INDIAN ROAD PLAYGROUND
Inwood Hill Park
This playground takes its name from the road that bounds it to the north. Formerly
known as Isham Avenue to honor local landowner William B. Isham, Indian Road earned
its present name in 1911, when traces of an Indian settlement were found in what
is now Inwood Hill Park.
Indian Road was a trail used by the Rechgawawanc clan of the Weekquaeskeek tribe
of American Indians. They traveled from upstate locales to the city in order to
trade furs with the European settlers during the 17th century. The road may have
connected to the Spuyten Duyvil Creek, facilitating trade between the settlers of
the Harlem and the Hudson River banks.
Using artifacts recovered in the late 19th and early 20th century, archaeologists
date human settlement in Inwood Hill Park to prehistoric times. Local historian
William L. Calver first discovered Native American tools and middens (heaps of shell
and refuse) in Inwood Hill Park in the 1890s. In 1895, Alexander Chenowith uncovered
caves in the park that had once served as dwellings, evidenced by pottery and carbonized
food found under beds of ash. While the land was being considered for a possible
park site, Reginald Pelham Bolton began extensive research on the Native American
life in the area. Alanson Skinner continued the project in the 1920s. In recent
years, the artifacts that had been unearthed in Inwood Hill were put on display
in the Museum of the American Indian in downtown Manhattan.
Although the majority of the native population left the area by 1715, several of
these native New Yorkers continued to live in the Inwood Hill area until the 1930s
when Parks Commissioner Robert Moses (1888-1981), using Works Progress Administration
(WPA) money and workers, initiated a massive reconstruction of the park. Parks created
this playground bordering the 35-acre lawn that dominates the southeast portion
of the park, which provides recreational facilities such as baseball fields with
bleachers, walking paths, and picnic areas.
In 1983, parents formed “The Friends of the Indian Road Playground”
(“FIRP”) to revitalize the playground. They lobbied to have fences fixed,
old and unsafe equipment replaced, new rubber matting installed. They also fundraised
to buy Long Island Beach sand for the sandbox.
Anna Werner was FIRP’s president. Her indefatigable efforts included soliciting
new family volunteers, writing grant proposals, joining the Environmental Committee
of Community Board 12, and organizing “clean-up, paint-up” parties.
Members and children presented a 3-D model of their ideas for the playground’s
transformation to the City Council. Funding was generously donated by the Heckscher
Foundation. Although it took nearly a decade and a lot of work, the new Indian Road
Playground opened in 1991.
Thanks to the founding members of Friends of the Indian Road Playground, Indian Road Playground provides an opportunity for organized play beside the wilderness of Inwood Hill Park. It is designed in a unique “chess and checker” theme, with spray showers that resemble pawns and a checker board painted on the pavement. Other features include swings and play equipment, safety surfacing, and a wooden climbing structure. Friends of Indian Road Playground continues to help Parks keep the playground safe and attractive through fundraisers and plantings.