I visited this location today and took some photos (below), and it is open to the public. I threw in a coin, but I haven't checked my lottery ticket. So I'll keep you posted on that. hahaaaa.
It was a hot, steamy summer afternoon on July 28, 1841 when James Boulard
and Henry Mallin sighted what appeared to be a body floating in the
water of the Hudson River near the shore of Hoboken, New Jersey. The
two men, who had been trying to relax at a quiet retreat called Sybil's
Cave located across the river from the heat and crowding of New
York City, raced to a nearby dock and borrowed a boat to retrieve the
floating object. They returned to the shore with the body of a woman,
later identified as Mary Cecilia Rogers, missing from her New York
City home since Sunday, July 25, 1841. This discovery brought
national attention to an already locally famous sight.
THE LEGEND OF SYBIL'S CAVE
Most people growing up in Hoboken 30 or 40 years ago were very
familiar with the legend of Sybil's Cave. Local legend held that it
was a natural deep cave with a spring located somewhere along the Hudson
River.
However, current residents and visitors may be surprised to
learn of the existence of this legend. The River Walk",
served as a respite to the pressures and crowds of the city by
providing a country like atmosphere for many residents, especially
those who had recently migrated to the city from rural areas. This
urban growth was the trend in those days prior to the Civil War, when
cities were expanding at the expense of rural populations and
traditions. Ferries and private boats brought New York City residents
across the Hudson River. This was the origin of the shipping trade,
which later immortalized Hoboken.
Hoboken shoreline of the
1800's was an area for relaxation for the stressed urbanites of New
York City and the nearby cities of New Jersey. A tree lined path
along the river, dubbed "River Walk",
served as a respite to the pressures and crowds of the city by
providing a country like atmosphere for many residents, especially
those who had recently migrated to the city from rural areas. This
urban growth was the trend in those days prior to the Civil War, when
cities were expanding at the expense of rural populations and
traditions. Ferries and private boats brought New York City residents
across the Hudson River. This was the origin of the shipping trade,
which later immortalized Hoboken.
Along the River Walk, many businesses grew to accommodate the
visiting travelers. These included taverns, inns and open recreation
areas such as Elysian Fields, which was the birthplace of modern
baseball. One of the most noted of these business was the renowned
"Sybil's Cave and Spring", today located between Eighth and
Ninth Streets at the foot of Stevens Institute of Technology on Frank
Sinatra Drive. Contrary to local legend, Sybil's Cave was not
natural. The cave was dug manually out of the cliff to reach a
natural spring in 1832 (see picture above), as the River Walk gained
in popularity. Glasses of water were sold to thirsty hikers for one
cent a glass, an outrageous amount for the time that people were only
willing to pay because of the beneficial and the medicinal properties
this water supposedly held. Tables were set outside, and a building
erected to serve the growing clientele. "Gleason's Pictorial
Drawing-Room Companion" of 1836 described Sybil's Cave as,
"One of the principle attractions of the place. No one visits
Hoboken without seeing it. It is hewn out and excavated to the depth
of thirty feet. In the middle is a spring of pure and sparkling
water, thousands of glasses of which are sold daily in the summer,
for a penny per glass."
tavern
was established on the site by Fred Eckstein, which served food and
had an Old World ambience, and the area continued to be popular with
visitors. The cave was accessible by a sliding metal door at the
tavern and was used for storage. Eventually, the commercial shipping
business encroached upon the area, urbanizing it and blocking out the
views of the Hudson River and New York City, which had originally
popularized it. Fred Eckstein's tavern became a gin mill for
dockworkers, and was later occupied by squatters. The building, after
ransacking over the years was torn down in 1937, and the cave was,
for a brief period, re-discovered beneath it. The Hudson Dispatch
Newspaper even published a photo showing
the entrance almost unchanged except for wear. To avoid injury to
adventurous youths, the cave was filled in soon after. Since very few
clues of the cave's existence remain today, it is obvious that great
care was taken to hide any evidence of the entrance, the better to
thwart future explorers of the legend.
In the 1880's, with the advent of the Board of Health, the spring
water of Sybil's Cave was declared unfit for human consumption.
However, this was not the end of Sybil's Cave. A
THE MARY RODGERS TRADGEDY
Although the appearance of a dead boy floating in the waters around
New York City was not an especially rare occurrence in the mid
1800's, the discovery of the lifeless and bloody body of Mary Cecilia
Rogers in the shallow waters near Sybil's Cave provoked outrage.
Mary, a young and beautiful 20 year old, left her home on the morning
of July 25, 1841 telling her current boyfriend and boarder, Donald
Payne, she would be visiting her aunt uptown. She would never return.
Her body was fished out of the Hudson River three days later, and the
cause of death was quickly ruled strangulation by the Hoboken
coroner. He also stated she had been sexually assaulted and brutally
beaten. Over a month later, remnants of her clothing and some
personal items were founded in a wooded area near the river in a
wooded area of Weehawken, just north of Hoboken. It was assumed she
was killed there by a man, or a gang of men, then thrown into the river.
Along with her aging mother, Mary ran a boarding house on Nassau
Street near City Hall. She also worked as a sales girl in a nearby
tobacco shop. Nassau Street at that time was the center of the
growing publishing and printing business, including the new
"Penny Press", the equivalent of our tabloid newspapers.
Mary was well known to the editors and reporters of these
publications, having lived and worked in the area for over a year.
This familiarity made the investigation of her death a personal
matter to them, and the case became the O. J. Simpson case of its
time, with dozens of reporters and writers following up on every
possible lead and investigating every possible suspect, all in the
public eye. This gave Hoboken and Sybil's Cave a boom of publicity
and tourists, as thousands flocked to the area to view the scene of
the crime.
Watching and reading all of this was a then unknown writer living in
Hoboken at the time named Edgar Allan Poe. He later transformed this
story into the pioneering detective tale, "The Mystery of Marie
Roget", changing the location of the saga from Hoboken to Paris,
France, but otherwise leaving other important facts and clues intact.
His writing on this case is said by many to be the birth of the
Modern Detective Story.
Despite the endless commentary and speculation in the press, the case
was never officially solved. Every one of Mary's former suitors were
publicly charged, but officially cleared. This constant publicity was
blamed for the apparent suicide of Donald Payne on the Hoboken
shoreline. Distraught over the loss of Mary, and the public
suspicions of his involvement in her death, his body was found
outside Sybil's Cave in early October with a bottle of poison nearby.
About a year after these events an innkeeper named Frederika Loss,
who ran the popular Nick Moore's House which
was located between Sybil's Cave and Elysian Fields, made a deathbed
confession, her fatal wounds apparently caused by an accidental
shooting at the hands of one of her sons. She claimed that Mary
Rogers had come to Nick Moore's House accompanied by a local doctor,
"Who undertook to procure for her a premature delivery."
The abortion was botched and Mary subsequently died. One of
Frederika's sons helped the doctor dump the body in the river, and
some of her clothing was later strewed about the woods in Weehawken,
to confuse police. Interestingly, it was one of Frederika's sons that
later "found" the clothing. This confession could also help
explain the coroner's finding of sexual assault on Mary Rogers' body,
and his later strange and unsolicited references to her chastity and
good morals, a possible attempt to protect her reputation.
Although Frederika's confession closed the case for many, including
Edgar Allan Poe, who in later editions changed "The Mystery Of
Marie Roget" to coincide with the abortion theory, some
investigators remained skeptical. Her two eldest sons were questioned
and even held under arrest, but were released following a judicial
hearing. The innkeeper's confession was challenged on the grounds she
was barely conscious at the time and may have been seeking revenge on
the son who shot her, or just publicity for herself. The skeptics
also point to the unexplained external injuries to the body of Mary
Rogers. The mystery remains officially unsolved to the present day.
POSTSCRIPT
Whether of not an abortion caused the death of Mary Rogers, the two
became connected in the public mind, and abortion was blamed for her
demise as well as the demise of public morals and everything else
that was wrong with the "big city". Many new laws
forbidding and further penalizing abortions were passed for the first
time in New York, and spread from there. These laws would remain on
the books for over 100 years, long after the memory of Mary Cecilia
Rogers and Sybil's Cave had faded from the public mind.
It is ironic that over 150 years after this tragic event, the
taxpayers of New Jersey are in the process of spending millions of
dollars in an attempt to return the Hoboken shoreline to its past
glory, as a recreation area for nearby city dwellers. Hopefully these
plans will at least include an acknowledgement to its rich past
including Sybil's Cave and Mary Rogers.
Source: New Jersey History Mystery
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