Major John André Monument | |
Location: | 42 Andre Hill, Tappan, New York |
Coordinates: | 41.0214°N -73.9547°W |
Built: | 1879 |
Architect: | Taseman & Co.; Olmstead, B.S. |
Added: | November 8, 2006 |
Area: | less than one acre |
Refnum: | 06001001 |
Major John André Monument, also known as the Site of Major John André's Hanging and Burial, is a historic monument located at Tappan in Rockland County, New York; it's only a few yards away from the New Jersey border. It is a gray granite monument erected in 1879 and approximately 40 inches square and 58 inches tall. It is located in a circular plot approximately 31 feet in diameter. It commemorates the site of the hanging of Major John André on October 2, 1780.[1]
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006.
The monument was constructed in 1879 by millionaire Cyrus W. Field. It was dedicated on October 2, 1879.[1] It was quite controversial when it was first constructed, and there were three attempts to destroy the monument:[1]
It was felt that a monument to a British spy was an insult to George Washington; for this reason, a bronze tablet was later added to commemorate the bravery of Washington and his generals during a crisis of the war.[1]
After Cyrus Field's death, his heirs refused to pay the taxes of $6.38 on the property. George Dickey of Nyack bought the land in a tax auction in October 1895. Mr. Dickey sold the land to the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society for $250 on November 13, 1905.[2] After the Society disbanded in 1983, the property was conveyed to Rockland County NY.[3]
HERE DIED OCTOBER 2, 1780.MAJOR JOHN ANDRE, OF THE BRITISH ARMYWHO ENTERED THE AMERICAN LINESON A SECRET MISSION TO BENEDICT ARNOLDFOR THE SURRENDER OF WEST POINT,WAS TAKEN PRISONER TRIED AND CONDEMNED AS A SPY.HIS DEATHTHOUGH ACCORDING TO THE STERN CODE OF WARMOVED EVEN HIS ENEMIES TO PITY,AND BOTH ARMIES MOURNED THE FATEOF ONE SO YOUNG AND BRAVE.IN 1821 HIS REMAINS WERE REMOVED TO WESTMINSTER ABBEY,A HUNDRED YEARS AFTER HIS EXECUTION.THIS STONE WAS PLACED ABOVE THE SPOT WHERE HE LAY,NOT TO PERPETUATE THE RECORD OF STRIFEBUT IN TOKEN OF THOSE BETTER FEELINGSWHICH HAVE SINCE UNITED THE NATIONSONE IN RACE, IN LANGUAGE AND IN RELIGION,WITH THE EARNEST HOPE THAT THIS FRIENDLY UNIONWILL NEVER BE BROKEN.
Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean of Westminster