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A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. I — Passage 65 (part 4)

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[Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)] Underbill's residence is con-jectured to have originally formed the bed of the Croton River, from the fact that trunks of trees have been discovered four or five feet beneath its muddy sediment. The southern declivities of the Point towards the Croton Bay are covered with extensive vineyards of Catawba and Isabella. The fable land also embraces luxuriant orchards and vineyards. The whole of the latter cover nearly an area of forty acres. Two thousand one hundred and fifty-four shad, and seven thousand herring, have been taken at single lifts in the adjoining waters. During the winter season vast flocks of coot and black duck frequent the shores of the Croton and Haverstraw Bays. There are numerous Revolutionary incidents connected with Croton or Teller's Point deserving of notice. It was off the west-ern extremity that tlie Vulture sloop of war came to anchor on the morning of the 21st of September, 1780, having brought up Andre for the purpose of holding an interview with Arnold ]^ and here she expected to have awaited his return — but soon after the spy had embarked for the opposite shore, a barge filled with armed men from the Vulture was seen approaching Teller's Point; whereupon, George Sherwood and.Tohn Petterson, who were in the vicinity, seized their arms and hastened to the shore, resolved in their own minds that the enemy should not land without opposition.