Bennett Park
1.8 acres
Bennett Park occupies the highest point of land in Manhattan, 265.05
feet above sea level. A large outcropping of Manhattan schist dominates the center of the
park. The area was part of a densely wooded hill known as Penadnik to the Delaware Munsee
Indians. Early Dutch settlers called this part of northern Manhattan "Long Hill"
and found the land useful for lumbering. During the Revolutionary War, General George Washington located his
base of operations at this strategic high point. Fort Washington was built in 1776 and was
the last stronghold for the Americans as the battle for New York swept northward on
Manhattan Island. On November 16, British and Hessian troops swiftly attacked and seized
Fort Washington in a pivotal defeat for the Americans. After the war, vestiges of the Fort
disappeared, and the surrounding area became known as Washington Heights. Granite paving
outlines the former contours of Fort Washington in the southern portion of Bennett Park. In 1871 the land that is now the park was purchased by James Gordon
Bennett (1795-1872), the prominent newspaper publisher and editor who is widely recognized
as a pioneer of American popular journalism. Born in Keith, Scotland, Bennett emigrated to
Nova Scotia in 1819 and settled in New York City four years later. He worked as the
Washington correspondent for the New York Enquirer in 1827-28 and became associate
editor for the Courier and Enquirer in 1829. Bennett launched the New York Herald in 1835, assuming the
responsibilities of editor, reporter, proof-reader, folder, and cashier. Because of his
independent and opinionated style, Bennett was lambasted in other publications and was
physically assaulted by two of the targets of his critical pen. Nevertheless, the
newspapers coverage of finance and politics, crime and scandal, and national and
international news, along with Bennetts bold and often controversial editorials,
made the Herald one of the most successful daily newspapers in the United States.
Bennett retired in 1867 but continued to write for the Herald until he died on June
1, 1872. In 1901 his son, James G. Bennett Jr., permitted the Sons of the
American Revolution to erect a monument on his land to commemorate the Battle of Fort
Washington. Sculpted by Charles R. Lamb, this bronze and marble stele is located on the
eastern perimeter wall of the park. Although he was said to have intended to donate the
property for a park, the younger Bennett died in 1918 without putting it in his will.
Consequently, the property was divided for sale, while honoring the request of the
American Scenic and Historical Preservation Society to preserve that portion of the land
where Fort Washington once stood. In 1928 the City of New York acquired the site of the
fort and additional land and assigned the property to Parks. Bennett Park opened in 1929, and three years later the Washington
Heights Honor Grove Association planted an American Elm tree in the park to commemorate
the bicentennial of George Washingtons birth. A playground was constructed in the
1940s, and the brick comfort station and storage building was erected in the north part of
the park in 1964. For the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Fort Washington in 1976, the
Washington Heights-Inwood Historicalal Society re-enacted the conflict on the site of the
former fort in Bennett Park. A neighborhood treasure, this historically significant park
offers visitors a place for quiet recreation. In 1996 a bronze plaque set in marble was dedicated in memory of
Private First Class Emilio Barbosa (1926-1945), a United States Marine enlisted in World
War II. On March 27, 1945 Private Barbosa was manning a gun turret aboard the battleship USS
Nevada at Okinawa Shima. As a Japanese Kamikaze plane attacked his ship, Barbosa fired
and disabled the enemy aircraft. The plane plunged onto the deck of the battleship, and
the bomb carried by the plane blew up on impact. The explosion mortally wounded 11
marines, including Barbosa, and injured 95 others. A gift to the City by the
soldiers brother, the Barbosa monument honors the young hero who grew up on nearby
Pinehurst Avenue.
Wednesday, Sep 09, 1998

