History of Westchester County, New York — Passage 71
[Frederic Shonnard & W.W. Spooner (1900)] 28th of October, lf>C>4, it was agreed that the line should start on the Sound at a point twenty miles east of the Hudson River and pursue a north-northwest coarse until it intersected the line of Massachusetts, which at that time was supposed to ran across the continent to the Pacific Ocean. In locating the twenty-mile start-ing point, Nicolls accepted representations made by the Connecticut people, and it was fixed at the mouth of the Maniaroneck Eiver, which in point of fact, however, is only ten miles from the Hudson. Accordingly, the boundary between New York and Connecticut was declared to be " a line drawn from the east point or side where the fresh water falls into the salt,1 at high-water mark, north-northwest to the line of Massachusetts." This produced a line striking the east bank of the Hudson just above Croton Point, and the west bank at West Point — an arrangement which, when the New York author-ities discovered the fact, was greatly to their dissatisfaction, and which later was rectified on a basis as nearly as convenient adjust-able to the original twenty-mile understanding. But for the time being, notwithstanding the serious miscalculation of distance, the division of territory on the Sound appeared equitable enough. It was unquestionable that everything east of Greenwich belonged to Connecticut, by virtue of long settlement and also of the articles of 1 (;:»(}.