Pre-colonial The Saw Mill River, then known as the Nepperhan River, acted as a boundary between the
Manhattan Indians and the
Weckquaesgeeks, members of the
Algonquian family who fished the region's streams and lakes with rods and nets. However, Westchester was not
demilitarized. Local
militias and raiding parties affiliated with both sides fought each other and terrorized the other's sympathizers and supporters. Many residents of southern Westchester abandoned their farms and drove their herds up the valley to
Buttermilk Hill to protect them from Loyalist raids. The Continentals built forts near Hawthorne, where a minor tributary named Flykill Creek drained into the Saw Mill (roughly at the junction of today's Saw Mill and
Taconic parkways), and built Yankee Dam to create a lake wide enough to slow any British progress up the river. At Chappaqua, the pacifist Quakers opened their meetinghouse as a hospital for injured
Continental Army soldiers. Storm's tavern was a gathering place for Continental officers and, later, their
French colleagues. As one of the few routes into hilly central Westchester, the river and its associated roads saw frequent skirmishes. In November 1777, three young men with Patriot sympathies were walking near the river crossing on the Dobbs Ferry Road (now Ashford Avenue) when they came upon a group of horsemen affiliated with Kipp's Regiment, one of the county's most-feared
Loyalist military units. The young men taunted their rivals, who beat them so severely that two later died. The survivor was awarded a
pension, believed to be the first in U.S. history, by the
Continental Congress. Later that month,
Emmerick's Chasseurs, an elite unit of Loyalist militia and
Hessian soldiers, staged a midnight raid on Storm's Bridge. Hoping to capture Storm and his cousins the Van Tassels, all active in the local
Patriot militia, the Chasseurs settled for burning and looting Storm's house and tavern. Proceeding on to the Van Tassel houses, they trapped Cornelius Van Tassel Jr., one of the cousins' teenage sons. As the Chasseurs set fire to the houses, he hid on a roof, then jumped off, fended off some putative captors, and fled into the cold waters of the nearby Saw Mill. He got away, but soon died of
hypothermia. The Saw Mill River and its adjacent terrain conferred some tactical advantages to those who knew it. One skirmish began when a Patriot militiaman, Jacob Acker, was hunting in a bushy area of the eastern flood plain at Elmsford. He spotted a detachment of 28 British soldiers, accompanied by a group of Loyalists, marching on the road to Storm's tavern. Acker began sniping at them from his concealment and killed two soldiers. Hearing the shots, other local Patriots came to Acker's aid, and eventually all but one of the detachment and the Loyalists accompanying them were captured. Some senior Continental Army officers spent time in the Saw Mill River valley.
George Washington is said to have mentioned the "
ford over the Nepperhan at the
elm tree", referring to a wide tree no longer extant; a century later, residents named their hamlet after the remark, "Elmsford". He left a meeting at the
Hammond House in Eastview moments before Loyalists converged on it; his host, Col. James Hammond, the commander of the Westchester militia, was captured and imprisoned for the rest of the war. On the British side, Major
John André spent his last night before his capture, with documents detailing
Benedict Arnold's defection, at the Rookery inn in Hawthorne. Later in the war, Young's farmhouse and Four Corners were the site of the largest military engagement near the river. By 1780, the Continentals were operating much more freely around northern Westchester, although they had to stay on the move to avoid attack. In January, one
company of about 250 troops from Massachusetts lingered long enough at Four Corners for local Loyalists to inform the British, who raised a force of about 100 cavalry and 400 to 500 infantry at
Fort Washington, today on the northern tip of
Manhattan. The force marched to Yonkers and up the Saw Mill overnight, arriving at Four Corners the next morning. The outnumbered Continentals put up stiff resistance, aided by the cold, heavy snow cover and their opponents' fatigue, but most were ultimately killed or taken prisoner. The British force, which also consisted of Loyalist and Hessian troops, subsequently burned down the Young house; the Continentals retreated to the north of the
Croton River for the rest of the war. , last lord of Philipsburg Manor|alt=Frederick Philipse III, last lord of
Philipsburg Manor In 1779, the
New York State Legislature passed a
bill of attainder confiscating the property of British officials and prominent Loyalists, Philipse included. The land, including land in the Saw Mill River watershed, was then distributed to the tenant farmers. In 1788, the state divided into three the
town of
Greenburgh, in which the entire eastern half of the tract had been located. The towns of Yonkers and Mount Pleasant joined Greenburgh, all approximately within their present boundaries. In 1790, a group of settlers organized the Greenburgh Presbyterian Church, and three years later built a church at Storm's Bridge. (Today, it is the National Register-listed
Elmsford Reformed Church, the oldest building in the village, the oldest church in continuous use in Westchester County.)
19th and 20th centuries Most of Yonkers' economy in the early 19th century was derived from the Saw Mill River. As of 1813, there was a small wharf slightly upstream from the mouth where the
sloops that carried river trade put in. Five small mills existed along the river above the village, all with their own dams, small
mill ponds, and nearby
tenements for the workers. The stagecoach route up the Post Road stopped at an inn near the bridge; a few stores existed to supply the workers there and at the mills. Some
pastures and orchards existed, but the rocky soil deterred most attempts at farming. (A historian later wrote that it was said at the time that "the succession of boulders was so continuous that one might have stepped from
Getty Square to the present Glenwood without setting his foot upon the ground".) Between the rocky soil and Wells' general refusal to sell or lease most of his land, there were so few settlers in Yonkers that two schoolhouses built during the
Revolution fell into severe neglect due to the lack of students. The manor house and the surrounding land at the river's mouth that is today downtown passed through several owners until 1813, when New York merchant Lemuel Wells bought the around the manor house. Wells neither subdivided nor developed the property, although he did extensively landscape the manor house grounds. In 1831, Wells built a long
wharf into the Hudson just above the mouth of the Saw Mill for the steamboat service which had been established between New York and
Albany. Otherwise, the property remained largely unchanged until his death in 1842. Maps of the property from the time of Wells' purchase and his death show the Saw Mill's mouth widening into a small
estuary before reaching the Hudson. The south bank of the river at the mouth had a bluff. The only construction directly affecting the river was the bridge that carried the
Albany Post Road, today Riverdale and Warburton avenues, part of
U.S. Route 9 and Route 9A, over the river. Wells had survived the death of his first wife and all four of his brothers; he also had no children, leaving him without a clear heir. His estate was further complicated by his
lack of a will. Accordingly, under New York law at the time, his holdings were divided among his widow, fifteen nephews and one grand nephew. They decided to subdivide and sell the property, and within a few years more buildings had gone up, just in time for the construction of the
Hudson River Railroad in 1848, which laid its track on a
causeway right across the river's mouth. Over the next several decades, as Yonkers' population grew rapidly, leading it to incorporate as a village and then, in 1872, a city, the rest of the estuary was
filled in and narrowed and the bluffs on its south side
graded out of existence. By the later decades of the 19th century, industry had grown up along the river's lower portion. So much pollution was dumped into the river from the factories alongside it that a local poet lamented the Saw Mill's decline in an 1891
quatrain: To let the river replenish itself, most of the dams that had been built were removed in 1893. Ten years later it had somewhat recovered, and people were again using it for drinking water and swimming. In the late 19th century, the
New York and Putnam Railroad was built along the Saw Mill River from
Putnam County to central Yonkers, and thence to Tibbets Creek and the
Harlem River. Various parts of the line operated until the 1940s and the 1980s. The main line of the railroad is now devoted to bicycle and pedestrian paths. They are the
South County Trailway on the parts south of Route 119, and the
North County Trailway north of 119 in Elmsford. To slake the thirst of its ever-growing population, which had reached almost 100,000 by 1915, Yonkers tapped the Saw Mill. Water from an impoundment north of downtown was held in two reservoirs and two water towers. It was
purified by slow
filtration through sand and then
chlorinated. By 1919 the city was drawing an average of 10.6 million gallons () a day from the river through this system. Despite this, the pollution of the river continued unabated, reversing its earlier recovery. In a 1920 report on the condition of public water supplies around the state, New York's
Health Department said "sanitary conditions upon the Saw Mill watershed are very unsatisfactory", despite the considerable rules and regulations it had promulgated to protect the river in Yonkers. The city's own public works department had noted dozens of violations for the previous year, most of them continued from the years before that. "A great many
privies and
cesspools are located on the edge of the Saw Mill and its tributaries and there is also drainage from poultry yards, barnyards and house drains," the department noted Rather than enforce the violated regulations more strictly and clean up the river, the city chose to cover it up entirely. Between 1917 and 1922, the last of river, including a small
gorge, was buried in a
culvert under the
Getty Square neighborhood, an effort to halt the river's frequent floods and quarantine its unsanitary water, and open up some space for further development. That same decade, the county parks commission proposed the
Saw Mill River Parkway along the river, just as the 1922
Bronx River Parkway follows the
Bronx River, and to add a sewer line along the river to prevent contamination of Yonkers' water supply. Construction began in 1929 and continued throughout the
Great Depression. By 1940, the parkway had reached the river's
headwaters at Chappaqua, where
World War II temporarily halted construction. In 1954, it was complete. The parkway's construction, along with that of the
New York State Thruway later in the decade, required some adjustment of the river's course in some areas. Westchester's postwar development led to more
stormwater runoff, which often flooded and closed the parkway. By 1958, engineers were urging that the river be cleaned up to reduce flooding. Still, illegal dumping and overflows continued. For example, storm runoff gave the Yonkers section the river's highest concentrations of heavy metals, PCBs, and other chemicals, according to a study of the river in 1983, the year the city stopped using the Saw Mill as its primary water source. A decade later, the sediment in the Saw Mill had the highest concentration of metals in the
United States Geological Survey's entire water-quality assessment program.
21st century A new kind of pollution entered the lower Saw Mill in 2003 when a Yonkers sugar refinery spilled
hydrochloric acid into the river. Westchester
District Attorney Jeanine Pirro brought criminal environmental charges against
American Sugar Refining, the plant owner, which was forced to pay a $20,000 fine; make a $100,000 donation to
Riverkeeper, a regional environmental organization that focuses on the Hudson and its tributaries; and give of sugar to Westchester Food-PATCH, a local nonprofit that supplies food to other nonprofits. Riverkeeper passed the money it received along to the Saw Mill River Coalition for local projects in Yonkers. In 2008, Groundwork Hudson Valley, the coordinator of the Saw Mill River Coalition, received a three-year, $889,183
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Targeted Watershed Grant. One of 15 recipients from a nationwide pool of more than 100 applicants, the group cleans up garbage, removes invasive species, and plants native trees along the river. The group also marks storm drains that drain to the river. On September 25–26, 2009, the Saw Mill River Coalition organized a
BioBlitz to catalog species of plant life, animal life, insects, fungi, and bacteria in the river and its watershed. The Coalition is also looking to restore the wetlands along the river in order to reduce flooding. Raising of the Saw Mill Parkway continues; in 2013, a stretch in Pleasantville was raised by three inches to reduce flooding from the river.
Daylighting The city of Yonkers carried out a $48 million
daylighting project in the 2010s to remove the culvert that the river flows through under Yonkers and bring the river to the surface. The project uncovered the river for six blocks in Downtown Yonkers. The newly surfaced river is the centerpiece of an urban park in
Getty Square, Downtown Yonkers. The first phase of the project removed a parking lot that covered a two-block section of the river in the Getty Square neighborhood of downtown Yonkers. Ground was broken on December 15, 2010, and the work was completed in December 2011. Work on the second phase, to expose the river in the Mill Street Courtyard, began on March 19, 2014 and was completed by August 2016. The project stimulated real estate investment in the area. The third phase of the daylighting project, consisting of a short section at New Main Street, was completed in November 2018; it consists of a park with a water wheel and plants. ==Recreation==