 
 
  In 1689 Jacob Leisler, serving as agent for a group of French Protestant
    refugees known as Huguenots, bought from John Pell 6,000 acres bordering
    Long Island Sound. The Huguenots named the settlement New Rochelle for La
    Rochelle, their previous home on the west coast of France. It became a town
  in 1788, was incorporated as a village in 1857, then as a city in 1899.
Visit the City
    of New Rochelle  online
 
 
Deeds Related to the Settlement of New Rochelle, 1689 and 1694 
 
Hays Family Papers, 1813 
 
McDonald Papers, 1844-1850
 
Glen Island Advertising Card,
1881
 
Personal War Sketches and  Minutes from the Flandreau Post #509, Grand Army
  of the Republic, 1897 - 1909
 
Blueprint of the City of New Rochelle Approach Sings,
  Oct. 11, 1922 
 
Portraits of World War II Soldiers by New Rochelle Artists and Illustrators,
  ca. 1940s 
 
 
Letter to the Editor regarding Thomas Paine, “New-York Spectator,"
  July 15,
  1806
 
 Letter from Charleston, SC City Marshall re George Markinson (freed slave),
  May
  25, 1816
 
 New Rochelle Principal's Black
Book, 1871-1890
 
 Charter Members of the Relief Engine Company, Photo Montage, Aug. 16, 1883 
 
 Chief Hollow Horn Bear Photograph, 1901 
 
 New Rochelle Yacht Club Photograph, 1925