East Hampton (town), New York

Not to be confused with East Hampton (village), New York.
East Hampton, New York
Town
Town of East Hampton

Hook Mill

Location of East Hampton in Suffolk County, New York
Coordinates: 40°57′25″N 72°11′56″W / 40.95694°N 72.19889°W / 40.95694; -72.19889Coordinates: 40°57′25″N 72°11′56″W / 40.95694°N 72.19889°W / 40.95694; -72.19889
Country United States
State New York
County Suffolk
Government
  Type Civil Township
  Supervisor Larry Cantwell (D)[1]
Area
  Total 386 sq mi (999.5 km2)
  Land 74 sq mi (192.4 km2)
  Water 312 sq mi (807.1 km2)
Elevation 33 ft (10 m)
Population (2010)
  Total 21,457
  Density 290/sq mi (110/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 11937
Area code(s) 631
FIPS code 36-22194
GNIS feature ID 978919
Website ehamptonny.gov

The Town of East Hampton is located in southeastern Suffolk County, New York, at the eastern end of the South Shore of Long Island. It is the easternmost town in the state of New York. At the time of the United States 2010 Census, it had a total population of 21,457.

The town includes the village of East Hampton, as well as the hamlets of Montauk, Amagansett, Wainscott, and Springs. It also includes part of the incorporated village of Sag Harbor.

East Hampton is located on a peninsula, bordered on the south by the Atlantic Ocean, to the east by Block Island Sound and to the north by Gardiners Bay, Napeague Bay and Fort Pond Bay. To the west is western Long Island, reaching to the East River and New York City. The Town has eight state parks, most located at the water's edge.

The town consists of 70 square miles (180 km2) and stretches nearly 25 miles (40 km), from Wainscott in the west to Montauk Point in the east. It is about six miles (10 km) wide at its widest point and less than a mile at its narrowest point. The town has jurisdiction over Gardiners Island, which is one of the largest privately owned islands in the United States. The town has 70 miles (110 km) of shoreline.[2]

Climate

East Hampton has an oceanic climate[3] slightly above humid continental, since the January mean is slightly below the freezing mark.[4] East Hampton is slightly cooler than more shielded and urban areas such as New York City in summer and is maritime-influenced with a strong seasonal lag resulting in June and September being on average the same temperature.[4]

Climate data for East Hampton
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 13
(55)
15
(59)
21
(70)
28
(82)
30
(86)
35
(95)
38
(100)
36
(97)
34
(93)
26
(79)
22
(72)
16
(61)
38
(100)
Average high °C (°F) 2
(36)
3
(37)
6
(43)
12
(54)
17
(63)
23
(73)
26
(79)
25
(77)
22
(72)
17
(63)
7
(45)
5
(41)
14
(57)
Daily mean °C (°F) −1
(30)
0
(32)
2
(36)
8
(46)
12
(54)
18
(64)
21
(70)
21
(70)
18
(64)
12
(54)
6
(43)
1
(34)
10
(50)
Average low °C (°F) −5
(23)
−4
(25)
−1
(30)
4
(39)
8
(46)
14
(57)
17
(63)
17
(63)
14
(57)
7
(45)
2
(36)
−3
(27)
6
(43)
Record low °C (°F) −20
(−4)
−18
(0)
−14
(7)
−8
(18)
−1
(30)
2
(36)
7
(45)
9
(48)
2
(36)
−6
(21)
−10
(14)
−17
(1)
−20
(−4)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 70
(2.76)
70
(2.76)
80
(3.15)
100
(3.94)
70
(2.76)
50
(1.97)
30
(1.18)
20
(0.79)
50
(1.97)
70
(2.76)
140
(5.51)
60
(2.36)
870
(34.25)
Source: [4]

History

Native-American history

Long Island Native American settlements, and their neighbors

This area had been inhabited for thousands of years by varying cultures of indigenous peoples. At the time of European contact, East Hampton was home to the Pequot people, part of the culture that also occupied territory on the northern side of Long Island Sound, in what is now Connecticut of southern New England. They belong to the large Algonquian-speaking language family. Bands on Long Island were identified by their geographic locations. The historical people known to the colonists as the Montaukett controlled most of the territory at the east end of Long Island.[5]

Native Americans inhabiting the western part of Long Island were part of the Lenape nation, whose language is also in the Algonquian family. Their territory extended to lower New York, western Connecticut and the mid-Atlantic coastal areas into New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Their bands were also known by the names of their geographic locations but did not constitute distinct peoples.[5]

In the late-17th century Chief Wyandanch of the Montaukett negotiated with English colonists for the sale of land in the East Hampton area. The differing concepts held by the Montaukett and English about land and its use contributed to the Montaukett losing most of their lands over the ensuing centuries. Wyandanch sold an island to English colonist Lion Gardiner for "a large black dog, some powder and shot, and a few Dutch blankets."[6] The next trade involved the land extending from present-day Southampton to the foot of the bluffs, at what is now Hither Hills State Park, for 24 hatchets, 24 coats, 20 looking glasses and 100 muxes.[6]

In 1660 Chief Wyandanch's widow signed away the rest of the land from present-day Hither Hills to the tip of Montauk Point for 100 pounds, to be paid in 10 equal installments of "Indian corn or good wampum at six to a penny".[7] The sales provided that the Montaukett were permitted to stay on the land, to hunt and fish at will, and to harvest the tails and fins of whales that beached on the East Hampton shores. Town officials who bought the land filed for reimbursement from the colony for the rum with which they had plied the tribe during negotiations. Gradually, however, colonists pushed the Montaukett off the land and prevented them from hunting and fishing, saying they were interfering with their farms.[6]

Many of the Montaukett died during the 17th and 18th centuries from epidemics of smallpox, a Eurasian disease carried by English and Dutch colonists and endemic in their communities, to which the Indians had no immunity. After the American Revolution, some Montaukett relocated with Shinnecock to Oneida County in western upstate New York, led by the Mohegan missionary Samson Occom, to try to escape settlers' encroachment. They formed the Brothertown Indians with other refugee Indian people from New England, and gave up some of their traditions. In 1831-1836, the Brothertown Indians migrated to Wisconsin, where they founded the settlement of Brothertown.[8]

Stephen Talkhouse, Montaukett, c. 1860s.

Some Montaukett continued to live on Long Island. In the mid to late nineteenth century, their most well-known member was Stephen Talkhouse. Their area on Lake Montauk was called Indian Fields until 1879. With their population reduced, over the years the Montaukett intermarried with other peoples of the area, but brought up many of their descendants as Montaukett in their culture. When Arthur W. Benson forced a government auction of Montauk, New York, in which he bought nearly the entire east end of the town, he evicted the Montaukett. They relocated to Freetown, a community established by free people of color on the northern edge of East Hampton Village. The tribe made several attempts to get the courts to declare the evictions illegal, but failed. Since the 1990s, the Montaukett have pressed for formal recognition as a tribe. The Shinnecock Indian Tribe, many of whom had continued to occupy a portion of land on the South Shore, have received federal recognition as a tribe. Historically both groups were part of the larger Pequot people.

Montaukett artifacts and sweat lodges are visible from trails at Theodore Roosevelt County Park. The park was formerly called Montauk County Park.

Settlement

Lion Gardiner tomb at the South End Cemetery

East Hampton was the first English settlement in the state of New York. Lion Gardiner in 1639 purchased land, what became known as Gardiner's Island, from the Montaukett people. In 1648 a royal British charter recognized the island as a wholly contained colony, independent of both New York and Connecticut; a status it was to keep until after the American Revolution, when it came under New York State and East Hampton authority.

On June 12, 1640, nine Puritan families from Lynn, Massachusetts landed at what is now known as Conscience Point, in Southampton; some later migrated to present day East Hampton. Among the first English settlers in East Hampton were Joshua Barnes, Thomas Baker,[9] Robert Bond, David Howe, John Hand, John Mulford, Robert Rose, John Stretton, Thomas Talmage and Thomas Thompson, along with their wives and children.

The Mulford Farmhouse, on James Lane, is the best-preserved 17th-century English colonial house in East Hampton. The barn dates to 1721, and the complex is operated as a living museum. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[10] It was built in 1680 for Josiah Hobart, a prominent early settler, named in the first formal deed of conveyance of East Hampton. This was known as the East-Hampton Pattent[11] or Dongan Patent. The 1686 instrument granting East Hampton to its new proprietors was signed by Thomas Dongan, then Governor of New York.[12] The patent named Capt. Hobart one of "Trustees of the freeholders and commonalty of the town of East-Hampton". A son of Rev. Peter Hobart, founding minister of Old Ship Church in Hingham, Massachusetts, Josiah Hobart and his brother Joshua both came to Long Island with their families. Josiah Hobart settled in East Hampton, where he served as High Sheriff of Suffolk County; and his brother Joshua, a minister, went to Southold, where he served the town for 45 years.

Mulford House, East Hampton

East Hampton was the third Connecticut settlement on the East end of Long Island. East Hampton formally united with Connecticut in 1657. Long Island was formally declared to be part of New York (and also subject to English law) by Charles II of England after four British frigates captured what is today New York City, releasing East Hampton from its Connecticut governance.

East Hampton was first called Maidstone, after Maidstone, Kent, England. The name was later changed to "Easthampton", reflecting the geographic names of its neighbors, Southampton and Westhampton.[13] In 1885 the name was split into two words, after the local newspaper the East Hampton Star began using the two-word name. "Maidstone" is frequently used in place names throughout the town, including the Maidstone Golf Club.

Deep Hollow Ranch, established in 1658 in Montauk, is the oldest continuously operating cattle ranch in the United States.

Gallery

Whaling Capital

Dolphins at East Hampton's first port at Northwest Landing

While East Hampton was originally primarily agricultural, the settlers soon discovered that whales frequently beached themselves along the South shore of the town and that the whales could then be carved up for food and oil. The proper handling of this phenomenon was to be written into town laws. As the demand for whale products grew, residents became more aggressive in their harvesting techniques. No longer content to settle for harvesting beached whales, they began harvesting live whales that were coming near shore.

Northwest Harbor, located at Northwest Landing, was the town's first harbor. The harbor turned out to be too shallow for large ships, so it was moved two miles (3 km) West, to Sag Harbor, which derived its name from the fact that it was just north of the settlement of Sagaponack, New York in Southampton.

At its peak, in 1847, 60 whale ships were based in the village, employing 800 men in related businesses. It was to be written about by Herman Melville in Moby-Dick. The port rivaled that of New York. After 1847 the whaling industry dropped off dramatically.

Among the sea captains of Sag Harbor were ancestors of Howard Dean who was born in East Hampton.[14]

The most famous voyages out of Sag Harbor were those by Mercator Cooper, who in 1845 picked up shipwrecked Japanese sailors in the Bonin Islands and returned them to Tokyo. In 1853 Cooper broke through the ice shelf to become the first person to land on East Antarctica.

East Hampton continues to have a large maritime presence, as Montauk is New York state's largest fishing port.[15] The Town is famed for its commercial sports fishing, made particularly famous by Frank Mundus. One of the largest buildings in the town is Promised Land fish meal factory at Napeague.

Presidents and First Ladies

First Ladies Julia Gardiner Tyler and Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis spent their childhoods there. Theodore Roosevelt was briefly quarantined in Montauk, at Camp Wyckoff, after returning from the Spanish–American War. Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton spent week-long summer vacations in 1998 and 1999.

Julia Gardiner Tyler

Julia Gardiner Tyler

Julia Gardiner was born on Gardiners Island and her father had a house in East Hampton village. On February 28, 1844, she and her father, David Gardiner, were part of the Presidential party aboard the USS Princeton (1843) when a malfunctioning cannon exploded, killing her father, along with two Cabinet officers. According to legend Julia fainted into the arms of President John Tyler (who had earlier lost his first wife). They married four months later, creating a national scandal, since there was a 30 a year difference in their ages.

Although Tyler was a member of the wealthy Gardiner family and a former First Lady of the United States, she had economic problems after the American Civil War, due to her support of the Confederate States of America, along with President Tyler. She is buried with the President in Richmond, Virginia. Her father and one of her sons are buried in the South End Burial Ground in East Hampton.

Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis

Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis

Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was born at Southampton Hospital on July 28, 1929. She would have been born in New York City but she was six weeks late and her parents, Janet Norton Lee and John Vernou Bouvier III, were staying at the Further Lane, East Hampton, home of her grandfather, Major John Vernou Bouvier, Jr., named Lasata.[16]

Her parents were married at St. Philomena's Catholic Church in East Hampton on July 7, 1928. The reception was held at the East Hampton village home of her maternal grandparents James T. Lee and Margaret Lee, on Lily Pond.

Her family were members of the Maidstone Club. She and her younger sister, Lee Bouvier, spent their summers at the house until she was 10, when her parents divorced.

Her connection to East Hampton received national attention in the 1970s following news reports and the 1975 documentary Grey Gardens. Her aunt, Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale, and cousin, Edith Bouvier Beale, were living in poverty in a mansion after which the film was named. Jacqueline and her husband Aristotle Onassis donated money to improve the plight of her relatives. Grey Gardens was also made into a Broadway musical. A documentary on the estate was released in 2006.

Jacqueline's aunt and uncle, Winifred Lee and Franklin d'Olier, continued to own the Lily Pond Lane home of her maternal grandparents until 2002. The Bouvier family cemetery plot is at Most Holy Trinity Catholic Cemetery on Cedar Street. Jackie's father, maternal grandmother, paternal grandparents, and paternal great-grandparents, as well as various relatives, including Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale, are buried in the cemetery.

Bill and Hillary Clinton

In 1998 and 1999 as talk surfaced that Hillary Clinton was considering a Senate run from New York, they began summering in East Hampton, where they stayed at the Georgica Pond home of Steven Spielberg. Clinton gave a Saturday radio chat from the Amagansett fire station.

In June 2008, at the conclusion of Hillary Clinton's Presidential bid, she stayed at the Wiborg Beach home of Thomas H. Lee in East Hampton Village.[17]

African-American history

East Hampton has played an important role in African-American history.

Slavery in New York was legal until 1827. During the War of 1812, the Gardiners used slaves to transport supplies back and forth to Gardiner's Island. According to the Gardiners, slaves were easier to pass through British blockades since it was "obvious" that they were "owned."

During this period Sag Harbor rose to a port status, rivaling New York, due to its whale oil trade, with slaves extensively working the docks.

After the repeal of slavery, Gardiner's slaves set up small houses Freetown (East Hampton), just north of East Hampton village, while Sag Harbor's freed slaves developed the Eastside community in Sag Harbor.

On August 26, 1839, members of La Amistad, a slave ship which had been commandeered by its captives, in Cuba, dropped anchor at Culloden Point and came ashore at Montauk to get supplies. The slaves, who were inexperienced navigators, thought they were on course to Africa. Members of the U.S. Navy ship USS Washington, seeing the slaves on shore, arrested them and took them to Connecticut. The Amistad case was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1841. John Quincy Adams argued for the Africans. The court decided in their favor, opining that the initial capture of the Africans was illegal, so they were freed.

One of the imprisoned slaves was to become a valet for President John Tyler and was killed aboard USS Princeton along with David Gardiner, who was on board with his daughter Julia Gardiner Tyler.

In 1845 Pyrrhus Concer was aboard the Manhattan, a ship captained by Mercator Cooper, which picked up shipwrecked Japanese sailors in the Bonin Islands. The ship was allowed to enter Tokyo Bay under escort to return the sailors and became the first American ship to visit Tokyo. Concer was the first African-American the Japanese had seen and is depicted in their drawings of the event.

East Hampton film director Steven Spielberg popularized the event in the 1997 film Amistad.

Playground for the rich

Maidstone Club

East Hampton from its earliest days with the settlement of Gardiners Island has had a reputation as being a home for the wealthy especially after the Gardiners married into almost all the wealthy New York families.

East Hampton however largely remained undeveloped until 1880 when Austin Corbin extended the Long Island Rail Road from Bridgehampton, New York to Montauk. As part of the development Arthur W. Benson forced an auction paid US$151,000 for 10,000 acres (40 km2) around Montauk and forced the eviction of the Montaukket Native Americans there.

Benson brought in architect Stanford White to design six "cottages" near Ditch Plains in Montauk and they formed the Montauk Association to govern their exclusive neighborhood. Among the cottages was Tick Hall, owned by Dick Cavett. It burned in 1993 but Cavett rebuilt it filming the process for a television documentary.

Corbin had more industrial desires for building the train to Montauk. He thought a new port city would develop around the train station on Fort Pond Bay and that oceangoing ships from Europe would dock there and the passengers would take the train into New York – thus saving a day in transit.

The grand plans for Montauk did not pan out and the land was sold to the United States Army which was to use most of the land for Army, Navy and Air Force bases through World War II with Theodore Roosevelt making a much publicized visit there at Camp Wyckoff at the end of the Spanish–American War.

One of the side benefits of the railroad extension was a building boom of mansions in the newly accessible village of East Hampton resulting in the wealthy venturing further east from Southampton with the Maidstone Golf Club opening 1891.

In 1926 Carl G. Fisher was to resurrect the dream of an urban Montauk with plans to turn it into the Miami Beach of the north. He bought the former Benson property for $2.5 million (which was then surplus government property following the end of World War I). He built the six-story Montauk Improvement Building in downtown Montauk (which is still the town's tallest occupied structure—as zoning has forbidden highrise structures), the Montauk Manor (which was a luxury hotel), dredged Lake Montauk and opened it to Block Island Sound to support his Montauk Yacht Club and the associated Star Island Casnio as well as the Montauk Downs golf club.[18] Fisher was to lose his fortune in the Crash of 1929 and the land was sold back to the military in World War II.

Through the years East Hampton's wealth has evolved emanating out from the village taking over the farmland that had once been dominated by potato fields. The most dazzling row of mansions remains in the village of East Hampton on the closest road paralleling the ocean along Further Lane and Lily Pond Lane.

While ostentatious displays of wealth occurred near the ocean ("south of the Montauk Highway") much simpler houses and bungalows have been built through the years throughout its history particularly in Springs and Montauk. In the 1950s and 1960s following the Kitchen Debate between Nikita Khrushchev and Richard Nixon more than cheap affordable prefabricated housing second homes called Leisurama were built in Montauk at Culloden Point.

In November 2006, the median price of a house in the Town was US $895,000 [19] compared with a national median for the U.S. of $225,000.[20] Several houses in East Hampton now sell for prices in the tens of millions of dollars. Living in East Hampton is relatively expensive, in 2007 the cost of living was 168% of the national average.[21]

Service community

A portion of the community consists of working people who provide services to the wealthy community. The service community within the town of East Hampton is centered in Springs which contains the more modest housing available.[22]

Artist colony

Pollock-Krasner house in Springs.

East Hampton's reputation as an artists colony began with painter Jackson Pollock, who resided in Springs, New York in the 1940s and 1950s, with Lee Krasner, at what is now known as the Pollock-Krasner House and Studio. Many of his most famous paintings were painted in the barn, which he had converted into a studio. The property is now open to the public for tours, by appointment. It is now owned by State University of New York at Stony Brook with scheduled appointments to see his studio, which was left unchanged after his death.

Among the other artists who popularized East Hampton as an artists colony were Willem de Kooning, Mark Rothko, Franz Kline, Ian Hornak, Larry Rivers, Alfonso Ossorio, Robert Motherwell, Andy Warhol, John Ferren and Thomas Moran, as well as art dealers Leo Castelli and Ileana Sonnabend.

Pollock died in 1956 while driving with his mistress, Ruth Kligman, and a friend of hers, on Springs Fireplace Road, after picking them up at the Long Island Railroad station in East Hampton.[23]

Pollock and Krasner are buried in Green River Cemetery, in Springs, along with many of the artists of their generation. Pollock's influence continues to be felt in the community.

Marcia Gay Harden won a 2000 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for portraying Krasner in Pollock (film) which was shot in East Hampton as the dream project of Ed Harris, who was also nominated for Best Actor.

An ongoing debate rages over whether 24 paintings and drawings found in a Wainscott locker in 2003 are Pollock originals. Physicists have argued over whether fractals can be used to authenticate the paintings. The debate is still inconclusive.[24]

Andy Warhol and his longtime collaborator, Paul Morrissey, had a large, waterfront estate in Montauk called Eothen. Among their guests were Jacqueline Onassis, Lee Radziwill, the Rolling Stones, Bianca Jagger, Jerry Hall, Liza Minnelli, Elizabeth Taylor, John Lennon, John Phillips, and Halston.[25]

In 1993 the Andy Warhol Foundation donated 15.6 acres (63,000 m2) of the estate to the Nature Conservancy for the Andy Warhol Visual Arts Preserve which is run in conjunction with Art Barge in nearby Napeague.[26]

Natural disasters

Cedar Point Lighthouse

Two major natural disasters that affected East Hampton include the Hurricane of 1938 and Hurricane Carol, in 1954, both of which found the Atlantic Ocean splitting the town in two at Napeague. The 1938 storm also washed up so much sand that the Cedar Point Lighthouse, which had been on an island, became connected to the mainland. The 1954 storm also toppled the MacKay Radio towers at Napeague.

East Hampton does not have the barrier beaches that run almost the entire length of the south shore of Long Island from Coney Island to Southampton. East Hampton's ocean beaches are connected to the mainland, which prevents them from being washed over in storms.

Due to storms on Fort Pond Bay, the hamlet of Montauk was actually moved by the Navy at the end of World War II. The hamlet was originally located at the train station, but was constantly being flooded.

East Hampton is regularly hit by hurricanes and Nor'easters. Given the town's generally flat topography, water often accumulates on town roads stranding motorists in heavy rains.

The town's most serious environmental problem is beach erosion. The town has severely restricted development on ocean front property, thus limiting impact. The Montauk Lighthouse, which used to be almost 300 feet (91 m) from the cliffs is now 56 feet (17 m) from the cliffs. The most threatened areas now are in the hamlet of Montauk, which is the only community in the town with its business district next to the ocean, as are the oceanfront estates of East Hampton. At Georgica Pond the United States Corps of Engineers built Groynes to protect the mansions. The construction is a source of friction with Southampton, which says the jetties interrupt the longshore drift, greatly increasing beach erosion there.

The lack of beach front development, including the fact there are no boardwalk promenades, which are features of many developed beach communities, has contributed to East Hampton beaches being listed among the best beaches in the country.[27]

Military history

While East Hampton is considered almost exclusively a residential community, it has been the home of United States Navy, United States Army, and United States Air Force bases, the last of which closed in the 1980s. It currently has a United States Coast Guard headquarters.

Skirmishes and military incidents took place in the town from the 17th century through World War II.

Massacre Valley

Montaukett grave in Montauk. The only recognizable grave is that of Stephen Talkhouse

The biggest recorded loss of life in the various skirmishes and conflicts in East Hampton was "Massacre Valley" in 1653 in Montauk when 30 members of the Montaukett tribe were killed by members of the Narragansett tribe at the foot of what is now Montauk Manor.[28]

The Montauketts had a thriving wampum (made from whelk shells on the East Hampton beaches) trade Connecticut tribes. The arrangements were disrupted in 1637 by the Pequot War which was to solidify English domination of New England and change the balance of power among Native American tribes.

The Pequot War was to contribute to the Montauketts selling Gardiners Island, East Hampton and Southampton to the English with the understanding the English would protect the Montauketts from attacks from Connecticut. However a war broke out between the Montauketts and the Narragansett, the nominal Native American victors in Pequot War.

In 1653 the Narragansetts under Ninigret attacked and burned the Montaukett village, killed 30 and captured one of Wyandanch's daughters. The daughter was ransomed with the aid of Lion Gardiner (who in turn was to get large portion of Smithtown, New York in appreciation). The Montauketts temporarily moved closer to East Hampton village and the English ordered ships in Long Island Sound to sink Narragansett canoes.[29] The skirmishes were to end in 1657.

Captain Kidd

East Hampton had pirates on its waterways in the 17th century and early 18th century, the most notable of which was Captain Kidd who was hanged after his booty on Gardiners Island was introduced at his trial.

Kidd is said to have buried treasure all over Long Island. Money Ponds at the Montauk Lighthouse are named because of treasure reported to have been left there.

In June 1699 Kidd was stopped on the island while sailing to Boston to try to clear his name. With the permission of the proprietor, Mrs. Gardiner, he buried $30,000 in treasure in a ravine between Bostwick's Point and the Manor House. For her troubles he gave her a piece of gold cloth (a piece of which is now at the East Hampton library) that was captured from a Moorish ship off Madagascar, as well as a bag of sugar. Kidd warned that if it was not there when he returned he would kill Gardiner. Kidd was tried in Boston and Gardiner was ordered to deliver the treasure as evidence. The booty included gold dust, bars of silver, Spanish dollars, rubies, diamonds, candlesticks and porringers. Gardiner kept one of the diamonds, which he gave his daughter. A plaque on the island marks the spot, but it's on private property.[30]

American Revolution

Montauk Point Lighthouse
Cannon retrieved from the Culloden on display at the Marine Museum

In 1775 the British first ventured toward Long Island at Fort Pond Bay at Montauk during the Siege of Boston. John Dayton, who had limited troops at his disposal, feigned that he had more by walking them back and forth across a hill turning their coats inside out to make it look like there more of them (a tactic referred to as Dayton's Ruse).[31] The British would not formally attack Long Island until 1776.

After the fall of Long Island during the Battle of Long Island, the East Hampton ports of Northwest and Sag Harbor were blockaded by the British and the British used Gardiner's Island for a hunting preserve.

The first American victory in New York after the Battle of Long Island was Meigs Raid on Sag Harbor (sometimes called the Battle of Sag Harbor) when continentals from Connecticut raided the British earth works in the village and burned the ships and wharfs on the East Hampton side of the village. The Americans killed six and transported 90 British prisoners back to Connecticut without losing a single soldier.

A story often circulated is the story of Isaac Van Scoy who had a farm in Northwest. According to the tales the British raided his farmhouse and he killed one soldier with a pitchfork. Van Scoy was reported to have eventually been captured and taken to a prison ship in Sag Harbor where he escaped.[32] The earthen remains of Van Scoy's house are still visible in the Northwest Preserve where he is buried (American flags mark his grave on holidays). His name is applied to various placenames in the area including Van Scoy Pond.

The manor house on Gardiners Island had just been built in 1774 and members of the British forces were to use it throughout the war – with or without permission. Among the British guests were Henry Clinton and John André. At one point Major Andre and Gardiner son Nathaniel Gardiner, who was a surgeon for the New Hampshire Continental Infantry, exchanged toasts on the island. Gardiner would later be the American surgeon who attended to Andre when he was executed after being caught spying with Benedict Arnold.[33]

The British fleet used East Hampton waters for blockading Connecticut and planning for a new offense to retake New England (that never took place). One of the ships, the HMS Culloden (1776) ran aground at what is now called Culloden Point in Montauk during a winter storm on January 24, 1781. The ship was scuttled and burned. In the 1970s remains of the ship were discovered and is now Long Island's only underwater park. Remains of the ship can be seen at the East Hampton Marine Museum in Amagansett.

After the war, Gardiners Island which had been considered an independent colony was officially added to New York and East Hampton.

George Washington was to authorize construction of the Montauk Point Lighthouse.

War of 1812

Gardiners Island from Springs, New York showing the famed white windmill and manor house.
Umbrella House, oldest house in Sag Harbor. It housed British troops in the American Revolution and was hit by cannon fire during the War of 1812 (where light colored bricks are in lower left corner)

During the War of 1812 British frigates once again controlled the northern bays of East Hampton with frigates headquartered in Gardiners Bay particularly harassing ships going into Sag Harbor.[34]

Sag Harbor had a fort manned by 3,000 troops on Turkey Hill. July 11, 1813 One hundred British Marines raided the wharf but were driven back after setting fire to one sloop by Americans led by Capt. David Hand.[35]

During the War of 1812 a British fleet of seven ships of the line and several smaller frigates anchored in Cherry Harbor and conducted raids on American shipping Long Island Sound. Crews would come ashore for provisions which were purchased at market prices. During one of the British excursions, Americans captured some of the crew. The British came to arrest then Lord of the Manor John Lyon Gardiner. Gardiner, who was a delicate man, adopted the "green room defense" where he stayed in a bed with green curtains surrounded by medicine to make him look feeble. The British, not wanting a sick man on board, let him be.[33]

The British were to bury several personnel on the island. Some of the British fleet that burned Washington assembled in the harbor in 1814.[36]

Gardiner's supply boats were manned by slaves during the war and this made it easier for them to pass through British lines. Many of the Gardiner slaves were to live in the Freetown (East Hampton), just north of East Hampton (village), New York.[33]

American Civil War

During the American Civil War, some of the Sag Harbor whaling ships were scuttled in Charleston, South Carolina harbor to blockade the city.

The USS Montauk, a monitor which was constructed at the Continental Iron Works in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, saw considerable action throughout the war. In 1865 the ship, docked at the Washington Navy Yard, was used as the prison for accused Abraham Lincoln assassination conspirators and the autopsy and identification of the body of assassin John Wilkes Booth.[37]

Spanish–American War

Camp Wykoff map at Shadmoor State Park

During the Spanish–American War, the Army built Fort Tyler on Gardiners Point Island in an attempt to protect Long Island.

A more important fort was the massive Camp Wickoff (also called Wyckoff) which stretched from the current Montauk Long Island Railroad station to the Montauk Point Lighthouse.

The area was used to quarantine soldiers coming from the conflict. The most prominent group among the 20,000 soldiers who passed through the base were Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders. The tented camp became a national scandal over the poor treatment of troops (256 died there) and President William McKinley visited to emphasize improvements.[38] Exhibits and artifacts from the camp are at Theodore Roosevelt County Park.

World War I

During World War I, the E.W. Bliss Company of Brooklyn, New York tested torpedoes in the harbor, a half mile north of Sag Harbor. As part of the process, Long Wharf in Sag Harbor was reinforced with concrete and rail spurs built along the wharf as the torpedoes were loaded onto ships for testing. They were shipped via the Long Island Road, along the Sag Harbor to the wharf which was owned by the railroad at the time. Among those observing the tests was Thomas Alva Edison. Most of the today's buildings on the wharf, including the Bay Street Theatre, were built during this time. The torpedoes, which did not have exploding warheads, are occasionally found by divers on the bay floor.[39]

World War II

Observation bunker rising above the shadbush at Shadmoor State Park
Coast Guard station at Amagansett where Germans came ashore

During World War II, coastal fortifications were set up along the eastern tip of Long Island at Montauk. A concrete observation tower as built next to the Montauk Lighthouse. 16 inch naval guns were placed in adjacent bunkers at Camp Hero. The observation tower is still next to the lighthouse and the additional bunkers are visible at Camp Hero State Park as well as Shadmoor State Park.

On June 13, 1942, as part of Operation Pastorius four German agents led by George John Dasch were landed by U202 [40] at what is now Atlantic Avenue Beach (sometimes called Coast Guard Beach) in Amagansett. Confronted by Coast Guardsman John C. Cullen, they said they were Southampton fishermen. When one of the four said something in a foreign tongue, they offered him $300 to keep quiet.[41] The agents disappeared into the night after he sought out his supervisor. When reinforcements arrived they discovered German cigarettes on the beach along with four heavy, waterproof oaken boxes buried in the sand filled with brick-sized blocks of high explosives, bombs disguised as lumps of coal, bomb-timing mechanisms of German make, and innocent-looking “pen-and-pencil sets” that were actually incendiary weapons.

The agents rode the Long Island Railroad into New York City and were ultimately captured along with four others who had come ashore at Jacksonville, Florida. Six of the agents were to be executed.[42]

In May 2007 the original Coast Guard station was moved to the property at the Town Marine Museum in Amagansett across the dunes from its original Atlantic Avenue beach location. The station was moved in 1966 to private property to save it from demolition by Joel Carmichael [43] The Marine Museum itself was the former barracks for the Coast Guard.

The Navy appropriated almost all of Montauk during the war for facilities including Montauk Manor which was used as a dormitory. Torpedoes were tested in Lake Montauk. Ships and dirigibles docked on Navy Road on Fort Pond Bay. The Navy was to find Fort Pond inhospitable since it was shallow. Dredging was to contribute to problems with flooding. After the war the Navy moved the residential section of Montauk which had been on the bay by the Long Island Rail station a mile to the south to get away from the flooding. One of the biggest legacies of the Navy presence was to be the dredging of Lake Montauk so that it replaced Fort Pond as Montauk's dock. The Coast Guard is now headquartered there on Star Island.

Cold War

AN/FPS-35 radar

After the war, most of the military property was disposed of as surplus, except for gun emplacements at Camp Hero next to the Montauk Point Lighthouse. The camp was designated as an Air Force Base supporting a 135-foot (41 m)-wide radar (AN/FPS-35) in the early 1960s to detect potential bombers headed for New York City. The massive radar and supporting state-of-the-art computers quickly became obsolete. While the other radars in this category were torn down, the one on Montauk, was saved largely because it served as a better landmark than did the lighthouse for sailors and ships on Long Island Sound. The base was officially decommissioned in the 1980s. The support buildings now form a ghost town. The radar structure has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1992, Long Island residents Preston B. Nichols and Peter Moon published a science fiction book, The Montauk Project: Experiments in Time. They suggested that the radar was used by the government to conduct time travel experiments. Some readers believe their sci-fi account is true. The base has become of cult interest among conspiracy buffs. It was featured in a segment of The X-Files.

Government

East Hampton town seal

The town has two governments, which sometimes are in conflict. The most visible town government is the elected Town Board, which consists of five people, including its head, the Town Supervisor. They are responsible for managing the taxes, roads, police, parks, zoning and general governance of the town. The Town Board was stablished by the State of New York in 1788. The government operates from a 13-acre (53,000 m2) campus on Pantigo Road.[44]

The historic, original Town government is known as the Trustees of the Freeholders and Commonalty of the Town of East Hampton. Today it is formally responsible for day-to-day decisions related to common property in the town. The Trustees derive their power from the Dongan Patent of December 9, 1686, which set up self-governance for the town. The patent (a land grant) establishing the trustees was an act by Thomas Dongan, the Royal Governor of New York.[45] Among the common properties which the trustees operate is Georgica Pond; they decide when the tidal pond is to be drained and filled. These actions often make headlines gas they sometimes cause the flooding of basements of neighboring properties owned by celebrities. In 1998, the pond was drained a few days before President Bill Clinton was to spend his summer vacation at the home of Steven Spielberg.

Since the late 20th century, the Town has often approved progressive social initiatives, including domestic partnership registration. In 1999, it imposed a 2 percent tax on residential real estate sales in excess of $250,000 for the purpose of buying open space for preservation.[46] The money has been used in part to the Town's establishing more than 200 miles (320 km) of trails,[47] including the Paumanok Path. Between 2002 and 2005, the tax raised $71 million.[48] In 2006, the Town adopted a dark skies ordinance, which is now being considered as a model for wider use in New York State to cut down on light pollution at night.[49]

Despite East Hampton's great wealth, its fire department and ambulance are both volunteer services, dependent on local full-time residents. In August 1998, President Bill Clinton was to give his weekend radio address from the Amagansett Volunteer Fire Station during his vacation.

The East Hampton town government campus with its house trailers on the left and the 19th- and 18th-century houses moved to the 10 acre campus for a "new" town hall in April 2007.

Although residences in the town are often featured in architectural magazines, the town offices have been housed for years in several double wide trailers on a lot, hidden from the street by a nondescript flat-roofed building. In 2006, the Town announced plans to convert its campus by adapting a collection of historic East Hampton buildings that had been moved over the course of 30 years to the 40-acre (160,000 m2) Further Lane home[50] of Adelaide de Menil, heiress to the Schlumberger oil fortune. In 2006 it was announced that the new Town complex was to be designed by internationally known architect Robert A.M. Stern (who designed the East Hampton Library in 1997).

The transfer of the historic houses to the Town government site was part of the sale of the de Menil to financier Ron Baron for $103 million; in 2007 this was reported as the highest price ever paid for a single residence in United States history.[51]

The township has aggressively pursued zoning ordinances to protect its residential and rural character. It has no chain fast food restaurants and or big box stores (unlike Southampton, which has numerous fast food chains and stores such as K-Mart). The village of East Hampton formerly also exercised a "no chain" rule. Since the mid-1990s, a Starbucks franchise site has opened (currently there is only one in the whole town) and a branch of Tiffany & Co.. Tiffany & Co. closed its store in 2014.

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
17901,497
18001,5493.5%
18101,484−4.2%
18201,64610.9%
18301,6681.3%
18402,07624.5%
18502,1222.2%
18602,2676.8%
18702,3724.6%
18802,5156.0%
18902,431−3.3%
19003,74654.1%
19104,72226.1%
19204,8522.8%
19306,56935.4%
19406,529−0.6%
19506,325−3.1%
19608,82739.6%
197010,98024.4%
198014,02927.8%
199016,13215.0%
200019,71822.2%
201021,4578.8%
Est. 201421,927[52]2.2%
U.S. Decennial Census[53]
East Hampton town map from U.S. Census

Demographics in East Hampton are skewed by the fact that more than half the houses are owned as second homes (among the owners are some of the wealthiest people in the country).[54] The East Hampton economy is based on retail and services to support the residential community.

As of the census[55] of 2010, there were 21,457 people and 21,038 households residing in East Hampton. The population density is 290.0 people per square mile (111.5/km2). There are 2,251 housing units at an average density of 403.6 per square mile (155.8/km2). The racial makeup of the town is 84.81% White, 26.38% Hispanic or Latino of any race, 3.36% Black or African American, 0.60% Native American, 1.32% Asian, 0.07% Pacific Islander, 8.33% from other races, and 1.50% from two or more races.

As of the census[55] of 2000, there are 1,445 households out of which 27.3% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 44.2% are married couples living together, 12.2% have a female householder with no husband present, and 39.0% are non-families. 31.9% of all households are made up of individuals and 16.8% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.47 and the average family size is 3.07.

As of the census[55] of 2010, in the town the population is spread out with 19.9% under the age of 18, 2.2% from 18 to 20, 5.1% from 20 to 24, 11.3% from 25 to 34, 21.5% from 35 to 49, 22.5% from 50 to 64, and 17.6% who are 65 years of age or older. For every 100 females there are 101.5 males.

As of the census[55] of 2000, the median income for a household in the town is $52,201, and the median income for a family is $55,357. Males have a median income of $38,566 versus $29,750 for females. The per capita income for the CDP is $25,725. 12.2% of the population and 10.3% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 20.5% of those under the age of 18 and 4.2% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line.

Special events

One of the highlights of the summer is East Hampton Fire Department fireworks display at Main Beach, usually held the Saturday night closest to July 4. The fireworks displays have generated controversy since 2005, when they were postponed because they were considered disruptive to the nearby nesting of the endangered piping plover. In 2005, 2007, and 2008 the fireworks were postponed until Labor Day weekend to protect the birds' nesting season. The village administration has since postponed the fireworks display to Labor Day weekend indefinitely.

A big draw in the summer had also been the shark fishing tournaments in Montauk. Since 2007, the Humane Society and other animal welfare groups have protested that the tournaments are cruel to the sharks, as they are not being caught for food.[56]

Each summer, the Artists and Writers Softball Game, a charity benefit, is held. Past players have included John Irving, Norman Mailer, Kurt Vonnegut, Dustin Hoffman, President Bill Clinton, and singer Paul Simon.

Every October the town hosts the Hamptons International Film Festival, an event screening independent films in several local theaters. It has a fairly large draw from the New York City crowd.

Barefoot Contessa, a Food Network original show, is filmed in East Hampton.

Communities and locations

Villages (incorporated)

Hamlets (unincorporated)

Census-designated places

In addition to the above, the United States Census has two locations using terms that are usually not used by residents of the town:

State parks

Suffolk County parks

Education

Clinton Academy

East Hampton does not have any colleges. The now disbanded Clinton Academy on Main Street was the first chartered Academy authorized by the New York State Board of Regents in 1784.[57] Three high schools are in the Town:

American educator Catharine Beecher was born in East Hampton.

Television stations in East Hampton

Radio stations in East Hampton

East Hampton

Montauk

Transportation

Railroad lines

The Long Island Rail Road's sole line in the Town of East Hampton is the Montauk Branch, which includes stations in East Hampton, Amagansett, and Montauk.

Bus service

The Town of Southampton is served primarily by Suffolk County Transit bus routes, although Hampton Jitney buses are available for trips to New York City.

Major roads

Airports

The town of Southampton contains the East Hampton Airport along the Southampton-East Hampton Town Line, and Montauk Airport on the northeast corner of Lake Montauk.

Ferries

The sole ferry in the Town of East Hampton is a passenger ferry taking people across the Block Island Sound between Montauk Harbor and either Block Island, New London, or Oak Bluffs on Martha's Vineyard.

See also

References

  1. "Newsday endorses Larry Cantwell for East Hampton supervisor". Newsday. 22 October 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015. However, Cantwell, 64, a Democrat from East Hampton
  2. Overview - Town of East Hampton
  3. "East Hampton Climate Summary". Weatherbase. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 "East Hampton Temperature Averages". Weatherbase. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  5. 1 2 John A. Strong, The Montaukett Indians of Eastern Long Island (Iroquois and Their Neighbors), New York: Heart of the Lakes Publishing, June 1998. (ISBN 0-8156-2883-8)
  6. 1 2 3 Gaynell Stone, "The Material History of the Montaukett", Lecture: January 31, 1998, East Hampton Public Library
  7. Benjamin F. Thompson, History of Long Island, 1839 (available on print.google.com)
  8. John Strong, "The Ancestors: An overview of Montaukett Prehistory", Lecture: 28 Nov 2002, East Hampton Public Library
  9. "Baker 1650". http://www.bakerhouse1650.com/about-us. External link in |website= (help);
  10. AIA Architectural Guide to Nassau and Suffolk Counties, Long Island, American Institute of Architects Long Island Chapter, American Institute of Architects, Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities, Courier Dover Publications, 1992, ISBN 0-486-26946-9
  11. East-Hampton Pattent, wikisource
  12. "The Dongan Patent", montauk.com
  13. East Hampton, New York (U.S.) - CRW Flags History
  14. Ancestry of Gov. Howard Dean compiled by William Addams Reitwiesner - wargs.com
  15. Montauk: New York's Largest Fishing Port By Ken Gail Seafood Council Newsletter Fall/Winter 1994
  16. America's Queen by Sarah Bradford (excerpted on CNN)
  17. Clintons Relaxing at Wiborg's Beach House (Maybe) - East Hampton Star - June 13, 2008
  18. Carl Fisher - Architect of Montauk - Montauklife.com
  19. Real Estate Market Softens - East Hampton Star - November 10, 2006
  20. Metropolitan Area Existing-Home Prices and State Existing-Home Sales - National Association of Realtors
  21. Greatschools.net East Hampton profile - accessed January 12, 2007
  22. Elizabeth A. Harris (July 2, 2012). "Tension for East Hampton as Immigrants Stream In". The New York Times. Retrieved July 3, 2012.
  23. The Tempest by Jerry Saltz (reprinted on artnet.com)
  24. The Case of Pollock’s Fractals Focuses on Physics by Randy Kennedy - New York Times - December 2, 2006
  25. Katherine Kapnick (June 18, 2010). "'70's Hamptons Glamor: The Eothen Estate And The Superstars Who Summered There". GuestofaGuest.com. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  26. Long Island: Andy Warhol Visual Arts Preserve - Nature Conservancy
  27. Dr. Beach
  28. Montauk's Indian Heritage - montauklife.com
  29. Long Island Indians and The Early Settlers - longislandgeneology.com - Retrieved January 18, 2007
  30. PIRATES AND PROHIBITION Excerpted from, "East Hampton History," by Jeannette Edwards Rattroy, copyright 1953; Printed by Country Life Press, Garden City, NY (excerpted on longislandgeneology.com) Access January 12, 2007
  31. An Old Dayton House Saved From Bulldozer - East Hampton Star - January 15, 1998
  32. The Story of Isaac Van Scoy - Early East Hampton - Long Island Genealogy
  33. 1 2 3 The Manor of Gardiners Island - The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries By John Austin Stevens - January 1885
  34. Eastern Suffolk During the War of 1812 - Longislandgenealogy.com
  35. War on the Waters: U.S. Navy and British skirmish in the Sound in the War of 1812 By Bill Bleyer - Newsday - Long Island Our Story Series
  36. East End Lighthouses - Gardiners Island Lighouses
  37. Contradictions Concerning the Death and Autopsy of John Wilkes Booth by Robert E. Arnold
  38. Camp Wickoff/Wyckoff on Montauk Point, Long Island - Longislandgeneology.com
  39. Sag Harbor In Its Industrial Heyday: Testing Torpedoes - Sag Harbor Express - May 5, 1997
  40. http://uboat.net/boats/u202.htm
  41. The Spies Who Came in From the Sea by W.A. Swanberg - American Heritage Magazine - April 1970
  42. German Espionage and Sabotage Against the United States in World War II - navy.mil
  43. Back to the beachfront Historic lifesaving station in E. Hampton is returned to beach, from where Nazi spies were foiled in WWII by Luis Perez - Newsday - May 25, 2007
  44. Town Board - east-hampton.ny.us
  45. trustee.easthmptonny.gov
  46. Residential Real Estate; Impending Tax Stirring Hamptons Home Sales - New York Times - March 26, 1999
  47. Paumanok Path Summit 2004 - Paumanokpath.org
  48. East Hampton Open Space Preserve Brochure - 2005
  49. Telescope Arrives in Montauk, Revolutionary Design is Nation’s First - November 16, 2006 - Montaukobservatory.com
  50. A New Campus - Dan's Papers - October 13, 2006
  51. Priciest Property in U.S. History: $100 Million De Menil-Carpenter estate is sold to financier May 24, 2007 East Hampton Star
  52. "Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2014". Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  53. "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  54. George DeWan, "Rich Present, Rich Past", Newsday - Long Island: Our Story Series
  55. 1 2 3 4 "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  56. Ocean City Shark Tournament Celebrates Cruelty to Sharks May 30, 2007 care2.com
  57. Easthampton.com history accessed January 12, 2007
  58. East Hampton High School profile, Greatschools.net, accessed January 12, 2007
  59. Pierson Middle-High School profile, Greatschools.net, accessed January 12, 2007
  60. East Hampton Star – January 12, 2006 – reprinted on Ross Institute site

External links

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