
The year 1932 is one of our
favorites for park history, if only becausefor whatever reasonit was a busy
one for park photographers. They took dozens of shots in the
park, showing our facilities
running at an unbelievable full tilt, including several Hudson River bathing beaches.
We recently dug out the
parks
annual report for 1932, just to have some words to go with the pictures
According to the report, over
two million
visitors came to the Palisades that year, including a good-sized armys worth of
bathers. An estimated 130,000 used the big bath houses at Hazard’s Beach or at Undercliff,
while another 210,000 used the “smaller dressing rooms” at Bloomers, Alpine, and
Quinns beaches. “Besides these, there were many persons who did not use the
bath houses, but who came to the Park in bathing suits and removed their outer wraps upon
arrival
”
Park
lifeguards would rescue a dozen
persons from drowning and “several cases were treated for submersion and
67 given
first aid treatment.” Happily, “no lives were lost at the beaches.”
Ross Dock,
meanwhile, was “home” to some three thousand campersthough they didnt quite
have to rough it. “Ross Dock Camp is equipped with many conveniences such as city
water, hot and cold showers, sanitary sewerage,
a rustic cabin housing the resident
camp manager and camp store. The entire area, including private bathing beach, is enclosed
by strong wire fence, thus excluding the general public
”
As fascinating as all this
was, it began
to get us thinking. We knew that within a decade, each of our bustling bathing beaches
would in turn be abandoned. Just how did that come about? The obvious, somewhat pat answer
is of course “pollution.” But as with so many things “obvious,” we
wondered if this one couldnt stand a closer look. Those of us living in the area,
after all, have become inured to the idea that the Hudson River is “polluted.”
But just how does a body of water apparently clean enough to accommodate hundreds
of thousands of bathers becomein a scant decadeunsafe to swim?
It was back to the file cabinet
drawer where the annual reports are kept, to do some historical “beach combing.”
Here’s an abbreviated chronology of what we found.
1933
For the first time, an
admission fee gets charged at the parks public beaches, 10 cents for anyone over
twelve.
The reason: the park has been losing revenue from its ferry operations ever since the
George Washington Bridge opened two years back. Some 97,017 persons opt to pay this fee,
while “it is estimated that almost 300,000 children also used the beaches
without charge.”

1936
Admission is still 10
cents, but the numbers have dropped to 59,703 paid and about 180,000 children, with a
revenue drop of 21 percent from the previous year. “It
is believed that the numerous new pools in New York City attracted many who
formerly bathed at the Palisades beaches.”
1938
“Only three bathing
areas were open to the public during 1938, those at Bloomers, Undercliff and Alpine.
Hazards (sic), at the southern end of the park, was
not opened, due to the lack of direct ferry service from New York City.” The missing ferry is a passenger-only boat that had run
from 158th Street to Carpenter’s Landing, crossing the river literally in the shadow of the
bridge that would spell its demise. Yet the total number of bathers remains almost the
same as in 1936.
1941
“1941 income amounted
to $5,211.25, a loss of $855.70 from last seasons revenue. This was probably due to
weather conditionslack of prolonged heat waves and cooler weekendsand the
tendency of people to patronize more costly places when money is freer.” The economy
has gradually improved since the start of the Great Depressionand people are
traveling farther from home. Without explanation, the Undercliff Beach is no longer listed
in the report, leaving just two beaches, Bloomer’s and Alpine.
1942
America has entered the
World War. The venerable Dyckman Street-Englewood Ferry finally succumbs to competition from
the bridge, and as a result, Bloomer’s Beach sees a
60 percent drop in income; Alpine is up
slightly. It is the tenth year without a fatality at the beaches.
1943
“The Bloomers Area was
not open
due to curtailed passenger car use and because the Dyckman
Street Ferry did not operate.” Alpine sees a 33 percent increase in attendance.
“This increase may have been accounted for by the desire of the public to
gain respite from war strains, and the fact that the beach was accessible to
those restrained by the war from the customary use of their automobiles for
longer distances.” (War-effort gasoline rationing has
gone into effect.)
1944
“The Alpine bathing area was closed for bathing for the duration,
because of river pollution caused by war conditions.” The first and only mention of
the wordand then its dropped like a cannonball on the page.
What are we to make of it? To be sure,
there are plenty of holes in our story, based as it is on a single source (the annual
reports). Still, we can see that it was in truth a host of causes, from the George
Washington Bridge to new city pools, that helped close the beaches. “Pollution”
was the final of these.
As a general rule, while the economy
sagged, people came to the beaches; when an upturn occurred, they tended to head to
destinations farther from home. So it was that during the Depression, our beaches offered
affordable recreation close to home for hundreds of thousands, most of them New Yorkers
who came on the ferry services. (This was also a time when a great deal of heavy
industryalong with its waste pipeswas closed down due to the weak economy.) When
the George Washington Bridge opened in 1931, it would put a dire crimp in ferry service.
In one year, the Dyckman Ferry went from taking over a million vehicles down to 300,000.
The 158th Street passenger boat struggled along for several years before going belly up, and
then the first of our beaches, Hazzard’s, had to close.
World War
II brought a whole new set of
complex variables to the equation, everything from “war strains” to gasoline
rationing. The gargantuan war effort would also produce massive amounts of industrial
wasteand so went Alpine, the last of our beaches.
It is perhaps crucial at this point to
note how knowledge of water quality issues has grown in
the decades since, and that the
Hudson has as a result undergone a profound recovery. Experts say our section of the river
is today on the very verge of being clean enough to swim again. Part of whats
intriguing about this is the thought that the river was probably already pollutedby
todays standardsbefore the war. We simply had neither the understanding
of water quality we have today, nor the technical means to test for it. (Remember that
most water pollution is invisible; to the thousands at our beaches, the river may have
seemed
clean enough.) So when children can once again jump safely into the water of the Hudson,
that water will likely be cleaner than the water of six decades ago, back during
the Great Depression
back when our bathing beaches nevertheless boomed
EN
July 8, 1998
To the Editor:
Your July issue discusses the condition
of the water of the Hudson River. From first-hand my own observations: From 1935 to 1940, as a boy,
I spent many hours with friends on the banks of the Hudson, both along the Palisade shores
and below the George Washington Bridge, on the New York side. There was no mystery about
the pollution. We observed a constant flow of raw sewage, which was widely distributed by
the tidal currents. Even as kids we considered it disgusting that “our” river
was being used for waste disposal. We did not know about the unseen industrial waste, but
the water was uninviting for swimming, boating, and even fishing. On a brighter note, the
river is much cleaner to the eye now, and I enjoy my weekly stroll at the
Alpine Boat Basin. The area is well maintained. I also
appreciate the presence of the well kept
Kearney House,
with the history and atmosphere it offers.
Leon Hillman,
P.E.
Demarest, NJ