The area is named afterSpuyten Duyvil Creek. "Spuyten Duyvil" may be literally translated as "Spouting Devil" orSpuitende Duivel inDutch, a reference to the strong and wild tidal currents found at that location. It may also be translated as "Spewing Devil" or "Spinning Devil", or more loosely as "Devil's Whirlpool" or "Devil's Spate."Spui is a Dutch word involving outlets for water.[6][7][8] HistorianReginald Pelham Bolton, however, argues that the phrase means "spouting meadow", referring to a fresh-water spring at Inwood Hill.[9][10]
An additional translation, "to spite the Devil" or "in spite of the devil", was popularized by a story inWashington Irving'sA Knickerbocker's History of New York published in 1809. Set in the 1660s, the story tells of trumpeterAntony Van Corlear summoned by "Peter de Groodt" to warn settlers of an attempted British invasion, with Corlear attempting to swim across the "Harlean river" from Fort Amsterdam to the Bronx mainland "in spite of the devil (spyt den duyvel)", Irving writes. The treacherous current pulled him under and he lost his life. This resulted in the name "Spuyten Duyvil" for "the adjoining promontory, which projects into the Hudson."[11][7][8][12][13]
An extensive appendix toStudies in Etymology and Etiology (2009) by David L. Gold, which includes commentary by Rob Rentenaar, professor ofonomastics at theUniversity of Amsterdam, goes into great detail about all the various translations for "Spuyten Duyvil" which have been mooted over the years.[14] Rentenaar concludes that "Duyvil" means "devil", either literally or in a transferred sense, but he could not determine what the intended meaning of "Spuyten" was because of the many variants that have been used throughout history.[15]
The creek was referred to asShorakapok byLenape Native Americans in the area, translated as "the sitting-down place" or "the place between the ridges".[7]
In the late 17th century,Frederick Philipse, the lord ofPhilipse Manor in Westchester County, received permission to construct a bridge across Spuyten Duyvil Creek and charge tolls. "King's Bridge", which was located roughly south of and parallel to where West 230th Street lies today, opened in 1693.[16]
Development of the neighborhood began in the latter half of the 19th century once theNew York Central and Hudson River Railroad came through.[4] The tracks originally crossed Spuyten Duyvil Creek and into Manhattan on the west side, butCornelius Vanderbilt wanted to consolidate his railroad operations into one terminal, so he had tracks laid along the north side of the Harlem River so that trains coming south from Albany could join with the Harlem and New Haven lines and come into Manhattan downFourth Avenue into his newGrand Central Depot.[17] This is the route still used byMetro-North today.
Through the 1920s development of the Spuyten Duyvil neighborhood continued. Large high-rise apartment buildings, which later becamecondominiums andcooperatives, began to be built in the 1950s and continued through the 1980s, bringing in affluent families attracted by its scenic qualities, as well as by the area's closeness to desirable neighborhoods such asFieldston andRiverdale.[4]
On July 18, 2013,a freight train derailed near theSpuyten Duyvil station due to an excessively widegauge at one point. No one was killed or injured.[18] Less than six months later, on December 1,a commuter train derailment near the Spuyten Duyvil station resulted in 4 deaths and over 70 injuries, 11 of them critical.[19] The cause of the second derailment was determined to be excessive speed.[20]
Based on data from the2010 United States census, the population ofKingsbridge and Spuyten Duyvil was 30,161, a change of 289 (1%) from the 29,872 counted in2000. Covering an area of 540.92 acres (218.90 ha), the neighborhood had a population density of 55.8 inhabitants per acre (35,700/sq mi; 13,800/km2).[21]
Spuyten Duyvil is patrolled by the 50th Precinct of theNYPD, located at 3450 Kingsbridge Avenue.[24] The 50th Precinct ranked 13th safest out of 69 patrol areas for per-capita crime in 2010.[25]
The 50th Precinct has a lower crime rate than in the 1990s, with crimes across all categories having decreased by 69.9% between 1990 and 2022. The precinct reported three murders, 22 rapes, 185 robberies, 213 felony assaults, 126 burglaries, 695 grand larcenies, and 288 grand larcenies auto in 2022.[26]
Henry Hudson Memorial Park features theHenry Hudson Monument, a 16-foot (4.9 m) bronze statue ofHenry Hudson sculpted byKarl Bitter and Karl Gruppe on top of a 100-foot (30 m)Doric column by architect Walter Cook of the firm ofBabb, Cook & Willard. The column was raised by public subscription c.1912 after theHudson-Fulton Celebration of 1909, but the project stalled when funds ran out, and Bitter died in 1915. TheHeroic statue of Henry Hudson was redesigned and completed by Gruppe – a student of Bitter – based on Bitter's plaster model. It was added byRobert Moses'Henry Hudson Parkway Authority in 1938, along with the twobas-relief panels at the column's base, also by Gruppe. The south panel shows Hudson receiving his commission from theDutch East India Company, and the north panel shows Native Americans and Europeans at the first Dutch trading post on Manhattan Island. The monument was dedicated on January 6, 1938.[4][29][30]
Villa Charlotte Brontë is aco-op apartment complex of two small three-story buildings at 2501 Palisade Avenue, containing 17 units, each with a different floor plan. It was built in 1926 and designed by Robert W. Gardner in the style of anItalian villa for attorney, developer and preservationistJohn Jay McKelvey Sr.[a] Similar in concept togarden apartments, it is regarded as one of the first apartment buildings in the Bronx. The complex overlooks the Hudson River – McKelvey advertised the apartments inThe New York Times, as being for anyone whose "soul is hungry for the majesty of the river" – and many of the apartments have views ofthe Palisades in New Jersey. The building is not landmarked, and a companion building, the seven-apartment cottage-like Villa Rosa Bonheur at 2395 Palisade Avenue, built in 1924, was torn down in 2019 after failing as a co-op in 1941. It kept on as a private home for decades afterwards until it was sold to a developer, who replaced it with an undistinguished apartment building, to the distress of the neighborhood. Villa Victoria (1927), a more ordinaryTudor-style apartment building, located between the other two "villas", still remains standing at 2475 Palisade Avenue, although McKelvey did lose possession of it in a foreclosure.[29][31][32][33][34][35]
^Merims, Belden.Newcomer's Handbook for Moving to New York City, p. 63. First Books, 2001.ISBN9780912301488. Accessed November 5, 2020. "Spuyten Duyvil (pronounced SPY-ten DIE-vul) has a southward pitch, so it seems to look back at Manhattan, but if you live here you're sure to look west to the spectacular sunsets, which blaze and bleed over the river."
^abcdWolfe, Gerald R. "Spuyten Duyvil neighborhood" inJackson 1995, p. 1224
^Sypher, Frank J."Dispute Springs Eternal Over 'Spuyten Duyvil'" (letter to the editor)The New York Times, November 14, 1993. Accessed November 24, 2020. "Reginald Pelham Bolton, in his authoritative history,Washington Heights (1924), argues persuasively that the Dutch name actually means 'sprouting meadow,' referring to the beautiful spring that to this day rises at the foot of Inwood Hill, near what remains of the original course of the Spuyten Duyvil Creek.... Correction: Nov. 21, 1993... It should have read 'spouting meadow,' not 'sprouting meadow.'"
^Gold, David L. and Rentenaar, Rob "Appendix 1: On the Etymology of the New York City Place NamesGramercy Park,Hell Gate, andSpuyten Duyvil , the New Jersey Place NameBarnegat, and Regional American EnglishFly ~ Vlei ~ Vley ~ Vlaie ~ Vly in Gold, David L. (2009)Studies in Etymology and Etiology: With Emphasis on Germanic, Jewish, Romance and Slavic Languages. Universidad de Alicante.pp.145-146ISBN978-8-47-90851-79
^Perl, Jed.Calder: The Conquest of Time: The Early Years: 1898-1940, p. 153. Accessed November 24, 2020. "In order to spare Stirling the long commute from Croton-on-Hudson, the family moved closer to the city, to Spuyten Duyvil; Sandy was delighted in hisAutobiography to comment that the Dutch name meant 'in spite of the devil' or 'spitting devil.'"
^Noles, Randy."Holt's Elusive Dream",Winter Park Magazine, April 1, 2022. Accessed August 12, 2025. "Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1872, Holt was the son of George Chandler Holt — a district court judge in the Southern District of New York — and Mary Louise Bowen Holt. Later his family moved to Spuyten Duyvil in The Bronx, where he spent his childhood."
^Moloney, Sile."Spuyten Duyvil: John J. McKelvey Sr. Honored with Co-Naming of Villa Rosa Bonheur Way on April 8",Norwood News, April 1, 2022. Accessed August 12, 2025. "According to Coggins, the co-naming celebrates the wide-ranging and historical contributions of McKelvey Sr. to modern day Spuyten Duyvil and the larger community encompassed by Bronx Community Board 8, as well as the legacy of the former architectural jewel, Villa Rosa Bonheur, created by McKelvey Sr. in 1924."