|

Jan /
Feb '08
“Cliff Dale”
part ii
In the Park Commission’s
Annual Report for 1939, two pages are devoted to the accomplishments of
the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the park that year, ending with,
“The razing of the Zabriskie house on the edge of the cliffs in Alpine, one of
the properties conveyed to the Commission by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., was
partly completed. This is one of the buildings visible from the river that has
had to be demolished in compliance with the terms of the gift, with a view to
the preservation of the skyline of the Palisades.”
Rockefeller had
purchased this particular piece of property in 1930. In 1933 he donated it,
along with many similar properties he’d acquired around the same time, to the
Park Commission, with the request that the Palisades skyline be returned to
its natural appearance. This was in response to fears that the construction of
the George Washington Bridge, which opened in 1931, would lead to a spate of
over-development on the cliff top, marring the Park Commission’s thus-far
successful efforts to preserve the Palisades scenery.
And so the mansions
fell.
Except, this particular mansion, once the largest on
the cliffs, did not fall so easily. A sizable piece of it, seven decades
later, is still standing. Built into a hillside, the southern portion is two
stories tall; north of that, the WPA crew must have finally decided to use the
basement as a containment vessel for the thick-walled upper stories they
toppled. Around the east side of the foundations, in numerals formed by stone
and mortar, about two feet tall, is a date:
1911


George Albert Zabriskie
was forty-two years old in 1911, the scion of a family tree that traced its
New World roots back to August 1662, when 24-year-old “Albert Saboriski,”
probably of Prussian or Silesian descent and seemingly traveling alone, first
stepped off D’Vos (The Fox) at the docks at New Amsterdam.
Albert would eventually cross the Hudson into New Jersey. The family he began
there would become among the most prominent in Bergen County by the time of
the Revolution. Throughout the nineteenth century, the family continued to
grow and flourish. George A. Zabriskie was born to a branch of the family that
had re-crossed the Hudson to live in New York City. By the time he was
supervising the construction of a cliff-top summer estate in Alpine—his
year-round residence was on Central Park South—Zabriskie had made a name for
himself in the flour business, serving as the New York representative for the
Minneapolis-based Pillsbury flour mills.

The fifteen-room manor
house that was built for Zabriskie at Alpine in 1911 was constructed of native stone on
a 25-acre estate that had once belonged to William C. Baker, an innovator in
using steam heat to artificially incubate chicken eggs. (Over 200,000 chickens
a year were hatched in buildings on Baker’s estate—see
our previous featured story). In addition to the manor house, Zabriskie had a gate house built on the Boulevard (today’s U.S. Route 9W),
where he and an aunt, who lived with him for many years, stayed during the
construction of the manor house. In the natural hollow to the south of the
manor house was a manmade pond. Terraced gardens adorned the cliff edge to the
east. On the other side of the road were cottages, greenhouses, a barn, and
other buildings (the Alpine Public School stands on these grounds today).
Zabriskie kept the name that Baker had assigned to the estate, “Cliff Dale”
(though he usually spelled it as one word, “Cliffdale”).



During World War I,
Zabriskie was named sugar and flour administrator of the Food Administration
Board under Herbert Hoover and a member of the United States Sugar
Equalization Board. As noted in the New York Times, “His wartime
and post-war work on behalf of the welfare of America’s allies won him the
awards of the Belgian Order of the Crown, the Polish Polonia Restituta Cross,
and the Order of Icelandic Falcon.”
But his true passion was
for American history and historic preservation. A member of the Sons of the
American Revolution, Zabriskie would go on to become a president of the
New
York Historical Society. From the Times again: “Active in patriotic
societies and civic affairs of New York, [Zabriskie] was chairman of the
membership committee of the Museum of the City of New York. He often fought to
prevent the destruction by city planners of historical landmarks, such as the
old Fort Clinton in Brooklyn.”
Zabriskie wrote a number
of books, some of them self-published, on topics ranging from polar
exploration to early Dutch Christmas traditions to The Bon Vivant’s
Companion, a guide to mixing cocktails.

After he sold his Alpine
estate to a real estate agent working for Rockefeller, George Zabriskie
continued to lead an active life, pursuing his many and eclectic interests. He
was eighty-five years old when he died at his winter home at Ormond Beach,
Florida, at the start of 1954.
Today, the ruins of his
cliff-top estate continue to captivate and intrigue hikers.

Sources:
Stanley
W. Bradley, Crossroads of History: The Story of Alpine, N.J., 1976,
Alpine Bicentennial Committee.
New
York Times, 3 Jan.
1954, p. 88 (obit).
Kevin
Wright, “Zabriskie Family History,”
Bergen County Historical Society.

Links to pages outside the njpalisades.org domain are
provided when we think such pages will be of interest to visitors and friends
of the NJ Section of the Palisades Interstate Park. We cannot verify the
accuracy of information or be responsible for the quality of content displayed
on pages with URLs outside the njpalisades.org domain.
Copyright ©
2008
Palisades Interstate Park Commission - NJ Section |