Thomas C. Pearsall Farm was a historic farmstead on the northeast side of Turtle Bay in what is now Midtown East, Manhattan, New York City, US. The tract originated in 17th-century Dutch and English land patents and, after a long chain of title, was acquired by merchant Thomas Pearsall in 1797 and devised to his son Thomas C. Pearsall in 1807. By the early 19th century the holding encompassed portions of today’s East 50s near the East River and the old Post Road; the site was gradually absorbed by the Manhattan street grid during the 19th century. [1] [2]
The acreage that later formed the Pearsall farm originated in colonial grants near Turtle Bay. A 1676 patent from Governor Edmund Andros to John Danielson described roughly thirty acres northeast of “Deutel” (Turtle) Bay, bounded by the commons and lands of Jacobus Fabricius and David De Voor. [1] Through the late 17th and 18th centuries, title passed among owners including John Jennings, Pieter Boeckhout (Bockholst), and the Hardman family; parts of the tract were associated with the Union Flag tavern on the Post Road. [1]
In 1784 the farm was conveyed to printer and bookseller Hugh Gaine, and in 1795 to attorney Josiah Ogden Hoffman. On April 27, 1797, Hoffman sold the property to New York merchant Thomas Pearsall. [1] Pearsall’s 1805 will gave his “country seat” to his wife for life, with remainder to his son Thomas C. Pearsall; the elder Pearsall died in 1807, and the devise took effect thereafter. [1] In 1809, Thomas C. Pearsall purchased an additional parcel (about four acres) that had been part of the Fabricius patent, consolidating the holding along the river and Post Road. [1]
Nineteenth-century descriptions place the farmhouse near the later bed of Avenue A (now roughly First Avenue) between East 58th and 59th Streets, with frontage on the East River and the Post Road. [1] Contemporary advertisements cited orchard and garden improvements, a wharf and landing, and access to rich fisheries in the adjacent cove at Turtle Bay. [1]
By the 19th century the Pearsall lands—like neighboring estates at Turtle Bay—were surveyed into city lots as Manhattan’s grid advanced. Subsequent owners subdivided and conveyed the tract, and the farm landscape disappeared beneath urban residential and commercial development. [2]
The farm’s title history has been compiled from deeds, wills, and period newspapers reproduced in Stokes’s Iconography, and is summarized with block and lot cross-references by the New Amsterdam History Center’s Mapping Early New York project. [1] [2] Related farm and tract maps are preserved in the New York City Municipal Archives. [3] A 19th-century map of a Long Island property “formerly belonging to Thomas Pearsall” also survives in the New York Public Library Digital Collections, illustrating the Pearsall family’s wider agricultural footprint in the region. [4]