![]() The Trust gives weekend tours, hosts movie nights, and other events on the island from May through October.Īfter finally docking, we walk up 72 steps to the island’s original walkway, and the castle ruins rise stoically to our left. Since 1994, nonprofit Bannerman Castle Trust has worked in conjunction with the Parks Department to maintain the castle. New York State bought the island in 1967 and it currently belongs to the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation. People scramble to take photos and our boat slows down as we approach, stopping entirely for 20 minutes as we wait for kayakers to paddle away from the dock (in 2015, a man died when his kayak overturned near the island and his fiancée pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide). The views of both sides of the Hudson are beautiful but mostly uneventful-until I spot the remains of Bannerman’s Castle rising like a decorative, concrete Phoenix from the lush vegetation on its island home. The 30-minute boat ride to Pollepel-often referred to as Bannerman’s Island-is a blissful respite from the afternoon heat. Our destination is not so much the island itself-which is rocky and wild-but a site that is familiar to anyone who has ridden the Metro North’s Hudson line, hiked a trail in the Hudson Highlands, or kayaked in the brackish waters of the Hudson: Bannerman’s Castle. In less than two hours, I’m boarding a small boat filled to capacity with 40 other people headed to Pollepel Island, located 1,000 feet from the eastern bank of the Hudson River. ![]() I escape the hot and humid city early on a Sunday morning in August and hop on a Metro North train bound for Beacon, New York. City dwellers have always found solace just north of New York in the Hudson River Valley. It’s no mystery why people flock to water when temperatures soar. The city of asphalt and glass towers is a greenhouse without the green skyscrapers suffocate, sidewalks sizzle, and the subway feels (and smells) like a dog’s mouth. Several old bulkheads and causeways that submerge at high tide present a serious navigational hazard.Ĭoordinates : 41☂7'21.29"N 73★9'16.No one writes love letters about August in New York City. The island has been the victim of vandalism, trespass, neglect and decay. While the exterior walls still stand, all the internal floors and non-structural walls have since burned down. The castle today Today, the castle is property of the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and is mostly in ruins. The island was placed off-limits to the public. However, on August 8, 1969, fire devastated the Arsenal, and the roofs and floors were destroyed. The island and buildings were bought by New York State in 1967, after the old military merchandise had been removed, and tours of the island were given in 1968. After the sinking of the ferryboat Pollepel, which had served the island, in a storm in 1950, the Arsenal and island were essentially left vacant. In August 1920, 200 pounds of shells and powder exploded in an ancillary structure, destroying a portion of the complex. Construction ceased at Bannerman's death in 1918. On the side of the castle facing the eastern bank of the Hudson, Bannerman cast the legend "Bannerman's Island Arsenal" into the wall. The castle, clearly visible from the shore of the river, served as a giant advertisement for his business. ![]() Most of the building were devoted to the stores of army surplus but Bannerman built another castle in a smaller scale on top of the island near the main structure as a residence, often using items from his surplus collection for decorative touches. Because his storeroom in New York City was not large enough, and to provide a safe location to store munitions, in the spring of 1901 he began to build an arsenal on Pollepel.īannerman designed the buildings himself and let the constructors interpret the designs on their own. After the Spanish-American War Bannerman bought 90% of the US army surplus, including a large quantity of ammunition. Pollepel Island is sometimes referred to as Bannerman's Island.įrancis Bannerman VI purchased the island in 1900 for use as a storage facility for his growing surplus business. It remains one of a very small number of structures in the United States which can properly be called a castle. ![]() It was built in the style of a castle by businessman Francis Bannerman VI (1851–1918). The principal feature on the island is Bannerman's Castle, an abandoned military surplus warehouse. Also known as Pollopel Island, Pollopel's Island and Bannerman Island, it is the site of Bannerman's Castle. Pollepel Island is an island in the Hudson River. ![]()
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