LIHS Journal of Long Island History Inventory
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The Long Island Historical Journal
THE LONG ISLAND HISTORICAL JOURNAL United States Army Barracks at Camp Upton, Yaphank, New York c. 1917 Fall 2003/ Spring 2004 Volume 16, Nos. 1-2 Starting from fish-shape Paumanok where I was born… Walt Whitman Fall 2003/ Spring 2004 Volume 16, Numbers 1-2 Published by the Department of History and The Center for Regional Policy Studies Stony Brook University Copyright 2004 by the Long Island Historical Journal ISSN 0898-7084 All rights reserved Articles appearing in this journal are abstracted and indexed in Historical Abstracts and America: History and Life The editors gratefully acknowledge the support of the Office of the Provost and of the Dean of Social and Behavioral Science, Stony Brook University (SBU). We thank the Center for Excellence and Innovation in Education, SBU, and the Long Island Studies Council for their generous assistance. We appreciate the unstinting cooperation of Ned C. Landsman, Chair, Department of History, SBU, and of past chairpersons Gary J. Marker, Wilbur R. Miller, and Joel T. Rosenthal. The work and support of Ms. Susan Grumet of the SBU History Department has been indispensable. Beginning this year the Center for Regional Policy Studies at SBU became co-publisher of the Long Island Historical Journal. Continued publication would not have been possible without this support. The editors thank Dr. Lee E. Koppelman, Executive Director, and Ms. Edy Jones, Ms. Jennifer Jones, and Ms. Melissa Jones, of the Center’s staff. Special thanks to former editor Marsha Hamilton for the continuous help and guidance she has provided to the new editor. The Long Island Historical Journal is published annually in the spring. -
The Industrialization of Long Island City (Lic), New York
EXPLORING URBAN CHANGE USING HISTORICAL MAPS: THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF LONG ISLAND CITY (LIC), NEW YORK by Elizabeth J. Mamer A Thesis Presented to the FACULTY OF THE USC GRADUATE SCHOOL UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree MASTER OF SCIENCE (GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY) August 2015 2015 Elizabeth J Mamer DEDICATION In memory of my father, who loved and collected old maps. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank Karen Kemp for her continued guidance as I worked my way through this research. Her patience and instruction were invaluable. Thank you as well to my mom and sister for their constant support throughout this process. A great thanks to Florence, whose boundless and persistent spirit motivated me. And finally, to Spencer, for both encouraging me and putting up with me. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS iii LIST OF TABLES iii LIST OF FIGURES iv LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS vi ABSTRACT vii CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 Motivation 2 1.2 Study Area 3 1.3 Research Goals 5 CHAPTER 2: BACKGROUND AND LITERATURE REVIEW 7 2.1 Historical GIS 7 2.2 Historical Narrative: The Urban Development of LIC 8 2.2.1 Pre-industrialization 9 2.2.2 Industrialization 10 2.2.3 Transportation Expansion 12 2.2.4 Residential Changes 14 2.3 Trends in Industrial Societies 15 CHAPTER 3: DEVELOPING THE DATASET 17 3.1 Historical Maps as Data Sources 17 3.2 Georeferencing 19 3.3 Digitization 22 3.4 Data Organization 26 3.5 Assign Shifts 30 CHAPTER 4: EXPLORING THE STORIES 33 4.1 Enumerating -
A HISTORY of LONG ISLAND
;^i>-i22 (l^acneU ^ninecattg Htbtaty 3tl)aca, Slein ^atk BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE JACOB H. SCHIFF ENDOWMENT FOR THE PROMOTION OF STUDIES IN HUMAN CIVILIZATION 1918 Cornell University Library F 127 .L8R82 V.3 History of Long Island 3 1924 026 113 914 ¥2 Cornell University Library ^^1 The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924026113914 A HISTORY OK LONG ISLAND From Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time BY ^W^ILLIAM S. PELLETREAU, A. M. VOL. Ill the lewis publishing company New York and Chicago 1905 INDEX A c Abbott, George B 94 Cabbie, Elijah 89 Abrams, James F 427 Cadman, Samuel P 205 Abrams & Stockton 427 Calder, Alexander G 340 Ackerson, T. Benton 398 Calder, William M 335 Allan, John T 338 Carleton, Thomas J 108 Assip, John 388 Carlin, Patrick J 352 Chandler, Albert B 211 B Chrichton, Alexander F 129 Church & Gough 356 Ballard, Gayton 68 Claasen, Arthur ' 13 Barnes, Charles C 280 Clarke, Frederick D 122 Barton, Charles T 107 Cochrane, William 24 Bass, Charles H 38 Comey, George P 39 Battey, William J 5 Cook, Elisha W 244 Bauer, August 363 Corbin, John R 445 Bauer, Henry C 378 Corrigan, Thomas 292 Baylis, Abraham B., Jr 124 Cert, William K 268 Baylis, Abraham B., Sr 123 Cosgrove, James F 188 Bell, James A. W 51' Cozine, Chauncey G 382 Bergen, DeWitt 234 Cummings, James J 455 Bierschenk, Philip igg Cutter, Ralph L 210 Birdsall, George N S6 Blackford, Eugene G 196 Boardman, Elbridge H 162 D Boardman, George M log Dale, James 266 Boerum, Folkert R 299 Davol, William H 288 Boerum, Henry 296 Dawe, James 337 Bonert, Louis 442 Dean, James E 21s Bonnlander, Nicholas 346 Denison, Charles H 366 Bowen, William T . -
North Shore Sample
T a b l e o f C o n t e n t s Volume I Acknowledgments . iv Introduction . vii Maps of Long Island Estate Areas . xiv Factors Applicable to Usage . xvii Surname Entries A – M . 1 Volume II Surname Entries N – Z . 803 Appendices: ArcHitects . 1257 Civic Activists . 1299 Estate Names . 1317 Golf Courses on former NortH SHore Estates . 1351 Hereditary Titles . 1353 Landscape ArcHitects . 1355 Maiden Names . 1393 Motion Pictures Filmed at NortH SHore Estates . 1451 Occupations . 1457 ReHabilitative Secondary Uses of Surviving Estate Houses . 1499 Statesmen and Diplomats WHo Resided on Long Island's North Shore . 1505 Village Locations of Estates . 1517 America's First Age of Fortune: A Selected BibliograpHy . 1533 Selected BibliograpHic References to Individual NortH SHore Estate Owners . 1541 BiograpHical Sources Consulted . 1595 Maps Consulted for Estate Locations . 1597 PhotograpHic and Map Credits . 1598 I n t r o d u c t i o n Long Island's NortH SHore Gold Coast, more tHan any otHer section of tHe country, captured tHe imagination of twentieth-century America, even oversHadowing tHe Island's SoutH SHore and East End estate areas, wHich Have remained relatively unknown. THis, in part, is attributable to F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, whicH continues to fascinate the public in its portrayal of the life-style, as Fitzgerald perceived it, of tHe NortH SHore elite of tHe 1920s.1 The NortH SHore estate era began in tHe latter part of the 1800s, more than forty years after many of the nation's wealtHy Had establisHed tHeir country Homes in tHe Towns of Babylon and Islip, along tHe Great SoutH Bay Ocean on tHe SoutH Shore of Long Island. -
Vol 1, Number 1 July 22-29, 2006
The Long Island Native & Black History UPDATE Volume 1, Number 1 July 22 – 29, 2006 [Reprint] Jul 25, 2006 On NY1 Now: News All Morn (http://www.ny1.com/ny1/OnTheAir/program_guide.jsp) Memorial To Be Built At African, Native American Burial Ground In Queens By Roger Clark A Queens’s playground is being transformed, as the city pays homage to the ancestors of both African and Native Americans. NY1's Roger Clark has more in the following report. Across the street from the Flushing cemetery is the final resting place for 1,000 people. But there are no headstones or landscaping - it's a playground built over a graveyard in the 1930's by the city. “It was inconceivable that you would make a playground out of a cemetery,” says activist Mandingo Tshaka of Bayside. “I’ve never heard of such a thing.” Beneath the asphalt is the burial place of mostly African and Native Americans buried in a potter's field from the 19th century. Now, a 15-year campaign to make the site a memorial park by Tshaka, who has ancestors buried in the field, is becoming a reality. “We're going to have lots of planting, benches, pathways, a new playground, [and] I think it’s going to be a wonderful amenity for the neighborhood," says Angelyn Chandler of the Parks Department. The 3.5-acre site will be surrounded by iron fencing, and there will also be a memorial to those buried there. Getting to this point wasn't easy because some residents weren't happy about losing a playground. -
The Migration of Jupiter Hammon and His Family: from Slavery to Freedom and Its Consequences
LIHJ — Founded 1988 by Roger Wunderlich Published by the Center for Global & Local History Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-4348 ISSN 0898-7084 Editor in Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor Editor at Large Charles Backfish Jennifer Anderson Joshua Ruff Wolf Schäfer HOME ABOUT LIHJ LIHJ BOARD AUTHORS RESOURCES SEARCH SUBSCRIBE 2013, Volume 23, Issue 2 The Migration of Jupiter Hammon and His Family: From Slavery to Freedom and its Consequences Charla E. Bolton, AICP and Reginald H. Metcalf, Jr. Charla E. Bolton, AICP, Town of Huntington, New York African American Historic Designation Council/ Reginald H. Metcalf, Jr., Town of Huntington, New York African American Historic Designation Council Abstract: Extensiv e research relating to the Jupiter Hammon family suggests a kinship history that plots their journey from West Africa into bondage within the plantation sy stem of the West Indies and North America and their journey into free society in the Town of Huntington, NY, through a combination of mutual support, self-sufficiency , and notable resilience. Keywords: African American, elder care, emancipation, family , Hammon, Jupiter, New York, pov erty , slav ery Introduction 1 Jupiter Hammon, acclaimed as the United States’ first published African American poet, is now recognized as a significant figure in American literature. Born in 1711, he published his first poem in 1760 and died about 1805, leaving an important body of poetry and prose. He lived most of his life on a large northern plantation, the Manor of Queens Village, a principal holding of the Lloyd Family.[1] He was owned by a succession of Lloyd family members who facilitated his education and the publication of his work. -
The Long Island Historical Journal
THE LONG ISLAND HISTORICAL JOURNAL I "Starting from fish-shape Paumanok where I was born..." Walt Whitman Spring 1989 Volume I 9 Number 2 The Long Island Historical Journal Spring 1989 Volume 1 * Number 2 PUBLISHED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT STONY BROOK copyright 1989 by the Long Island Historical Journal ISSN 0898-7084 All rights reserved The editors gratefully acknowledge the support of the Office of the Provost, SUNY at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York, The Long Island Com- munity Foundation, Old Westbury, New York, and the Long Island Savings Bank, Syosset, New York. We also thank Dr. Joel T. Rosenthal, Department of History, SUNY at Stony Brook, for his help in launching the Journal. The Long Island Historical Journal is published twice a year, in October and April. Yearly subscrip- tions are $15.00, single copies $8.00. Address ar- ticles, correspondence, books for review, and subscriptions to: The Editor, LIHJ Dept. of History SUNY at Stony Brook Stony Brook, NY 11794-4348 Manuscripts:We will publish original contributions on any aspect of Long Island history. Submit manuscripts in duplicate (no carbons), on 81 " x 11" stock. Double space, with generous margins, and on only one side of each page. Notes should be numbered consecutively, assembled at the end of the text, and modeled on the examples given in the Chicago Manual or Turabian. THE LONG ISLAND HISTORICAL JOURNAL Editor: Roger Wunderlich, SUNY at Stony Brook. Associate Editor: Richard P. Harmond, St. John's University. Editorial Board: Floris Cash, SUNY at Stony Brook; Lynda R. -
Cumulative Index, 1937-1957 to the Nassau County Historical Journal, Compiled by Edward J
THE N A S S A U C O U N T Y H I S T O R I C A L J O U R N A L A Quarterly Devoted To Nassau County Life And Letters Cumulative Index 193 7 - 195 7 VOL. XIX SPRING, 1958 No. 2 (Part 2) Compiled by Edward J. Smits THE NASSAU COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY FOREWORD This Cumulative Index, 1937-1957 to the Nassau County Historical Journal, compiled by Edward J. Smits in 1958, has been converted into electronic form in 2014. Nassau County Historical Society (NCHS) Trustee David R. Doucette scanned and converted the text from the original printed edition. We omitted from that version the inside front cover (listing 1958 NCHS officers, trustees, meeting dates, and membership dues) and substituted this Foreword. Also omitted was information about the Journal, which was on the inside of the original back cover; it is replaced here at the end with current information about the NCHS and the Journal. Otherwise editing was minimal; insertions in the electronic version are indicated by brackets [thus]. Edward J. Smits compiled this Index when he was Assistant Curator for the NCHS. He has been a trustee since 1963 and is currently a Vice President of the Society. He was a curator from 1955 to 1971 and Director of the Nassau County Division of Museum Services from 1971 to 1992. Since 1983, he has served pro bono as Nassau County Historian. He was Planning Coordinator of the Museums at Mitchel Planning Group, from 1994 to 2000, and Chief Executive Officer, Museums at Mitchel/Cradle of Aviation, from 2001 to 2004. -
Revolutionary War 1775–1777
A New Nation Lesson Plans LESSON 16 Revolutionary War, 1775–1777 L . S u p e r Quebec 1775 io r British North America R. ce n re MASSACHUSETTS w L a . L H St Lake Champlain 1776 u r o n Fort Ticonderoga 1775 Fort Ticonderoga 1777 NEW L. Ontario HAMPSHIRE Saratoga 1777 Concord 1775 Lexington 1775 Bennington 1777 M NEW ASS Bunker Hill 1775 rie . AC . E S . YORK R H L R U T n S e E o r CT T M s 1777 British occupy a T d S w New York City. u RI a H l e Long Island 1776 PENNSYLVANIA British North D tain 1777 Princeton From Bri America Germantown 1777 Brandywine 1777 Trenton 1776 R. M July 4, 1776 Declaration A NEW JERSEY io R of Independence is signed h N Y O L A A in Philadelphia. N DELAWARE I D H VIRGINIA C Jam es R A . L 9ACH_34_35_L_1775.eps A P Great Bridge 1775 Revolutionary War P 1775–1777 A NORTH ATLANTIC CAROLINA British victory OCEAN Patriot victory S a SOUTH v Moore's Creek Bridge 1776 British supply line a n CAROLINA n a Proclamation Line of 1763 h R . 0 150 300 miles GEORGIA s 0 150 300 kilometers ie d In t s e W e h t m o r F ©Nystrom Education. Reproduced by permission from The Nystrom Atlas of Our Country’s History. Associated with The Nystrom Atlas of Our Country’s History Activity Book and The Nystrom Atlas of Our Country’s History Hands On Curriculum: www.NystromEducation.com 9ACH_34_35_M_1775.eps 210 TheSample Planning Lessons, Framework Materials, and Resources The Road to Independence 9ACH_34_35_K_1775.eps LESSON 16 Lesson Plans Battle of Long Island Document Packet Directions: All documents in this packet are connected to one another. -
The Dr. Daniel Whitehead Kissam House (1795) 424 Park Avenue, Huntington
The Dr. Daniel Whitehead Kissam House (1795) 424 Park Avenue, Huntington Dr. Daniel Whitehead Kissam came to Huntington from Glen Cove in 1795 to practice medicine. Huntington, a town of 4,000 inhabitants, had recently lost its two doctors – the Reverend Dr. Zophar Platt died in 1792 and Dr. James Sandford died in 1794. He purchased a new house across from the Village Green in the heart of town. The Kissam House is the second house on this property. In 1661, John Wescott built a house here and sold it to Thomas Powell in 1663. Powell, a Quaker, left Huntington in 1695 because he did not want to pay taxes to support the official church. The house passed through several different owners and may have been used to quarter British troops during the revolution. That house may have been burnt down by the British when they left Huntington in 1783. Timothy Jarvis, a housewright, acquired the property and built the present house. Because of its fine detailing, it is believed that he built it specifically for Dr. Kissam. Dr. Kissam had been apprenticed in New York City for his medical training and began his practice in Glen Cove in 1787. That same year he married Elizabeth Tredwell, whose cousin the Reverend Samuel Seabury became the first Episcopal Bishop of the United States. Dr. Kissam, his wife and four children (ages 1 to 7) moved into what is known as a half house because there are rooms on only on side of the hall. The house features elegant wood moldings, especially in the front upstairs chamber. -
The History Andecology of Little Neck Bay, LI, NY
The History and Ecology of Little Neck Bay, LI, NY '. :\ ~, ..-....,....,... ,.., .-no: ILLUSTRATIONS: ADELINE W. JAHfLKA ECOLOGY PHOTOS: RICHARD 'BLU~ Alley Pond Environmental Center 228-06 Northern Boulevard Douglaston, New York 11362 The History and Ecology of Little Neck Bay, LI, NY By Aline Euler, Ed.D. and Dyan Freiberg Illustrations by Adeline Wuttke Jahelka Current Photographs by Richard Blum Alley Pond Environmental Center 228-06 Northern Boulevard, Douglaston, NY 11362 www.alleypond.com Ph. 718-229-4000 SECOND PRINTING 2008 Table of Contents PAGE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION 1 MAP OF LITTLE NECK BAY 2 A HISTORY OF SINTSINCK 3 CHRONOLOGY OF SIGNIFICANT EVENTS TO PROTECT LITTLE NECK BAY 37 THE ECOLOGY OF LITTLE NECK BAY 41 PLANTS & ANIMALS 49 BIBLIOGRAPHY 62 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We extend a special thank you to the Long Island Sound Study and the Vogler Foundation for their financial support and contribution to the publication of this guide. We are very grateful to these grant programs for their interest in funding APEC's Educational Services to bring the role, function, and value of estuaries to the public. We would also like to thank the Long Island Sound Study for their support and funding of APEC's National Estuaries Day Events. The authors wish to recognize and thank our volunteer illustrator, artist Adeline Wuttke Jahelka who freely gave of her time and talent for this guide. This booklet would not be the same without her artistic insight and beautiful illustrations. We truly appreciate her patience and perseverance during the editing process! We would also like to recognize APEC Board members Richard Blum and Bill Nieter for their contributions to this booklet. -
1 3 . a P P E N D I C E S
1 3 . A p p e n d i c e s This volume is composed of all the appendices of the Proposed Comprehensive Plan for the Town of Riverhead, Draft for Public Review of July 2002. The appendices include extensive background information consulted in preparation of the Proposed Plan. Additional information is included in the text of the Proposed Plan itself, which is available under separate cover. Copies of the Proposed Plan can be obtained by contacting the Town of Riverhead Planning Department at (631) 727-3200. The following appendices are included herein. • Appendix A: Agriculture. • Appendix B: Natural Resources. • Appendix C: Scenic and Historic Resources. • Appendix D: Economic Trends. • Appendix E: Population and Housing Trends. • Appendix F: Parks and Recreational Facilities. • Appendix G: Transportation. 13 - 1 A p p e n d i x A : A g r i c u l t u r e A . 1 H I S T O R Y O F A G R I C U L T U R E I N R I V E R H E A D Since the earliest settlements, agriculture has been a mainstay of Riverhead’s economy. The first settlers grew just enough food to survive. However once basic survival was assured, they began growing grains to sell to communities in New England. They also cultivated fruits and vegetables and raised livestock to feed their own families and for local trade. In the 18th century, intensive farming led to the depletion of the soil. By about 1810, farmers adjusted their practices and began fertilizing their fields with fish scrap from local fisheries and later imported manure from New York City stables.