Moving Kemper Memorial Back on School Drawing Board
by Judy Silberstein*
(November
10, 2003) The Mamaroneck School District is looking
for an additional full-sized soccer field to accommodate
an expanding enrollment
and an explosion in the number of children playing field
sports. They’ve scoured the community and are continuing
to speak with municipal leaders about possible alternatives,
but they are coming to the conclusion that the only practical
way to squeeze in an extra field would require shifting
land now devoted to the Kemper Memorial Park on the Boston
Post Road.
The Board and the Kemper family would like
to avoid a fight, but after months of private discussions,
have yet to find an acceptable compromise. Feeling
increasing time pressure, the Board reached out to the public
on Friday, November 7 to explain its current position.
The first time the district proposed alterations at the
Kemper Memorial was in 2000, when the Board was putting
together a $50 million
bond issue for capital improvements. A controversy ensued
over changing a historical memorial and rather than risk
defeat of the entire capital plan, the Board dropped the
soccer
field
and
went forward with a somewhat smaller bond issue that passed
in the May 2001 referendum.
Fast forward to 2003: since May, the School Board has been
in private conversations with the Kemper family, but as yet
no solution has surfaced that is acceptable to both the schools
and the family. On Friday, the School Board revealed
that it has reopened the issue and believes it is honing
in on a plan it feels will honor the spirit of the memorial,
provide the park with an equal amount of space, improve traffic
safety and flow in front of the school, and still eke out
the extra field.

1. A Board proposal would turn the
football field, add a soccer field (right) and create a deeper
park
(center) as large as the existing one (dark lines).
Reconfiguring the park is an option
the family has yet to accept, said Richard Cantor, grandson
of
Adolph
Kemper,
who
donated
the park to the district in 1946 in memory of his son Richard
and the 98 other local men and one woman who died serving
the country during World War II. The family has not ruled
out changing the park entirely, but would consider
it only if no other viable option existed and only under
specific
conditions. “The
conditions would have to satisfy the community, veterans’ groups,
the Larchmont Historical Society, as well as the family,” said
Cantor. “Conditions would include assurances to protect
the park and its significance in the future,” he stressed.
As
the Board learned in 2001, the family members living in the
area retain a strong emotional attachment to the park
and were deeply offended by the Board’s original plans
and by its failure to locate the family and consult with
them early on. To prevent the School Board proceeding with
its plans, the Kemper family retained attorneys. Had
the School Board not changed its plan, the family was prepared
to fight
the
district
in
court – and
in the court of public opinion.
Now two years later, the current School Board has been
attempting to mend fences with Richard and Paul Cantor, Adolph
Kemper’s grandsons, and with Jean Hofmann, their mother.
The Board has apologized for their earlier missteps, and
proposed a different set of plans that, they believe, would
be more respectful of the memorial.
For their part, the family is still searching for a solution
to the soccer problem that does not involve disturbing the
park with its mature grove of trees. Richard Cantor met with
the Gazette to recount his family’s point of view and
to display alternate approaches for locating a soccer field
on the Mamaroneck High School campus or in the surrounding
communities. He has been in recent conversations with Village
of Mamaroneck Mayor Phil Trifilletti and Town Supervisor
Valerie O’Keeffe and believes that there is potential
for locating an additional
field in each municipality. The family has engaged landscape
architect Richard Behr who has prepared drawings that show
solutions they contend are preferable to the district’s
plan. “In the long-run, the district will need to consider
these satellite sites as demand for athletic space continues
to grow,” he argued.
The Cantor family proposals, however, have not proved workable
for the district. Board President Bob Martin outlined a number
of concerns. Adding a field on municipal land would be problematic.
Martin advised that Town Supervisor Valerie O’Keeffe
has told them the schools should not consider use of the
Town Center, as is suggested in one of Behr’s designs.
With respect to a possible field at Harbor Island, Martin
said, “We do not believe that, at this time, the Village
of Mamaroneck is prepared to give the school district the
control we would require.” Further, he added, “We
do not know when the reconfigured fields at Harbor Island
might become available. It’s a question of time, as
well.” Two other family designs would not achieve the
goal of allowing three fields to be used
simultaneously (see:
figure 2, below, for example), and/or would require reconstructing
buildings at the high school. “That
would be prohibitively expensive,” Martin suggested.

2. A Kemper family plan would add a
soccer field in the track oval (top left) and move the baseball
diamond to the Post Road (bottom right).
Yet, the designs developed by the district’s landscape
architects have proved unacceptable to the family. In addition
to disturbing the park, Mr. Cantor argued, the district plans
would create safety hazards by placing the soccer field too
close to the football field and to the Boston Post Road.
Each side believes it has the upper hand, should it come
to a legal contest. Richard Cantor argues that the 1946 deed
conveying the land from the Kempers to the district contains
a restrictive covenant that prohibits the land being used
for anything other than the memorial. However, Board President
Martin said, “We have spoken with attorneys and have
been informed that it is within our legal rights to pursue
our plans.”
Is a meeting of the minds possible - without a legal fight?
Richard Cantor admitted that the family continues to harbor
considerable mistrust of the district’s motives. "If
the Board violates the current deed, why should our family
believe a future Board would not violate a new deed if it
became expedient to do so." In contacting the media this
week, the School Board broke an
agreement with him and his brother
not to go public. “That is a breach of trust,” he
said. For his 85 year-old mother, “This is tearing
out her heart,” he added.
Nevertheless, he is willing to continue conversations with
the Board. Despite impressions conveyed elsewhere in the
media, both he and the Board are attempting to avoid a battle
and to find an amicable solution.
*Judy Silberstein served on the Mamaroneck School Board
from 1998-2001.
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