Westchester Village was founded by English settlers who left New Haven Colony for Dutch New Netherland, on land purchased by Thomas Pell in 1654.[1] The settlement was called Oostdorp, or East Towne, and called Westchester by the English settlers.
1655 - September 15: Farms in what is now the Bronx were attacked during the Peach War between the Munsee and New Netherlands.
1777 - March: The Loyal American Regiment was raised and joins two other Loyalist military units that operate out of Morrisania and Kingsbridge.
1781 - January 22: Lieutenant Colonel William Hull led a part of the 2nd Canadian Regiment in raiding De Lancey's Brigade in Morrisania. The 2nd Canadian Regiment burned the enemy's barracks, captured 52 prisoners, and took large supplies of ammunition and forage.[4]
1852 - July 28: The steamboat Henry Clay, travelling from Albany, catches fire on the Hudson river. The crew beached the steamboat in Riverdale where it continued to burn down. Forty-seven bodies were recovered.[8]
1855
Gouverneur Morris Jr. sells additional land to be combined with Morrisania Village to form the Town of Morrisania.[2]
1857 - The foundry of Janes, Fowler, Kirtland & Company, owned by Adrian Janes moves to facilities in the Bronx in order to cast the second United States Capitol dome.
1873 - The state legislature annexes three towns from Westchester County to New York City as of 1874. The three annexed towns of this "Annexed District" (later known as the West Bronx) were the Town of West Farms, the Town of Morrisania, and the Town of Kingsbridge.[2]
Fordham Hospital became the first public (municipal) hospital to be located in the Bronx.
1893 - The building for the Webb's Academy and Home for Shipbuilders was completed on the former Fordham estate of William Henry Webb. The building was "a romantic version of a medieval castle", with turrets, fanciful carving, and other flourishes.[12]
The Simpson Street station of the IRT White Plains Road Line was built in 1904 and opened on November 26, 1904. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on September 17, 2004, reference #04001027.The Manhaset building (1905) in Longwood, since 1941 home of the oldest Latin music store in New York City.The first published book of Bronx history: History of Bronx Borough, City of New York by Randall Comfort
John F. Murray, the Commissioner of Public Works, becomes the second borough president.[20] after governor Charles Evans Hughes removes Louis F. Haffen from office.[30]
January 1: The parts of New York County which had been annexed from Westchester County were newly constituted as the County of the Bronx, the 62nd and last county to be created by the state, effective in 1914.[39][40]
June 19, 1936: In Yankee Stadium, German ex-heavyweight champion boxer Max Schmeling defeats American and not-yet-champion Joe Louis, in an upset that was used as propaganda by the Nazi regime.[53][54]
June 22, 1938: Now-heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis defeats Max Schmeling, in a rematch of their 1936 Yankees Stadium bout, again played up by both countries for propaganda purposes.[56][54]
July 20, 1957: the Rev. Billy Graham holds a prayer service at Yankees Stadium attended by over 100,000 people, including vice-president Richard Nixon.[54]
July 15: Fordham Hospital, which was the first public (municipal) hospital in the Bronx, is closed.
September 28: Muhammad Ali wins the last boxing match to be staged at Yankee Stadium. Police officers demonstrated outside the stadium as a part of a labor action,[54]
June 21, 1990: Nelson Mandela is welcomed at Yankees Stadium by 80,000 people at the beginning of an 11-day tour of the United States, after being released from prison in South Africa.[54]
1991 - Concourse Plaza Multiplex cinema in business.[38]
September 23, 2001: A memorial service, titled "Prayer for America," is held at Yankee Stadium to remember the victims of the September 11 attacks.[80][81]
January 24: Four teenage boys drown in the Long Island Sound near City Island when their overloaded dinghy sinks. A communication misunderstanding between them and the 911 dispatcher contributed to their deaths[82]
A second beaver takes residence in the Bronx River. The beaver is named "Justin" after the Canadian singer Justin Bieber in a contest held by the Bronx Zoo.[92]
December 2: Golden Krust founder and CEO Lowell Hawthorne commits suicide in the company's Claremont factory.[73][97]
December 28: Prospect Avenue fire - On the night of December 28, 2017, a fire tore through an apartment building in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx. Thirteen people died and 14 were injured. It was the deadliest fire in New York City in 25 years.
January 1: Vanessa Gibson became the fourteenth Bronx Borough President, as well as the first female and first African American elected to that office.[101]
January 9: At least nineteen people were killed, and at least 60 others were injured, after a fire tore through an apartment building in the Fordham Heights neighborhood of the Bronx. Officials are expecting it to be one of the New York City's worst fires in modern times.[102]
^Everest, Allan S. (1976). Moses Hazen and the Canadian refugees in the American Revolution (First ed.). Syracuse, N.Y. p. 90. ISBN978-0-8156-0129-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Bolton, Robert (1855). "History of the Parish and Church of West Farms.". History of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the County of Westchester: From Its Foundation, A.D. 1693 to A.D. 1853. Stanford & Swords. pp. 703 - 707. Retrieved 22 January 2018. historic grace episcopal church west farms.
^Robert Bolton, A history of the county of Westchester, from its first settlement to the present time vol. II (New York, 1848) pp 259ff is the source for this section.
^ abDunbaugh, Edwin L. (1994). A Centennial History of Webb Institute of Naval Architecture. Glen Cove, N.Y.: Webb Institute of Naval Architecture. ISBN0-9622631-1-7.
^Comfort, Randall; Steurer, Charles David; Meyerhoff, Charles A. D. (1906). History of Bronx Borough, City of New York. Bronx, New York: North side News Press. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
^"MILLER WANTS TWO TERMINAL MARKETS: Head of Mayor's Commission Favors One South of 14th St. and One Near 52d St. MUCH FOOD NOW WASTED Other Speakers at Women's Reception Urge the Building of Centres For Economy". The New York Times. December 3, 1912. p. 13.
^"Gen. Jones's Hike Starts. Her Suffragist Army Will Carry a Petition tO Albany"(PDF). New York Times. January 2, 1914. Retrieved 2009-08-14. 'Gen.' Rosalie Jones and her suffragist army started a 'hike' to Albany yesterday to take a petition to the legislature asking for women watchers at the polls when the question of votes for women is voted upon in 1915. The march began at Broadway and 242d Street at 9 o'clock in the morning. ...
^Ida Husted Harper; Susan B. Anthony; Matilda Joslyn Gage (1922). History of woman suffrage. Fowler & Wells. p. 451. The "hike" began Monday morning, Dec. 16, 1912, from the 242nd street subway station, where about 500 had gathered, and about 200, including the newspaper correspondents, started to walk. From New York City to Albany there was left a trail of propaganda among the many thousands of people who stopped at the cross roads and villages to listen to the first word which had ever reached them concerning woman suffrage, and many joined in and marched for a few miles. The newspapers far and wide were filled with pictures and stories. The march continued for thirteen days, through sun and rain and snow over a distance of 170 miles, including detours for special propaganda, and five pilgrims walked into Albany at 4 p. m., December 28.
^Thorne, Kathryn Ford (1993). Long, John H. (ed.). New York Atlas of Historical County Boundaries. Simon & Schuster. pp. 33, 118–133. ISBN0-13-051962-6.
^New York. Laws of New York. 1912, 135th Session, Chapter 548, Section 1. p. 1352.
^Anderson, Porter (23 September 2001). "Prayer service: 'We shall not be moved'". CNN.com. Retrieved 14 May 2011. One of several emotional high points in Sunday's "Prayer for America" service at New York's Yankee Stadium followed Bette Midler's singing of "Wind Beneath My Wings."
^Hopkins, Nick (24 September 2001). "At Yankee Stadium, a tearful farewell to victims: Relatives among thousands attending service". London: Guardian.com.uk. Retrieved 14 May 2011. A famous stadium that normally reverberates to the shouting and cheering of baseball fans became an unlikely cathedral last night in which the relatives and friends of America's terrorist victims paid their tearful respects.
^Graff, Monika (20 April 2008). "Pope Benedict XVI holds mass at Yankee Stadium in New York". photo and caption. UPI. Retrieved 14 May 2011. Pope Benedict XVI holds the papel staff as he waves good-bye to clergymen after delivering mass at Yankee Stadium on April 20, 2008 in New York.