History of Westchester County, New York — Passage 40
[J. Thomas Scharf (1886)] eral law, the trustees being Archbishop Corrigan, Right Rev. Monsignor William Quin, Y.G., Rev. Charles R. Corley (all e.v-officio), Mr. John Wallace and Mr. Francis O'Neill. The history and statistics of St. Mary's parish school have been given already. St. Joseph's Church, on Ashburton and St. Joseph A ve-nues.— The parish of St. Joseph was set oft' from St. Mary's in May, 1871. The division line has not been offi-cially defined with accuracy, but is assumed to follow Yonkers Avenue from the Bronx to the Croton aque-duct; thence by the aqueduct to the arches crossing the Saw-Mill River, and down the river, leaving the glen to Garden Street, on the upland, within the parish; thence by Garden Street to Locust Hill Avenue, and thence to the Hudson River. Rev. Albert A. Lings, at that time assist-ant at St. Mary's, was made the first pastor, a charge which he still holds, and the Rev. An-thony Molloy has been