquired its pres-ent appellation. This individual married Gertrude, only daugh-ter and heiress of the above Johannes. In 1734 Yerplanck's Point (consisting of one thousand acres) was held by John Lent, who paid therefor the yearly rent of one pepper-corn on the feast day of St. Michael, the archangel. The Yerplanck's subsequently sold the Point to the present proprietors, John Henry and others, for the sum of nearly $300,000.