History of Westchester County, New York — Passage 146 (part 2)
[J. Thomas Scharf (1886)] The line then ran due north about as far as to Clinton Avenue of the present day, and from that point ran west, in a line not deviating much from the above-mentioned avenue, until it struck his own smaller farm, On the north side of the Sing Sing Kill, with the Kill as its southern boundary, was the farm of John Bishop, containing eighty-three acres. Its eastern boundary followed the Post-road to a point a short distance south of St. Augustine's Roman Catholic Church. From that point the line ran a little south of west to the Hudson River, which was the western boundary. This farm embraced the greater part of the district known as Strangtown, and extended only a short distance beyond the present northern bound-ary of the village. Located to the north of the Bishop place was the farm of Albert Orser, contain-ing one hundred and sixty-four acres. The village