Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis
Flushing bay would appear to have been a very favorable place for native occupancy. North beach on Fishs point, the extremity of the promontory, is opposite Rikers island, beyond which a moderate stretch of still water separated it from Quinnahung and Snakapins, native settlements in the south part of the Bronx. From Flushing bay there set in westwardly a watercourse, known to the settlers as Ludovics or Wessels brook.
This was named in a deed of 1666 as a "certain creek INDIAN NOTES BOROUGH OF called Sackhickneyah where Wessels mill stood." The creek extended inland with deep windings to the Trains meadow, a large tract of marsh-land which is still in great part existing in its original condition, nlling the large basin of lowland now partly occupied by North Woodside, and extending as far north as the Flushing turnpike.
On the east of this area the old Trains Meadow road made its crooked way between Maspeth and North Beach on Flushing bay.