Tuckahoe Marble

Federal Hall (1842) in Manhattan is constructed of Tuckahoe Marble.

Tuckahoe Marble or Westchester marble — orInwood marble originating in Westchester County, New York, USA, and surrounding counties, has long been quarried at Tuckahoe, Sing Sing, Hastings, and Thornwood.[1] It is part of the Inwood Formation dating from the Late Cambrian to Early the Ordovician.

Description and geology

Tuckahoe marble is a high quality marble first discovered in 1822 in the town of Eastchester in Westchester County, New York. The marble is from the larger "Inwood Formation" or "deposit", which stretches in a northeasterly direction from mid-Manhattan through southern Westchester.[2] The marble is characterized scientifically as a dolomitic marble and varies in color from a light gray to light green, to a bluish white or brilliant white. A distinctive characteristic is the medium-to-coarse size of the calcite and dolomite particles that primarily compose the stone, which often contains minor amounts of hematite and pyrite. Oxidation of these iron-bearing minerals causes certain varieties of the marble to turn orange-brown when the stone is exposed to weather.[3]

History

Tuckahoe Marble Quarries exhibit

The vast majority of the early residential and commercial buildings in New York were constructed with wood while government and institutional buildings and mansions of the wealthy were often built of brick or stone. Locally quarried Manhattan schist and sandstone from the lower Hudson Valley were typically used before marble became more popular. By the late 18th century, marble was being produced by a number of quarries in northern Manhattan and along the Hudson River in Westchester. The most well-known quarry that supplied stone from the deposit was located in the area now known as Tuckahoe. This "Tuckahoe marble" was nearly pure white in color and considered by many to be of the highest grade.

Many federal buildings destroyed by the British during the War of 1812 were rebuilt with Tuckahoe marble. The commercial marble industry first developed along the Bronx River. In 1818 the Tuckahoe Marble Quarry opened and eventually became a major producer of marble for the world. These local marble quarries were the main reason that the state government of New York chose Sing Sing as the site of a new prison in 1825.

From 1865 to 1871, hundreds of Scottish and Irish laborers blasted huge quantities of marble from the quarry at Hastings-on-Hudson. An inclined railroad carried it down to the quarry wharf on the Hudson River where it was dressed by skilled stonecutters and loaded onto ships bound for cities like New York City and Charleston, South Carolina. By the 1880s, Hastings Pavement was producing the paving blocks used extensively in Central Park and Prospect Park in Brooklyn. Between 1895 and 1900, Hastings Pavement produced 10 million such blocks and shipped them throughout the U.S. and to cities in Canada, Brazil and England.

White Tuckahoe marble supplied the early United States with a building material suitable for the neoclassic architecture popular in America's early public buildings. Tuckahoe Marble was the single most important white marble deposit in the country until the latter part of the 1800s when the extensive, high quality marble deposits of southwestern Vermont became more available after the rise of the railroad. Quarrying of Tuckahoe Marble ceased in 1930.

Buildings and structures

Tuckahoe marble was used to construct the burial vaults at the New York Marble Cemetery (1830) and the New York City Marble Cemetery (1831), both repositories of influential and prominent early citizens. The list of local buildings constructed of Tuckahoe marble is long and includes:

See also

References

  1. The greater Inwood marble formation stretches from northern Manhattan, the Bronx [e.g., Kingsbridge, Mott Haven, Melrose, Tremont], and Westchester County into western Connecticut.
  2. Tuckahoe Marble
  3. Diane S. Kaese and Michael F. Lynch (2008). "Marble in (and Around) the City Its Origins and Use in Historic New York Buildings" (PDF). Common Bond 22 (2 (Autumn 2008)): 7.

Further reading

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