History of Westchester County, New York — Passage 84 (part 2)
[Frederic Shonnard & W.W. Spooner (1900)] He left the property to his son, Frederick, who mar-ried a daughter of Augustus Jay (ancestor of Chief Justice John Jay). Frederick built in 171S the line Yan Cortlandt mansion, which, together with the then existing residue of the estate, was purchased by the City of Xew York in 1889, the land being con-verted into a public park (Yan Cortlandt Park) and the mansion placed in the custody of the Colonial Dames of the State of New York, and by them utilized for the purposes of a historical museum. Jacobus Yan Cortlandt, the ancestor of the Yonkers Van Cort-landts, also owned a large estate in the Town of Bedford, part of which descended to Chief Justice John Jay and is still in the pos-session of the Jay family. Our narrative, from the period when the active acquisition of the lands of Westchester County began, about the time of the Eng-lish conquest (1661), has naturally followed the course of the pro-gressive new purchases and occupation running from the seat of the already settled localities on the Sound westward and northward along the formerly unpurchased or undeveloped shores of the Har-lem River, Spuyten Duyvil Creek, and the Hudson. Pursuing this natural course, our attention has been mainly claimed by the great land grants of Morrisania, Fordham, Philipseburgh, and Cortlandt Manors, extending consecutively from near the mouth of the Bronx to Anthony?s Nose, and covering substantially the whole of the west-ern half and northern section of the county.