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Only a hand full of buildings survived the Urban renewal initiative that devasted Huntington Station in the 1960s and 70s.  Now with the demise of the former auto repair shop at 1000 New York Avenue, there is one less.  Right next door to the now gone auto repair shop stands a surviror with a long standing conection to Huntington’s African American community.

The story begins in 1906 when Louis M. Brush filed a subdivision map for a large tract of land on the east side of New York Avenue, south of Olive Street.  The subdivision of 337 lots was known as Highland Park.  The subject property, 1006 New York Avenue, comprises lots 31 and 32 of the subdivision.

On August 23, 1909, Brush conveyed the property to Charles W. Fox (Liber 708, page 563).  Less than two weeks later, Fox conveyed the property to Emma Paulding pending payment of a $2,000 loan due in three years at an interest rate of 6%. (Mortgage Liber 346, page 124).  Under the terms of the transaction, Fox was obligated to insure the buildings on the property, indicating that buildings existing in 1909.  Although the 1909 atlas does not show any buildings, an item in The Long-Islander edition of October 2, 1908 indicates that Mr. & Mrs. Jurgensmaier had broken ground on a new residence in Highland Park.  The 1917 atlas identifies the owner of the property to the south of the subject property as Jurgensmaier.  The reference in the mortgage and the development of the adjoining property point to a construction date of about 1909 for the subject premises.

Over the next decade, the property changed hands several time among the children of builder George W. Fox[1].  Charles Fox sold the property to Elizabeth B. Gardiner (The Long-Islander, February 25, 1910, page 5).  She then sold the property to Oscar W. Fox (The Long-Islander, March 24, 1911, page 5), who then transferred it back to her (The Long-Islander, October 18, 1912, page 5).  Finally, she transferred it back to Oscar W. Fox one last time (The Long-Islander, March 17, 1916, page 4).  Interestingly, these transfers were all reported in The Long-Islander, but not found in the County Clerk’s records during a title search.

The property left the family in 1917 when Oscar sold the property to Cecelia Kehoe.  (The Long-Islander, January 26, 1917, page 4).  Apparently, George Fox had given the purchasers a loan to purchase the property and they defaulted on it because notice of foreclosure and sale of the property was printed in The Long-Islander on December 7, 1917, page 9.  However, it appears that the original mortgage from Emma Paulding had never been satisfied.  An action between Emma Paulding and members of the Fox family resulted in a judgment for Paulding in the amount of $2,532.36 on October 11, 1918 and the transfer of ownership of the property to George Fox (Liber 965, page 477).

George Fox then sold the property to Charles H. Ballton on April 19, 1920 (Liber 997, page 366).  The deed refers to a $2,000 mortgage, but the earlier mortgage had been discharged and no record of a mortgage given by Charles Ballton was found in the County Court records.  Charles H. Ballton was the son of the famous Greenlawn entrepreneur and farmer Samuel Ballton, known as the Pickle King.  Charles Ballton owned a moving and trucking company and also engaged in the sale of sand and gravel and refuse removal.  (Advertisement in The Long-Islander, September 11, 1925, page 17).

Less than two years later Ballton conveyed the property to the Crispus Attucks Lodge No. 9055 of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows (John H. Plummer, George Allen and Charles H. Ballton, trustees) for $3,200 (Liber 1033, page 595).  The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows was a fraternal organization first chartered in this country in 1843 when a lodge in Philadelphia was established with a charter from the Grand Lodge in Manchester, England.  In this country, African American Odd Fellow lodges were generally associated with the Grand United O rder, whereas white lodges were affiliated with the Independent Order.  The Huntington lodge was established in 1913 with 30 members (The Long-Islander, August 22, 1913, page 4).  It was named for the African American who was one of the five people killed in the Boston Massacre in 1770.

According to Richard Robertson, the nephew of Charles Ballton, the building was known as Odd Fellows Hall.  The Odd Fellows met upstairs (the Elks Club met there as well).  Downstairs was an apartment in which Mr. Robertson’s aunt Maude Smith lived.  Maude Smith was the granddaughter of Benjamin Ballton, who was Charles Ballton’s brother.

According to Mr. Robertson, the Odd Fellows was made up of brick masons from the south.  The only young members were a man named Shakespeare and George and Willy King, who owned the biggest black construction company in Huntington.

Maude Smith moved out of the building in the mid-1930s.  After she moved out, two of Benjamin Ballton’s sisters operated a restaurant there, serving what would now be called soul food.  Mr. Robertson said that after the end of the World War II the Odd Fellows started meeting at Rosetta Hall on Church Street, which was behind the firehouse and also owned by Charles Ballton.  Mr. Robertson thought the upstairs of the subject property remained vacant for a long time after the Odd Fellows moved to Rosetta Hall.  This recollection coincides with the sale of the property by the Odd Fellows in January 1945 to Max and Clara Herman for $3,875.  (Liber 2419, page 139).

Max Herman was a kosher butcher, who had a shop two doors down from the subject property.  He was in town by 1924 when he advertised in The Long-Islander (May 23, 1924, page 4) (“If you have chickens for sale, communicate with Max Herman, Butcher”).  According to Adele Kalstein, whose parents operated a grocery store in the same building as Herman’s butcher shop, Herman was an exclusively kosher butcher and attracted customers from a wide area.  Next door to the north was the butcher shop of Samuel Levy, who arrived in town as early as 1917 (The Long-Islander, January 12, 1917, page 6 and April 6, 1917, page 6).  However, Levy sold both kosher and non-kosher meats and, therefore, did not attract as many kosher customers.

Herman apparently owned the subject property as an investment.  It is believed that the storefront has been used as a barbershop since the 1940s.  Mr. Herman died on February 7, 1965 (The New York Times, February 10, 1965, Obituary section).  Later that year, Sam Raskin, as executor of Herman’s estate, sold the property to Brun-Wal Corp. of 780 New York Avenue (Liber 5764, page 1574).  The corporation conveyed the property to James F. Straub in 1970 (Liber 6860, page 301).  The current owner, Rehab Investors, acquired the property in 1979 (Liber 8670, page 7).

ADDENDUM:  Odd Fellows Hall was demolished in the Fall of 2018 as part of Renaissance Downtowns’ Gateway Plaza Project.  See http://renaissancedowntowns.com/projects/huntington-station/

 

 


[1] George W. Fox had six children, Chauncey, Harry, Charles, Oscar, Lillian and Elizabeth. (The Long-Islander, October 31, 1924, page 8).  Elizabeth is identified as Elizabeth Romano in an item in The Long-Islander, November 30, 1923, page 8 and a year later as Elizabeth Gardiner, The Long-Islander December 5, 1924, page 18.

A typical Long Island three quarter house sits behind two early 1960s high ranches on the east side of West Neck Road about a quarter of a mile north of Huntington village.  The house provides a glimpse into the humble nineteenth century background of one of the leading Long-Islanders of the twentieth century.

Although no early deeds have been located, Joseph Warren Conklin and his wife Rebecca appear to be the original owners of the house.  When one of their daughters died in 1901, her obituary noted that she had lived in the house since her birth in 1850[1].  Her parents married in 1835 and their first child was born in 1836.[2] It is likely the house was built at about the time they married and started a family.

A construction date in the 1830s or 40s is consistent with the physical evidence.  All of the details of the house point directly to the Greek Revival Style in the second quarter of the 19th Century, including: a braced, pegged frame of sawn spruce, no ridge pole, a brick/stone foundation, side hallway, front entrance entablature with glazed sidelights, frieze (“lay on your belly”) windows over 6/6 windows, porch with square columns, a small rectangular chimney set crosswise to the roof ridge and a debased fireplace mantle.

The rear kitchen service wing is unusual for Long Island, where the service wing was usually placed on the side hallway end of the house during the Federal/Greek Revival Period (1790-1850).

Of the Conklin’s eight children, two died in childhood.  The only deed found in the Suffolk County Clerk’s records under Joseph Warren Conklin’s name is for a 14½ acre triangular parcel on the west side of West Neck Road, which he acquired in 1841.[3] Warren Conklin was a farmer, who in addition to his home lot and the parcel on the west side of the road, also owned 10 acres on the east side of Oakwood Road and 20 acres on the east side of Woodbury Road about three quarters of a mile south of Main Street.

Unfortunately, Warren Conklin died in 1854[4] at the age of 45 leaving behind seven children ranging from 1 to 18 years of age.  A mortgage he had taken out in 1841 and secured by the property on the west side of West Neck Road was foreclosed the following year.[5] His widow advertised the lots on Oakwood and Woodbury Roads for sale at auction a year after his death.[6]

It must have been difficult for his widow to raise seven children on her own—one died three years after Warren at age 10 and another died in 1866 at age 22.  Rebecca Conklin borrowed $700 from George Carll of Dix Hills in 1866 at 7% interest secured by the nine-acre homestead.  The following year the mortgage was released in part to allow for the development of houses along what is now known as Mechanics Street.[7] The Long-Islander noted the new development:  “We learn that several of our mechanics have made arrangements to purchase lots on a new street to be opened near the residence of Mrs. Rebecca Conklin on the North Bowery.  The locality to be known as Mechanicsville.”[8] The entire mortgage was cancelled later that year.[9]

In 1871, Rebecca Conklin again mortgaged her homestead, this time giving a mortgage to Mary P. Baldwin to secure a $500 loan for a three-year term at 7% interest.  Rebecca Conklin, who had been a founding member of the Central Presbyterian Church, died in 1880.  At the time of her death, her only personal property was a cow, which was sold for $40 to cover her funeral expenses.  She left debts of $613.56 for doctor’s bills, notes and merchandise from various local stores.[10] Her family sold at auction three building lots from the homestead property as well as five acres of woodland on the ridge between New York Avenue and Oakwood Road south of the village, which may be what was left of the ten acre plot Warren Conklin left.  The sale of these properties yielded $890.  It appears that the 1871 loan from Mary Baldwin—which was secured by a mortgage on the homestead—was still not paid off at the time Rebecca Conklin died.  The property was purchased at auction by Mary, Henrietta and Juliette Conklin for $697.28 a year after their mother died.[11]

The three sisters continued to live in the house for the rest of their lives.  Henrietta, who was sickly her entire life, died in 1901.  Apparently, money was still an issue for the family.  Henrietta’s two sisters placed a notice in The Long-Islander thanking “the many kind friends who so generously assisted in defraying the expenses attending the funeral of our sister.”[12]

As early as 1880, Mary advertised her services as a dressmaker.[13] Juliette also engaged in dressmaking and millinery.  To accommodate their business the room in the northeast corner of the house was enlarged.  They also continued to sell building lots along Mechanic Street.  In 1905, the remaining  property was surveyed and divided into 10 lots including the lot with the family home.

Juliette died in 1914 and Mary died in 1916.  The lot with the house, now about an acre and a half, was sold in 1920 to Paul Williamson.[14] The property had a series of owners until the current owners purchased it in 1979.  In 1961, two lots were created from the front yard of the property; thereby obscuring it from view.

One of the leading figures of twentieth century Long Island—if not the nation—traced his family tree to these humble beginnings.    Rebecca and Warren’s son Alonzo had five children, one of whom was Grace Ethel Conklin.  Grace married George Tyson Grumman.  George and Grace Grumman’s son LeRoy graduated from Huntington High School in 1911, served in World War I and after the war established the aerospace company that bore his family’s name.  The Grumman name became synonymous on Long Island with fighter jets and space exploration.


[1] The Long-Islander, January 18, 1901, page 3.

[2] Conklin Family Genealogy on file in the archives of the Huntington Historical Society.

[3] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 35, page 10.

[4] He was the seventh person to be buried in the Huntington Rural Cemetery.

[5] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 87, page 504.  He had purchased the land from Brewster Conklin and given the mortgage to Erastus Conklin.  Erastus Conklin died and his executors included Platt Conklin, Warren’s father, and Brewster Conklin.  The foreclosed land was purchased at auction by David W. Conklin.

[6] The Long-Islander, March 2, 1855, page 3.

[7] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 144, page 227

[8] The Long-Islander, April 12, 1867

[9] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Mortgage Liber 84, page 595

[10] Suffolk County Surrogate’s Court File.

[11] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 256, page 242

[12] The Long-Islander, February 15, 1901

[13] The Long-Islander, May 7, 1880, page 3

[14] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 1030, page 449

In October 1870, Evelyn Ketcham wrote a letter to her brother George to invite him to her upcoming marriage to Sydney Buffett.  Sydney was from an old Huntington family, but had moved to Nebraska a year earlier to seek his fortune.  Their great, great grandson would eventually become the world’s richest man, but that’s another story.  What’s intriguing is Evelyn’s postscript:  “They have changed the name of Dix Hills.  The name is Elwood now.”

The name Dix Hills—originally Dick’s Hills, named for Dick Pechegan—was given to the area on both sides of Jericho Turnpike.  The area north of the Turnpike was known as North or Upper Dix Hills.  On June 7, 1870, a post office was established in North Dix Hills under the name Elwood (the office was discontinued on October 31, 1902).  A notice in the February 10, 1871 edition of The Long-Islander advised that the Postmaster General had ordered the Dix Hills Post Office discontinued and all letters and papers transferred to the Elwood Post Office.

Where the name came from is a mystery.  Anna Singer, writing in The Long-Islander¸ speculated that the name was derived from Elkanah Wood, whose family owned a good deal of land in the area (The Long-Islander, May 23, 1974).  The name Wood cannot be found in the Elwood area on the 1873 atlas and, although there was indeed an Elkanah Wood, he wasn’t born until 1871, a year after the post office was established.

Around the same time that “they” were changing the name of North Dix Hills, the residents of the area we know as East Northport were debating what to call their hamlet.  Unlike the situation in Elwood, the residents were not subject to the dictates of the Postmaster General because they did not yet have their own post office.  Instead the residents of what was then known as Claypitts—for the plentiful deposits of clay to be found there—met in the local schoolhouse to discuss changing their hamlet’s name.  Fourteen names were suggested, but the top contenders were Delmont and Fairview.  The vote was reported in The Long-Islander on January 27, 1870 in verse:

The name “Clay Pitts” we bid adieu

For we have elected the name “Fairview;”

And that by a large majority, too,

Over the names some had in view!

But apparently not all were happy with the new name.  A group of residents put forward the name Genola, which was considered by some to be the efforts of a minority to impose its will on the majority who had openly and fairly voted for Fairview.  That name lives on in the place where the community buries its dead—Genola Rural Cemtery.

Residents’ wishes would soon be subjected to outside influences.  This time, it would be the arrival of the Long Island Rail Road.  The Rail Road terminated at Northport in 1867.  But plans were soon formulated to extend the line to Port Jefferson.  It was decided to follow an easterly route from the Greenlawn station, rather than extend the line from Northport.  When the line opened in 1872, trains stopped at a new station south and slightly east of the Northport station.  Although the station is officially known as the Northport station, the area around it became known, at least unofficially, as East Northport (probably because the more geographically accurate South Northport would be too silly a name).

The post office, however, decided on still another name.  In 1896, it opened the Larkfield Post Office.  The name Larkfield was apparently in honor of the meadowlarks that could be found on the open fields of the area.  According to East Northport, An Incomplete History, in 1909, residents circulated a petition to change the name of the post office to East Northport.  And thus the name became official.

But still there was dissention. In 1952, the East Northport Board of Trade announced an effort to revert to the name Larkfield.  The Board of Trade claimed that mail destined for East Northport often found its way to Eastport or Northport.  Moreover, the growing community should have an identity independent from the village to the north.  The effort was renewed in the 1960s, but the geographically inaccurate name persists.

Another hamlet of Huntington has had the same name for centuries, but how it is spelled and pronounced has changed.  Once known as Whitman’s Hollow, the name Commack comes from the Indian name “winnecomac” meaning “pleasant land.”  Originally the name was spelled Comac and the historic pronunciation rhymes with the word “comic.”  Now most residents pronounce the name Co-mack, with the emphasis on the first syllable.

The change in pronunciation has been attributed by some to the rapid growth of the area in the 1950s and city radio announcers’ unfamiliarity with the traditional pronunciation.  However, the earlier spelling of Comac seems to support the “modern” or outsider’s pronunciation.  Whereas the modern spelling Commack should be pronounced Com-mack with the emphasis on the second syllable—not exactly the same as “comic,” but closer than Co-mac.

But the change of spelling occurred much earlier than the suburb boom of the mid-twentieth century.  In fact, the Commack spelling appears in the Brooklyn Eagle as early as 1868.  In The Long-Islander, Commack appears as early as 1891; and the last time Comac appears is 1894.  Therefore, locally it would seem the change in spelling was made in the 1890s.  And it would seem reasonable to assume that the “modern” pronunciation was being used as early as the 1890s—if not earlier.

It is unclear why the modern pronunciation seems to follow the old spelling of the name and why the change in spelling did not reinforce the traditional pronunciation.

These are but three examples in the Town of Huntington of the sometimes fleeting nature of place names.  We tend to think that places are given names and that those names stick.  But ask the residents of Fairground, Oldfields, Cow Harbor, Horse Neck, Fresh Ponds, and Sweet Hollow about the permanence of place names.

But a community by any other name . . .

When she died in 1932, Mary Campbell Stuart Symonds became one of the last people to be buried at Huntington’s Old Burying Ground at Main Street and Nassau Road.  She and several generations of her family are buried at the top of the hill where the British built Fort Golgotha in the waning days of the American Revolution.  From this high point, visitors to the family plot could enjoy vistas across the countryside to the waters of Huntington Harbor and Long Island Sound and all the farms that surrounded Huntington village.  And there across the street from the graveyard was the family homestead, an oasis of gardens, greenhouses, ponds, and fresh water springs surrounding the family’s home.  Only now that bucolic view of home has been lost to the steady march of progress that has created the downtown Huntington we know today.

Even during her lifetime, Mrs. Symonds saw her family’s homestead replaced by storefronts, houses, the Opera House, Huntington’s first artificial ice factory, the Fire Department, Huntington’s first Town Hall and the Trade School.

Symonds was buried in the family plot along with her parents, her aunts (who died as young children), and her grandparents.  Her grandfather Zophar Oakley was a successful and well-respected merchant in town.  He was involved with many local ventures; he served as president of the Huntington Mutual Fire Insurance Co., he was stockholder of the Cold Spring Whaling Company, and chair of the Whig party in Huntington.  He was so well regarded that many of his neighbors appointed him as executor of their wills, including Congressman and Long Island’s first historian Silas Wood.  Shortly before he died, when Huntington established a new Union Free school, some expressed concern that the town’s poorer residents would not be able to pay their school taxes, Oakley contributed $1,000 to help pay those taxes for them.

Zophar Oakley was from West Hills.  As a young man he purchased land on the northwest corner of Main Street and Wall Street (where Starbuck’s is today) and opened a general store.  In 1828, he purchased from the estate of Timothy Williams 12 acres on the north side of Main Street stretching east from Wall Street.  Williams father Nathaniel operated an inn on the property.  The inn stood on the north side of Main Street where New York Avenue now is.  Timothy continued the inn and also operated a store and for a time the post office from the same building.  Oakley continued to operate the Williams store, which was a true general store offering a wide variety of merchandise—“almost every article called for in the country.”

Oakley built a house northeast of the store in 1845.  The property included a spring fed pond, greenhouses, gardens and orchards.  It was considered one of the garden spots of town.  At the southwest corner of his property—along Main Street near Wall Street, Oakley rented stores to other merchants such as Isaac Adams who had a tinsmith shop and Fayette Gould who had a jewelry store.  By the 1850s, this row of stores was known as the Empire Block.

It is unknown how Zophar’s daughter Catherine of Huntington came to meet and then marry Carlos D. Stuart, a poet and newspaper editor in New York City.  Stuart had grown up in Vermont and upstate New York in the mountains near Lake Champlain and Lake George.  As a teenager, he went to Fort Ann where he found work as a bookkeeper and salesman in a local store.  When he was twenty, he left for New York City where in addition to his working as a salesman, he wrote and published poetry.  He then traveled the world sending accounts of his travels back to the New York Tribune.  He eventually returned to New York and became editor of the New York Sun from 1840 to 1850.  He was considered second only to Horace Greeley among the editors of the numerous daily newspapers in mid-nineteenth century New York.  In 1843, he published Ianthe and Other Poems. His poems also appeared in newspapers across the country.

He married Catherine Oakley on May 22, 1850.  Just a few months later, The Long-Islander announced that Stuart would be establishing a new newspaper in New York to be known as The New Yorker.  While this paper does not appear to have taken off, it did attract the attention of another poet who wrote to Stuart asking for a job:

I take the liberty of writing to ask whether you have any sort of opening in your new enterprise for services I could render—I am out of regular employment and fond of the press—and, if you would be disposed to “try it on” I should like to have an interview with you for the purpose of seeing whether we could agree to something—My ideas of salary are very moderate.

The letter was signed “Walter Whitman” and is now in the archives of the Huntington Historical Society.

Stuart retired from the newspaper business because of tuberculosis in 1856 Later that year, he and a partner, William A. Conant, took over Oakley’s store and purchased the two acres in the southwest corner of his property—the land along Wall Street and Main Street—for $8,000.  The entire purchase price was covered by a mortgage held by Oakley.

The partners placed a notice in The Long-Islander in September 1856 (a month before the deed was actually signed):

The Undersigned (under the style of Conant & Stuart,) having purchased the mercantile establishment of Z.B. Oakley, and replenished the stock of the same, will endeavor to deserve the favor of the public, and maintain the reputation of the “old Stand.”  Their stock embraces a general assortment of Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, Hardware, Iron, Agricultural Implements, Carpenter’s Tools, Paints, Oils, Varnish, Dye Stuffs, Glass, Drugs and Medicines, Leather, Boots and Shoes, Carpeting, Oil Cloth, &c., &c.  Wood, and all marketable produce taken at current prices.

Less than two years after the sale, Zophar Oakley died.  Stuart then gave up his partnership with Conant and transferred his interest in the property to Conant, subject to the $8,000 mortgage.  A year later, Conant, who would later represent Huntington in the State Assembly, sold the property to William Miles of New York City for $10,500 and subject to the $8,000 mortgage.  Miles would sell the property to Timothy Baylis in 1865, but more about that later.

Stuart was active in the civic affairs of Huntington, especially the cause of free public education.  Perhaps it was Stuart’s influence that led to his father-in-law’s $1,000 gift.  But he died in 1862 at the age of 40.

In May 1884, Carlos Stuart’s daughter, Mary Campbell married Joseph White Symonds, who had been appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court of Maine in 1878 and served for six year. How they met is another mystery, but it appears that, initially at least, they settled in Huntington because their only son—Stuart Oakley Symonds—was born in August 1885 in Huntington.  According to a biographical sketch, the family moved to Maine while the boy was a very young child and Joseph Symonds resumed his private law practice there.

By 1900, the Symonds had divorced and Mary moved in with her mother in Huntington.   By then the old homestead would have been unrecognizable.  What had once been an outpost west of the Town Spot was becoming Huntington’s down town business district.

The old store, owned by William Miles of New York City, was operated by Baylis & Wells starting in 1862.  In 1865, Timothy Baylis purchased the property apparently for his son Hiram Vail Baylis, one of the partners operating the store.  Hiram gave up the store because of ill health and went into farming.  But he held onto the property and rented the store out.  Unfortunately, the store burnt to the ground and Baylis did not have enough insurance.  The land was sold off lot by lot, but Baylis kept the eastern most lot and built a house there.

The old homestead—and the village—underwent a tremendous change in the years after the Civil War.  In 1869, William Conant, at one time Carlos Stuart’s partner in the general store, was now a member of the New York State Assembly.  He introduced a controversial bill to extend New York Avenue north from Main Street to the east side of Huntington Harbor.  The legislation was controversial because of the route and because of the expense.  In fact, the extra taxes borne by the entire town (which at that time extended all the way to the south shore) for a road that would benefit only those in the village area led to the formation of the Town of Babylon just three years later.  Huntington’s south shore residents were upset that town meetings were always held in the northern part of town.  The added tax burden that they had to bear for a road they would likely never use was the impetus to finally form their own town on the south shore.

Concern was raised about laying out the road directly across from the existing road, which would put it through Hiram Baylis land and require the demolition of his barn.  An alternate route between the Baylis property and the Stuart property was proposed, but then the road would not line up with the existing road.  The more direct route was chosen—the new road was to begin in line with South Street, proceed north “to a point opposite the north side of the barn of Hiram Baylis” then run northeast in a straight line to the harbor—that is why today New York Avenue curves at the Canterbury Ales restaurant.

Hiram Baylis house was spared, but was now separated from the rest of the Empire Block.  Baylis sold the house in 1888 to Philip Pearsall who converted it into two stores after he extended the front wall on the east and west of the building to create a flat façade.  The house still stands today on the northeast corner of Main Street and New York Avenue.  The first floor was home for many years to The Bombay Company store, it is now the site of Ricky’s.  The second floor has been occupied for many years by Hirschfield Insurance.

Besides necessitating the demolition of the Baylis barn, the road bisected the Stuart property.  But that was minor compared to the changes that would come twenty years later.

In 1891, Catherine Stuart sold the family homestead for $20,000 to a syndicate of 22 prominent Huntingtonians under the name Huntington Real Estate Association.  Fifteen thousand dollars had been raised from the investors and a mortgage was given for the balance.  The lot with the house was sold for $7,000, while the 30 foot lot next to Hiram Baylis’ old house on Main Street sold for $3,000.  Within a year, the entire property had been resold for a total of $35,228.25—a 93% profit on the original $15,000 investment in one year!  Several of the lots were purchased by members of the syndicate in their individual capacities.

The subdivision included the creation of three new roads: Stewart Avenue (a misspelling of the former owner’s name), First Street (now Gerard Street) and Second Street (one block north of Gerard street; it no longer exists).  Dr. Oliver Jones, who was one of the members of the syndicate, purchased many of the lots on the east side of the property.  He proposed extending the new Stewart Avenue across Main Street to Myrtle Place.  His obituary in The Long-Islander noted that Dr. Jones’ “well-known hobby was the opening of new roads.”  The doctor claimed that the new road would improve traffic flow between the village and the train depot.  But this extension, which would have come within a few feet of the new library building, met stiff opposition and was never built.

In 1910, Dr. Jones had the old Oakley-Stuart house divided into three parts and moved; the main 2½-story section to Stewart Avenue and the two 1½-story side wings to First Street.  They were to be used as dwellings.  The plan may not have worked out the way Dr. Jones hoped:  by 1914, the two sections on First Street were identified on the Sanborn Insurance Map as “vacant wrecks.”

One of the first lots sold was a landlocked one that was sold to the Huntington Hall Association.  The lot in the middle of the block included a narrow walkway to Main Street.  In the year following the sale, the Hall Association erected a large opera house, which quickly became the center of Huntington’s social and entertainment functions.  The wood frame structure hosted regular plays, lectures, entertainments and even poultry shows.  The noted African American leader Booker T. Washington spoke to a large and admiring crowd in the Opera House in 1901, just two days after his groundbreaking—and controversial—dinner with Theodore Roosevelt in the White House.  Unfortunately, the building stood for only 18 years.  A mysterious fire at about 1:00 a.m. on March 15, 1910 quickly destroyed the building, but thanks to the diligence of the local fire departments, did not harm any other the adjoining buildings.

Despite the calls for a replacement venue, the Huntington Hall Association sold the land and the corporation was dissolved in 1911.  That same year, the voters of the Huntington Fire District approved the purchase of land on Main Street just east of where the opera house had been.  The new brick firehouse was dedicated on September 10, 1912 and housed the first mechanized fire fighting equipment, which had been purchased in 1910 to replace the old horse drawn—or more often, human drawn—apparatus.  The firehouse served the district until 1958, when the current firehouse was built on Leverich Pace.  The 1911 building is now a furniture store.

The construction of the firehouse rounded out Huntington’s civic core on or across the street from Zophar Oakley’s homestead.  As the homestead was being subdivided, the town’s first library building was erected across the street in front of the Old Burying Ground.  The Trade School building was constructed at the eastern end of the homestead in 1905 and Town Hall was built in 1910.

The Trade School dates back to 1881 when two women began to teach girls how to sew in the basement of St. John’s Church on Park Avenue.  The following year Emma Paulding, daughter of Admiral Hiram Paulding, took over the school and eventually expanded it to include boys as well as girls and to teach manual arts, such as chair caning and carpentry, as well as sewing.  As enrollment grew (by 1903 over 150 students were attending classes), classes were held in various locations in the village but it became clear that the school’s popularity required a permanent home.  In 1904, the school was formally organized as “The Huntington Sewing and Trades School.”  The next year, Cornelia Prime, a local philanthropist, purchased a lot at the southeastern corner of the Stuart homestead to erect a permanent home for the Trade School.  The architect’s had designed the town library across the street 14 years earlier.  The school was taken over by the Huntington school district in 1937.  The district eventually sold the building to the Town, which in turn sold it to the Huntington Historical Society, which uses the building to store it archives collection and for its administrative offices.

Symbolically, perhaps the most important building to be constructed on the old Stuart homestead was Huntington’s first Town Hall.  For its first two and a half centuries, Huntington’s town government met in local inns to conduct business.  Eventually space was rented for the Town Clerk to keep all of his files.  But no permanent seat of government existed until the beginning of the twentieth century.  As Huntington grew, there clearly was a need for a place where all of the Town’s official business could be done, with a substantial jail on the first floor, and a courtroom on the second floor.  Dr. Oliver L. Jones offered the town free of cost a site just west of the Trade School, across from the Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Building, on the corner of Main Street and Stewart Avenue, and although there were other sites in consideration, this location was chosen.  Peabody & Wilson were chosen as the architects and Wanser & Lewis was awarded the contract for the erection of the new building, with a winning bid of $15,966.93.  The design called for all exposed work on the building face to be brick, and all stone work on the outside to be light marble.  All exterior woodwork would be cypress, and all interior work would be oak.  Miss Cornelia Prime, who donated the land for the Trade School building, donated the clock which sits atop the cupola built for this purpose.  Although it boasts an impressive façade, the building is rather small.  Less than 25 years after it was built, an article from The Long-Islander of June 17, 1932 reported a proposal to build a new Town Hall to help alleviate the unemployment situation in the Town, and as a result of complaints of overcrowding.  This issue was revisited in 1958, and in 1979 Town Hall finally moved into larger quarters, the old high school building—built coincidentally at the same time as Old Town Hall.

The wood frame building to the east of Old Town Hall, which once served as the headquarters for the Huntington Police Department and is known as the annex, actually pre-dates Town Hall.  It was built in 1894 as a bowling alley and ice cream parlor.  The bowling alley, which extended to the northeast, was vacant by 1914 and later demolished.

Dr. Jones’ bowling alley would have faced some competition from the lanes in the new Knights of Columbus building built in 1915 on Stewart Avenue across from Town Hall.  Those alleys were “said to be the best in this section of Long Island,” reported The Long-Islander when they were opened.  The local Knights of Columbus council, the first in Suffolk County, was organized in 1899 with 40 members.  When St. Patrick’s school was started in 1922, the first classes were held in the Knights of Columbus building.  Unfortunately, the building was destroyed by fire in March 1930.  The Knights apparently did not have the funds to rebuild and the burnt out hulk became a public safety concern.  In 1935, however, the building was renovated and completely changed to make it the Stewart Arms, which quickly became a social gathering place for many Huntington organizations.  Eventually, the Town took over the building for its growing staff.  Today the building houses a gym and offices.  The bowling alleys remained until just a few years ago.

Just up Stewart Avenue, the Consolidated Ice Company took advantage of the fresh water spring on the property.  The spring created a pool of clear, cold water, which supplied a steady year-round stream of water flowing north where it merged with other streams on the way to the harbor.  The company, also sometimes referred to as the Huntington Ice Company, was organized by Hewitt G. Sammis in 1902.  Huntington’s first artificial ice plant took advantage of the deep artesian well that produced water “as pure, sparkling and clear as Mother Nature can give.”  An assessment borne out by tests of the water and the ice produced from it.  The plant originally produced 12 tons of ice a day.  By 1906, the plant’s capacity was increased to 20 tons; five years later 40 tons; and by 1919 1,000 tons.  All this artificial ice—also called Hygeia ice after the Greek goddess of health, cleanliness and sanitation—supplemented the natural ice cut from local sources such as Prime’s Pond (now known as Heckscher Park Pond) and St. Join’s Lake in Cold Spring Harbor.  The natural ice was often 5 inches thick and sometimes even a foot thick.

In 1930, the company merged with several other ice companies to create the Long Island Ice Corporation.  In 1959, the local plant was acquired by the Losquadro Ice Group of Brooklyn.  Losquadro was acquired by Artic Glacier, Inc. of Canada in 2004.  The plant no longer produces ice and now serves as a distribution point.

Simon Hirschfeld, who built two houses on the old Stuart property, also took advantage of the natural spring there.  He marketed “Sparko-Crystal Water,” which he advertised as “pure, healthful [and] helpful.”  The water cost 50¢ a bottle delivered.

Of course, the stores along Main Street are the most familiar and oldest development of the old homestead.  Five buildings were erected east of the old Hiram Baylis house.  Now the site of upscale boutiques as well as a landmark diner, this row of stores over the years have also housed a meat market, drug store, barbershop, hardware store, grocery stores, and a harness shop that featured a large wooden horse that modeled horse blankets and netting used to keep flies off a horse’s back.

Hiram Baylis house had been converted to a grocery store operated by Henry Borchers, who owned a chain of 16 stores across the Island.  The headquarters were in Huntington and Borchers had a warehouse on Stewart Avenue.  In 1921, Borchers sold 15 of the stores to A.L. Beckmann & Co.

But the largest grocery business on the street was next to the fire department.  Sam Brumberg, who claimed to one of the pioneers of a new way of selling groceries known as the “supermarket,” in 1932 opened a store on New York Avenue in the building now occupied by Value Drugs.  Brumberg had opened a supermarket in Jamaica in 1919 and his chain of stores eventually grew to several stores throughout the Island.  He named the store “Stop ‘n’ Shop,” but was not affiliated with the current “Stop & Shop” chain that originated in Massachusetts in 1914.

This new concept was so successful that six year later, he moved to a larger store on Main Street next to the firehouse.  The new store boasted a modernistic orange and black sign with the name “Stop ‘n’ Shop” in raised letters.  The store’s name was also embedded in the new cement sidewalk in front of the store.  Until the recent installation of brick sidewalks, part of the store’s name remained in the sidewalk instructing children who reached that point to “hop.”  Parking was provided in the rear of the store on property leased from the estate of Dr. Jones.  Access to the parking lot was from First Street as well as a driveway from Main Street.

In 1952, Brumberg enlarged the store from 6,000 square feet to 20,000 square feet making it, he claimed, the largest supermarket on Long Island.  The store along with another in Huntington Station (now C-Town) was acquired by the Grand Union chain in 1959.  Within ten years, the store was empty.  Today the building has been integrated with the old firehouse and is home to Classic Galleries furniture store.

~ ~ ~

By the time she died in 1932, Mary Campbell Stuart Symonds, who continued to live in the house on the corner of Main Street and Nassau Road, had seen the place where she grew up completely transformed from gardens surrounding the family home, to the center of Huntington’s business and civic life.  But she helped to preserve Huntington’s past by donating numerous items to the Huntington Historical Society.  She also set aside in her will $1,000 “for the care of my plot in the old cemetery at Huntington formerly belonging to Zophar B. Oakley.”  The money was to be used to keep the grass cut, “to keep the posts and chains surrounding the plot in good condition and to reset the headstones whenever they may get out of plumb and to do such other things as may be necessary in the premises.”

A visitor in 2007 would have found that none of the headstones in the plot was upright; many were broken.  But using the fund set aside 75 years earlier and held by the Trustees of the Old First Church, all the stones have now been repaired and reset, except for Zophar Oakley’s, which was too far gone to be repaired.

 

 

 

 

Although now a busy commercial corridor surrounding by residential developments, in the early twentieth century the valley bounded by New York Avenue on the east and Old Walt Whitman Road on the west, south of Jericho Turnpike, retained its agricultural and rural character.  John T. Leiper, who was active in local politics, offered his horse farm for use as a camp for the Civilian Conservation Corps, one of the most successful programs of the New Deal.  The CCC was designed to alleviate unemployment and at the same time improve the environment.

Leiper was born in Pennsylvania in 1867 and played professional baseball in Columbus, Ohio and Portland, Oregon.  After he retired from baseball in the 1890s, he came to Long Island and lived on the grounds of the Meadow Brook Club where he served as huntsman.  After he acquired the property in Huntington, he raised and trained horses and hounds that he used in hunts throughout the then open country in Dix Hills, West Hills and Half Hollow.  He also raised gamecocks.

In 1931 he was elected Justice of the Peace as a Democrat.  He was not re-elected in 1935 and was also unsuccessful in 1937.  He served as a commissioner of the South Huntington Water District from 1937 to 1954.

Perhaps due to his political connections, Leiper’s property was chosen as the site of a Civilian Conservation Corps camp.  He leased six acres of the property to the army from 1934 to 1938.  Considered one of the most successful New Deal projects, the CCC operated in a military style to undertake environmental improvement projects.  On Long Island, the CCC was concerned with Gypsy moth eradication.  The young men who worked at the camp ranged from their late teens to early twenties and were paid a dollar a day in addition to meals and lodging.  They were required to send $25 a month home to their families.

By the 1950s, the Leiper property was being subdivided.  Leiper held onto about an acre and a half until 1959 when he sold to Vito and Louis Porcelli of 2375 New York Avenue (Deed Liber 4684, page 561), who further subdivided the remaining tract.  Judge Leiper died in Pennsylvania in 1960 (The Long-Islander, August 1960).Judge Leiper’s house stood at 2234 New York Avenue until 2009 when it was demolished to make way for a new house.  The camp was located south of the house.

Of course, the history of the area pre-dates Judge Leiper and the CCC camp.

The earliest deed located for Judge Leiper’s property is dated May 2, 1851 (Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 64, page 249).  David Ketcham conveyed 100 acres to Jeffery Smith of Huntington for $2,500.  The property was bounded on the west by the road from the Turnpike towards the house of Oliver Baylis (i.e. Old South Path, now New York Avenue); on the south by Timothy Carll’s land; on the east partly by the highway from Long Swamp to Wolf Hill (i.e. Melville Road) and partly by land formerly belonging to John Carll, deceased; and on the north partly by land formerly belonging to John Carll and partly by land of Henry Hendrickson.

The deed conveyed the land together with the building thereon.  Smith borrowed money in 1854 and 1855 secured by mortgages on the property.  The 1854 loan was $1,400 from Whitman Bedell and David Baylis (Mortgage Liber 45, page 409).  The second loan was $600 from Joseph Theal of New York City (Mortgage Liber 47, page 359).  It is possible that Smith borrowed the money to build a new house on the property.  This would be consistent with the physical evidence—sawn spruce framing, rubble foundation topped with brick, pre-Victorian styling—which points to a construction date in the 1850s.   J. Smith appears as the owner of a structure in this area on the 1858 atlas.

Smith sold the property to John O’Neill of Brooklyn for $3,000 in 1861 (Deed Liber 115, page 229).  By this time Smith was identified as formerly of Huntington, now living in Stony Brook.  The sale was subject to the two mortgages Smith had given.

Apparently O’Neill defaulted on the mortgages and the property was sold at public auction on the steps of the Suffolk Hotel in March 1871.  The successful bid of $300 was made by Russell W. Adams of Brooklyn, to whom the $1,400 mortgage had been assigned (Mortgage Liber 121, page 368).

Just a year later Adams sold the property to William Peet of Manhattan for $8,250 (Liber 184, page 187).  Peet was also an assignee of Smith’s $1,400 mortgage (Mortgage Liber 121, page 344).  Although Adams sold the property in March 1872, he is identified as the owner on the 1873 atlas.

Some time in the decade following his purchase of the property Peet died and the property was sold by his executors to William P. Book and James S. Book, both of Jamestown, NY, in 1882 for $6,500 (Deed Liber 265, page 239).  The sale was subject to a $3,000 mortgage given in 1875 (Mortgage Liber 121, page 362) and a lease of the property to Joseph S. Baitter from June 1881 to March 1884.  Absentee ownership indicates that the property was held as an investment and leased to local farmers.  However, a later newspaper reference states that James Book occupied the farm when he owned it (The Long-Islander, December 6, 1907).

In 1894, William P. Book (still of Jamestown) and James S. Book (now of Huntington) conveyed the property to Ella J. Book of Huntington for $6,000 subject to two mortgages totaling $3,000 (Deed Liber 414, page 401).  A subsequent deed identifies Ella Book as the wife of James Book.  A year later Ella Book leased the property to D.O. Lang of Brooklyn for nine months beginning June 1, 1895 (Deed Liber 426, page 463).  In this transaction Ella Book is identified as living in Pennsylvania.  Lang agreed to pay $250 in rent and was given the option to purchase the property for $5,250–$3,000 cash accompanied by a $2,250 mortgage.  The lease refers to timberlands as well as ploughed fields.  Lang was permitted to cut timber for his own use as firewood or fencing.  He was also authorized to make alterations to box stalls 10 to 22, but had to restore them at the end of the lease.  Evidently, the property was now being used to raise animals—a subsequent deed identifies the property as the Suffolk County Stock Farm.

A year after the conveyance to Ella Book, she and her husband sold the property to Charles Cyril Hendrickson of Queens for $4,800 (Deed Liber 437, page 464).  A year later (April 8, 1896) Hendrickson gave a $5,000 mortgage to Henry Hyde of Hempstead for a loan due on April 28, 1898 (Mortgage Liber 237, page 380).  By this time the property was known as the Suffolk County Stock Farm (The Long-Islander, January 4, 1896).  Hendrickson, who was in the construction business (he had the contract for erecting the Cullum Memorial Building at West Point (The Long-Islander, February 29, 1896), worked to improve the property.  By the beginning of 1896, he had had the house, barns and stables painted and repaired.  He also began clearing out the woods and had plans to install a steam engine in the barns for pumping water and heating.  The farm featured a half-mile track for the 18 horses Hendrickson had on the farm—a number he intended to increase (The Long-Islander, January 4, 1896).  Apparently, Hendrickson defaulted on his loan and Hyde sued.  The property was put up for auction at the front door of the Huntington House and Hyde submitted the winning bid of $5,000 (Liber 471, page 539).  This deed identifies the property as the Suffolk County Stock Farm.

Soon thereafter, Hyde was declared incompetent and was living in Massachusetts.  In 1903, the property was sold by his agent Edmund Hyde to John T. Leiper of Hempstead for $5,000 subject to a $2,500 mortgage (Deed Liber 540, page 338).  The description of the property is similar to the description in the 1851 deed except that the names of the neighboring owners have been changed and the acreage is now given as 88 acres instead of 100.

 

 

The story that has been told of the small, white, brick house at the northeast corner of Fort Salonga Road (NYS Route 25A) and Makamah Road is of an eccentric old unmarried woman—Miss Mary Osterby—who worked the farm dressed in her father’s Civil War uniform and sold beer to workers from the local brickyards.  It is a charming story of a quaint by-gone era.  Unfortunately, it is not accurate.  The real story is more complex.

Miss Mary was not an unmarried spinster; nor did her father fight in the Civil War.  Bentte Marie and her husband Bernard Osterby emigrated from Denmark in 1881.  He was a 47-year-old veteran of the Danish army, who reportedly received several medals for bravery.  She was 13 years younger.  They had been married for two years.  There are indications that he may have had a first wife and was the father of ten children, although this aspect of his life has not been confirmed.

Bernard Osterby purchased the four-acre property in March 1890 from the heirs of the Reverend Moses Rogers for $450.[1] Moses Rogers was born in 1793 and was one of the first Methodist ministers in Huntington.  Rogers had purchased the property in 1854 for $800.[2] The property included a large eighteenth century house.  This house may have been associated with the Presbyterian Church that was built at this corner in the late 1700s.  According to an account from the Reverend N.S. Prime, the church was removed in 1829 and “rebuilt at Red Hook” near the current location of the shopping center on the south side of Route 25A, west of Vernon Valley Road.[3]

Bernard Osterby borrowed $300 from Isaac Sammis of Northport to pay for the purchase.[4] Nineteen months after he purchased the property, Bernard transferred ownership to his wife.[5] A couple of weeks later, in November 1891, Mary and Bernard Osterby paid off the first mortgage and entered into a mortgage agreement with Elizabeth Slessor of Centerport for $600.[6

It is unclear when the Osterbys came to Fort Salonga, but they were here by 1888.  In that year, Jacob Jacobson had filed a complaint against Bernard Osterby for selling liquor without a license.  A trial on the complaint was set to begin, but Jacobson did not appear.  It was alleged that Osterby had threatened Jacobson.  In any event the case was dismissed, but Osterby was immediately re-arrested on a previous charge of disturbing the peace.[7]

Osterby continued to sell liquor illegally.  After a trial before Justice Strawson in Northport, he was convicted on that charge in 1890 and fined $50.[8] Justice Strawson heard about another complaint against Osterby two years later.  Johanes and Maren Kasso were recent Danish immigrates living near the Osterbys in a cottage at Breeze Hill farm (now Indian Hills Country Club).  Mrs. Kasso was a 32 year old mother.  She complained to Justice Strawson that the 57-year-old Osterby repeatedly went to her house while her husband was away.  It is unclear if criminal charges were ever filed, but Osterby again resorted to threats.  While out hunting, he ran into Mr. Kasso, pointed his gun in Kasso’s face and threatened to blow his head off if he didn’t mind his own business.[9]

Osterby was identified in an article in The Brooklyn Eagle in 1892 as a saloonkeeper.  He apparently catered to the workers in the nearby brickyards.  Apparently several others were also selling liquor—illegally—in the area and “the neighborhood has gained the reputation of being decidedly ‘tough’.”[10] So tough, in fact, that in 1896 blood was shed at Osterby’s place.  Osterby had taken advantage of a new liquor tax law, known as the Raines law, which allowed hotels to sell liquor.  So his place became a hotel where a number of foreigner workers from the brickyards stayed.  Two men, who apparently knew each other, boarded there without incident until one summer Sunday morning while one of them was eating dinner, the other, without saying a word, came in, picked up a large carving knife and struck the first man in the face, nearly cutting off his nose.  The other boarders were so shocked that the assailant was able to make his escape without any attempt being made to stop him.[11]

The next incident, four years later, was even worse.  At two o’clock on the morning of January 15, 1900, the entire house was destroyed by fire and one of the boarders, a 34-year-old immigrant,[12] did not make it out of the house.  The fire may have started when a gas lamp exploded.  Fifteen people were staying in the house at the time, including two children.  Osterby was awakened by the crackling of the fire and ran from room to room waking the boarders.  The woman staying with the two children escaped with one.  Mrs. Osterby returned to the house to rescue the other, a six-year-old girl.  Mrs. Osterby was badly burned on her face and hands.  The Osterbys lost all their belongings except for a small box of papers.[13]

The house was subject to a $1,000 mortgage the Osterbys had given in March 1899 to secure a loan from Francis Olmsted of Northport.  The house was insured for $1,000.  But it had been sold about two weeks before the fire to satisfy a judgment obtained by James O’Rorke, who had sued Osterby for unpaid wages.  No deed from this foreclosure sale could be found and the fact is that the Osterbys continued to live on the property.  According to the 1900 census, they were renters, but by 1910 they were listed as owning the house, subject to a mortgage.  Somehow, the Osterbys managed to hold onto the property.

An intriguing, but puzzling clue can be found in the County Clerk’s records.  On October 18, 1900, three documents were filed with the County Clerk.  The first is a mortgage dated October 13, 1900, which secured a $400 loan from Lewis Smith.  The security was described as the property that “this day was conveyed” to Bentte Marie Osterby by Lewis Smith.  The other two documents were deeds transferring the property—first from Osterby to Smith and then from Smith back to Osterby.  Both deeds were dated October 13, 1890—ten years earlier than they were recorded.  The deed from Bentte Marie Osterby to Smith identifies the property as being the same premises conveyed by Bernard Osterby to Bentte Marie Osterby on October 26, 1891.  Obviously the deed is a fake because it refers to a document with a later date.  And according to the mortgage the transfer of the property was contemporaneous with the mortgage, i.e. October 13, 1900, not 1890.

It is also interesting that the deed by which Smith conveyed the property back to Osterby—supposedly in 1890—contains a restriction:  “the said premises shall not hereafter be used for the sale therefrom or thereon of any spirituous liquors and in case such condition is broken the title to said premises shall be forfeited and the premises shall revert to the party of the first part,” i.e. Lewis Smith.[14] The one conviction against Bernard Osterby for illegally selling liquor was in July 1890—three months before the purported deed restriction.  But he continued to be identified as a saloonkeeper and he had obtained a Raines law certificate, which is issued to sellers of liquor.

We can speculate why these bogus deeds were created and filed.  Presumably, Osterby collected $1,000 from the insurance policy.  But there is no evidence that the  $1,000 Olmsted mortgage was ever paid–it was still open in 1957.  Most confusing of all is how they managed to hold onto the property.  Perhaps chastised, Osterby listed his occupation as farm laborer in the 1900 census.  But in 1910 he listed Boarding House.

It seems likely that the existing brick house was built to replace the house destroyed in the fire in 1900.  The original section of the existing house would have been too small to accommodate 15 people.  Brick construction was virtually unheard of for houses built in Huntington before the late nineteenth century.  Whereas using bricks to build a house after a devastating fire, especially when brickyards are located so close, makes sense.

In any event, Bernard Osterby died in May 1910.  His widow re-married by 1920.  Her new husband was an Irish immigrant named John Merry.  He was 16 years younger than his new wife and worked as a road laborer.

Mary Osterby finally sold the property in 1921 to Raymond Bloomer of Manhattan reserving for herself a life estate to all the buildings and the soil under farm tillage.  Bloomer could clear the woodland and build there.[15] Bloomer gave Mary Osterby a $1,000 mortgage, which was cancelled in November 1926.[16] Mary was still alive in 1926, but her date of death has not yet been found.

In 1948, Jane Bloomer Goverts inherited the property from her uncle Raymond Royce Kent, who died in Florida.  It is unclear who Raymond Royce Kent was or how he acquired the property from Raymond Bloomer.  There appears to be some family relationship because Kent’s niece was also named Bloomer.  Could the two Raymonds be the same person?

Goverts eventually lived in Rochester and may not have lived in the house.  In the summer of 1949, Eugene Mudge of Brooklyn rented the house.  Mudge purchased the house with one acre in 1957.  Mudge’s title insurance company evidently found the 1899 mortgage to Francis Olmsted that had never been cancelled.  Goverts filed an order to show cause in December 1957 to get the “ancient mortgage” discharged.

Mudge remodeled and expanded the house in the 1970s.  The current owners acquired it in 200X and expanded the kitchen. The small brick house remains intact and distinct, a relic of the property’s colorful past.  Marguerite Mudge, who was executive director of the Northport Historical Society in the 1980s, reveled in the house’s history, even if some of the facts were a little off.


[1] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 330, page 35

[2] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 77, page 59

[3] Huntington Babylon Town History, By Romanah Sammis (Huntington, NY 1937), page 189.

[4] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Mortgage Liber 193, page 539

[5] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 348, page 497

[6] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Mortgage Liber 205, page 590.

[7] The Long-Islander, June 30, 1888

[8] The Brooklyn Eagle, July 10, 1890

[9] The Brooklyn Eagle, January 15, 1892 and census records

[10] The Long-Islander, June 30, 1888

[11] The Long-Islander, August 1, 1896

[12] He was a Dane named Niels Kiepner, according to The Brooklyn Eagle; or a Swede named Neilis Cobke, according to The Long-Islander

[13] The Brooklyn Eagle, January 15, 1900; The Long-Islander, January 19, 1900

[14] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 501, pages 6 and 7; Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Mortgage Liber 271, page 173

[15] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Deed Liber 1026, page 241

[16] Suffolk County Clerk’s Office Mortgage Liber 483, page 554 and Mortgage Liber 606, page 92

Just a month after assuming the Presidency following the assassination of William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt was accused by a southern newspaper of perpetrating “the most damnable outrage which has ever been perpetrated by any citizen of the United States” when he invited Booker T. Washington to dinner at the White House.  (Washington was not the first African American to meet with a President in the White House.  Frederick Douglass had met with Abraham Lincoln.  However, Washington was the first invited to dinner at the White House.)

Just two days after that dinner, the educator gave a speech at the Huntington Opera House entitled The Negro Problem in the South to “one of the largest lecture audiences the local Opera House ever held.” (The Long-Islander, May 31, 1907).  This appears to have been Washington’s first visit to Huntington, but he would later develop a close and affectionate connection with the place.

In 1901, Washington was the leading African American in the country.  He had just published his autobiography, Up From Slavery, and was becoming an informal presidential advisor.  Washington was born into slavery in 1856 in Virginia.  Following his emancipation at the end of the Civil War, he worked in salt furnaces and coal mines before putting himself through school.  He was a well-regarded teacher at Hampton Institute in Virginia in 1881, when the Institute’s president recommended him to the founders of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama as that school’s first leader—a position he would hold for the rest of his life

An important part of his duties as leader of Tuskegee was to raise money.  Initially such efforts were focused in the Boston area, but later concentrated on New York City.  By 1907, Washington was looking for a summer home on Long Island, where he would be near the wealthy philanthropist who supported his school.  The Van Wyck farm on West Neck was offered to him for a seasonal rental.  The farm’s owner, Helen Van Wyck Lockman described the place in a May 7, 1907 letter:

“The Huntington place adv. on Sunday is charmingly located by the Harbor side with no road or nuisance of any kind between.  It is a double old-fashioned house with parlor, large living room, large dining room with three windows on the water and eight bedrooms.  An extra could be provided for a man in one of the outbuildings.  There is a private lane leading down a hillside to the house.  Perhaps three acres of land are enclosed within it.  I own 600 feet to the waterfront.  There are 4 stalls in the barn.  I have another barn on my land should extra stalls be required.  The modern improvements are being put in now.  Possession June 1st. Rent for 4 months or longer $1000.”

Four days later, Washington’s agent sent Mrs. Lockman a $100 deposit for the $750 rental.  At the end of the month, The Long-Islander reported that Washington would be spending the summer at the Van Wyck farm and would be working on a book—perhaps My Larger Education, which was published in 1911.  In July, he gave a speech to 1,000 Huntingtonians at the Opera House entitled “Education as the Solution of the Race Problem.”

Washington told The Long-Islander that he came to Huntington for two reasons: to work and to rest.  He also said that he found that nature and man had worked together well to produce such a beautiful spot as Huntington.

Washington returned to the Van Wyck Farm in 1908 and in August of that year  “delighted a large Huntington audience at the Opera House Monday night, [August 17th] the proceeds of the entertainment being to assist the Huntington Sewing & Trade School.”   Washington’s support of the Trade School is appropriate because the guiding principle of Tuskegee was advancement through education—not only of academic subjects but of trade skills as well.

Washington returned to the Van Wyck Farm in 1909 and 1910.  The Long-Islander later reported that he proved to be “a most delightful neighbor.”   Early in June of 1909, he lamented at being away from Huntington for so long and reports that his niece and nephew pester him every day about returning to Huntington.

After four summers renting the Van Wyck Farm, Washington decided to purchase a house.  He selected a secluded spot in Fort Salonga overlooking the Long Island Sound.  The house was picked out by February of 1911, but Washington hadn’t seen it.  He asked Mr. & Mrs. Philip Payton to look it over for him and to let Mrs. Washington know what it was like so that she would know what to provide to furnish the house.  He described its location:

The house is right on the Sound and about 1/8 of a mile from the post office Fort Salonga.  You get off the steam cars at Northport and take the trolley to Northport Harbor and from there you have to take a team to the house.  A party named Brown, I think, occupied the house last summer.  I think it is called the Snyder place.” (BTW papers, Vol. 10, page 588-9)

Through a series of transactions, intended probably to disguise the identity of the ultimate purchaser, Washington acquired the house in April.  The New York Times reported that the house was in “one of the finest sections of Long Island—a neighborhood where many wealthy New Yorkers have large estates.”  The Times continues that “it was at first thought that Dr. Washington contemplated the erection of an institution similar to Tuskegee Institute on his newly acquired Long Island tract, but it is not now thought that he will carry out such a project, as it is not large enough for an institution of any size.”

The Times also reported that “it was said that there was no objection when it was learned that the negro educator had brought land upon which to build himself a Summer home, but when the rumor spread that he intended to add enough land to his holdings to erect an institution similar to Tuskegee for the education of negroes there was considerable dissatisfaction.”  (In fact, the house was already built when Washington acquired the property.)  The Times reported that neighbors formed a syndicate and offered to buy the property from Washington for $1,500 more than he had paid for it and to offer him another tract of land on the Sound not far from the property.  Washington had given a mortgage of $5,000 apparently in connection with the purchase of the property, so $1,500 would have been a substantial premium.

The Long-Islander seems to have out-reported The Times because the local paper made clear that the house will be used by Washington as his summer home and not for his “great educational work.”

There is little known about Washington’s time in Huntington.  A recently published biography includes only one sentence:  “Booker bought a summer house on Long Island where the family spent summers, although he traveled and spoke much of the time the family was relaxing on the beach.”  [ Norrell, Robert J., Up from History, The Life of Booker T. Washington (Cambridge, The Belknap Press 2009)]

While in residence in Fort Salonga, Washington addressed the congregation at the Presbyterian Church and St Paul’s Church in Northport. And reportedly, taught Sunday school at Bethel AME church in Huntington.

Washington’s tenure in Fort Salonga was short-lived.  He sold the house to Henry S. Brush in May 1914.  He contemporaneously purchased a house in Huntington Village from Brush.  The house on Green Street is now the location of Finley’s restaurant and was apparently purchased by Washington as an investment because in May 1914 he expressed his hope that the house is rented and kept rented because he did want to lose the income.  Later that year, the financial condition in the south was depressed because there was no market for cotton.  As a result, Washington says, it is necessary for him to realize something soon on the house in Huntington.   Washington died in 1915 at the age of 59.

The Fort Salonga property came into he ownership of the Huntington Land Company (of which Henry Brush may have been a part) and in 1915 was transferred for nine acres of shorefront property in Centerport.  Eventually, a family from Forest Hills acquired the property and used it as a summer residence for many years.

In 2005, the Town of Huntington, at the urging of former historical society trustee Thelma Jackson Abidally, designated the property a local historic landmark.  When the last member of the Forest Hills family died, the property was sold to a local contractor who had plans to build an addition.  Those plans were never realized and the house continues to sit vacant.

The contractor sold the house in 2007 to another local resident who in 2009 applied to have the landmark designation revoked so that he could demolish the historic house and build a new house on the site.  The owner was convinced to drop that application and has instead developed plans to relocate the house closer to the road, where it will be more visible, and to build his new house behind the relocated historic house.  Although moving historic houses from their original location is generally not favored, it should be noted that in this case the house had previously been moved at least once already to protect it from the severe erosion.

In 1909, the Huntington school district undertook the construction of a new building that was promised to be one of the best, modern-built schoolhouses in the state outside of the cities, according to The Long-Islander.

The site of the school, across from Old First Church, had been the center of education in Huntington since the eighteenth century.  The Huntington Academy was built here in 1795.  The Academy was replaced by the three story wood Union School building in 1858.  Thirty years later a primary school (today the west wing of Town Hall) was built.

At a construction cost of $105,000, the new High School building featured accommodations and equipment for laboratory work, manual training and trade school work, drawing and other necessary departments of a modern curriculum.  The new building had a gymnasium, library, and botany room as well as three floors of classrooms and offices, (though the auditorium was not built until 1928). The school had two curriculums: one for those who planned to attend college, and one for those who did not.

In February of 1909, the alumni and other “generously minded citizens” were asked to make donations towards furnishing the new school.  Unfortunately, construction delays prevented the building from opening in time for the September 1909 school term, but by Thanksgiving the building was completed.  A picture of the old Huntington Academy was hung in the new building, and the small bell from the old school house was retrieved from the firehouse, after 50 years of residence there, and was also housed at the new school.  The fire department inscribed the bell with the years it served for fire duty as well as the time it called the children to the old Academy.

The official dedication was held on February 1, 1910 in the new assembly room on the second floor of the building, and was attended by over 600 people.  Gifts from alumni and citizens were received including the furnishing for the gymnasium by Miss Cornelia Prime, (who also donated $5000 to the construction), and a Steinway Piano by Dr. G. H. Carter, and a flag from Ringham & Campbell.  Speeches were made, a history of education in Huntington given, and music was played.  The next morning 380 students walked through the doors for the first time.  The number of students grew until 1958, when it had far exceeded the 600-person capacity.  Overcrowding had become such a problem that yet another new and modern high school was constructed.

The building was then used for the Junior High School grades until 1979.

 

At the beginning of the twentieth century only a handful of  commuters began their journey into New York City from the Huntington Train Station.  But in 1909, the Long Island Rail Road undertook massive system-wide improvements, including the construction of a new depot in Huntington, that helped to increase daily ridership from dozens to hundreds a day in the 1920s and to thousands a day now.

The Long Island Rail Road, founded in 1834 to provide a rail link from New York City to Boston, had arrived in Huntington in 1867.  The station was located on the west side of New York Avenue in a sparsely settled area two miles south of the Huntington business district.  Over the years, a thriving commercial district separate from Huntington village grew up around the station.

In 1900, the Pennsylvania Railroad purchased a controlling interest in the LIRR, as part of a joint plan to provide direct access to Manhattan.  With an infusion of new money after the merger, the Long Island Rail Road undertook system-wide capital improvements including the construction of Pennsylvania Station (which opened on September 8, 1910); direct access to Manhattan via tunnels under the East River; electrification of all trains west of Jamaica; and the elimination of grade crossings.

The improvements, with a price tag of over $50 million (the equivalent of over one billion dollars today), included $100,000 in improvements in the area around Huntington Station.  The local projects included building a new brick and stucco station house on the east side of New York Avenue; eliminating the grade crossing at New York Avenue by lowering the roadbed; and extending the existing trolley line, which then ran from Halesite to the train depot, down to Amityville.  The extended trolley line would be powered by electricity carried 35 miles from Long Island City to a transformer located east of the new station house.

In January 1909, the railroad unveiled plans for the new Huntington train station, which carried a price tag of $20,000 and featured a gambrel roof with dormers in both the front and back and two large columned porticos on either side of the waiting room.  The new station included direct access from the train to the trolley, which looped into the station on the north side of the tracks, east of the station house.

The new, improved service was greeted with anticipation that Huntington, which would now be just a fifty-minute train ride from the big, new terminal in Manhattan, would become “one of the most important towns on Long Island.”  The Long-Islander predicted that the improvements would “give Long Island by far the greatest boom in its history.”

“The magnificent new depot in Manhattan now nearing completion will in itself be a big advertisement for Long Island right in the heart of the commercial centre of the Western hemisphere,” The Long-Islander predicted.

Huntington’s new station house was opened to the public on October 21, 1909.  Although a “beautiful grove of big trees [had] been so wisely preserved at the northerly end of the tract,” the railroad did not have any plans for landscaping the one and half acre station grounds.  Beautification of the grounds was left up to the community.

The railroad depot and grounds are the first things that greet the eye of the stranger entering a village or city and the last thing upon leaving and the impression gained by the visitor from the appearances of the railroad station goes far towards forming his idea as to the character of the community,” The Long-Islander explained.  Moreover, properly designed and maintained grounds “will give an added dignity and sense of culture and refinement to the town.”  An attractive station “also means better conditions in other ways and a pride in the maintenance of the reputation of the place and the better preservation of law and order.”

The railroad graded the property and provided topsoil and fertilizer.  The Huntington Association, a group of Huntington’s wealthy summer residents, spearheaded a fund raising drive to underwrite the plantings.  Laurel and other attractive shrubbery were planted and “evergreens . . . set out so as to cut off the view of any unsightly buildings.”

Two years after the new depot was completed, the name of the surrounding community was officially changed from “Fairgrounds” to “Huntington Station.”  A decade later over 500 commuters a month traveled from Huntington.

The station became a point of pride for the community, especially after a new stationmaster, Maurice Schuck, arrived in 1916.  Agent Schuck, who lived in an apartment on the second floor of the station house, quickly gained a reputation for excellent service and for beautifying the station grounds, which were described as “an attractive park of stately trees, ornamental shrubs and beds of flowering plants.”  Year after year, he was recognized by the railroad for having the best-kept and most attractive station on Long Island.  Agent Schuck planted hundreds of flowers and bulbs that provided almost continuous bloom from June through the first frost.

Today the local community and the Long Island Rail Road have again joined forces to beautify this one hundred year old building located in the heart of Huntington Station.  A new group called Friends of Huntington Train Station has assumed the role previously played by the Huntington Association.

A century after their construction, the magnificent terminal in Manhattan is just a memory (having been demolished in 1963), but Huntington’s modest station house continues to serve local commuters.

Most Long Islanders are familiar with the Island’s history as a place where the wealthy of New York City built lavish country estates.  In this regard, we most often think of the Roaring Twenties and estates such as OHEKA, which was completed in 1919, or Caumsett, which was built in 1925.  But the Country House era is generally considered to have started as early as 1860.  An early local example would be Fort Hill on Lloyd’s Neck built in 1879.

But in Huntington the Country House era can be traced back even further.  In the 1830s, of one of Huntington’s most magnificent early homes was built on a hill on East Neck between Huntington Bay and Huntington Harbor.  The home commanded spectacular views as well as attention from the surrounding community.

The house incorporates the standard two-story, center hall massing and plan of a traditional Georgian house, but is embellished with Italianate style elements, such as a flat roof with deep overhanging eaves on massive scroll-sawn brackets that frame frieze windows and tall first floor windows.  A construction date in the late 1830s makes it one of the earliest Italianate houses in the country.

The house was built for John R. Rhinelander, who was a member of a wealthy New York City family that was one of the largest landowners in Manhattan.  Rhinelander was a doctor who fought cholera outbreaks in New York and Montreal.  Although the exact date the house was built has not been determined, Dr. Rhinelander purchased land in the area as early as 1838 and by 1840 he was invited to give the oration at Huntington’s Fourth of July celebration.  The construction of his house was notable enough to merit a mention in Benjamin Thompson’s History of Long Island, which was published in 1839.  Thompson described the house as “a splendid mansion” built as a “country residence.”   The estate was soon considered one of the finest in Huntington.

Throughout the 1840s, Dr. Rhinelander was active in Huntington affairs.  He was a trustee of the Huntington Harbor school district (and its largest taxpayer), a founder and first president of the Huntington Farmer’s Club, appointed to represent the town’s interests to the Long Island Rail Road, a member of the committee advocating for permanent and direct steamboat service to New York City (the current site of the Huntington Yacht Club was the old steamboat landing, which had been part of Dr. Rhinelander’s estate), and a delegate to the convention of Democratic Republican Party (as the current day Democratic Party was then known).  He also gave talks to the Huntington Library Association and became embroiled in a debate in the Letters to the Editor column of The Long-Islander over temperance issues.  His gardens were said to be beyond description and produced bounties of fruit including peaches, plums and grapes.  A visitor described Dr. Rhinelander as being known for his good humor and friendliness to all.  In a report on the doctor’s treatment of the captain of a shipwrecked schooner, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that the doctor’s “kindness on such occasions is proverbial.”  Apparently, some tried to take advantage of the doctor’s good nature, prompting him to place notices in The Long-Islander advising store keepers not to trust any person purporting to act on his account without written permission from him or his wife.

Dr. Rhinelander died in 1857 at the age of 62.  His wife Julia died seven years later.  In 1865, the estate was purchased by Dr. George White, who held the property only a  short time.  By 1873, Thomas Lord, Jr., the son of a wealthy New York merchant, had purchased the estate. During the Civil War, Lord had served as a captain in the Seventh Regiment of the National Guard and was a part of the official escort and guard of President Lincoln’s body while it laid in state at New York City Hall.  Shortly after purchasing the Huntington estate, Lord initiated legal proceedings to have his 79 year old father declared insane to prevent him from squandering the family fortune and marrying a 48 year old widow—but that’s another story.

The younger Lord, like Dr. Rhinelander, became active in Huntington affairs.  In 1875, he hosted a meeting at his house to consider incorporating Huntington into a village, but that effort foundered.  His wife was a member of the first Board of Directors of the Huntington Library Association, which was revived in the same year.  The Long-Islander wrote in 1877 that the mansion and grounds  are “perhaps the most picturesque site in this section of the country, commanding a view of the Harbor on the West, the Bay on the East, the Connecticut Shore on the North, and the Village on the South.”  While Dr. Rheinlander referred to the estate as “Rhineland,” Lord appears to have coined the name “Interbaien,” perhaps a reference to the Swiss resort town Interlaken, which means between the lakes.  Here it would referred the home’s location “between the bays.”

Lord sold the property to William Alsop of New York City in 1881.  Alsop died two years later, but his wife apparently held onto the property until 1891 when it was acquired by John P. Kane.  Kane was a partner in a large mason and building supply company in Manhattan known as Canda & Kane.  Two years after he bought the estate and following the death of Canda, Kane formed the John P. Kane Company.  Kane was the father of eleven children—ten by his first wife and one by his second wife, who was his first wife’s sister.

In accordance with common practice, the estate has been known as the Kane Mansion since 1979 when the Town undertook a historic structures inventory because Kane’s was the first name to appear on historic maps.  Kane also had the good fortune to have his name given to the street on which the house is located.

Kane died in 1907, but the property remained in the family for another five years.  In at least two of those years, the family rented the place for the summer.  The interior of the house was redecorated in 1910.  Two years later, Frederick L. Upjohn purchased the property.  Upjohn, along with his three brothers, was one of the founders of the Upjohn Pill & Granule Company in 1886 in Kalamazoo, Michigan.  The company’s name was changed to The Upjohn Company in 1902 and is today one of the leading pharmaceutical companies in the world.  Fredrick Upjohn opened the New York office of the company a year after the company was established.  He retired in 1907.  Upjohn was well known as a yachtsman and was a Commodore of the Huntington Yacht Club—located just down the street from his house.  Upjohn reportedly spent $20,000 remodeling the house and re-christened it “Highlindens.”  It was probably during Upjohn’s ownership that the two one-story flat roofed wings were added on either side of the house.  At the same time, the original bowed front porch was replaced with a straight porch on the same Ionic columns.  Unfortunately, Upjohn died suddenly at the age of 60 just five years after he bought the property.

The following year, the estate was advertised for sale in Country Life magazine as “one of the most unique and beautiful estates on the North Shore.”  The estate consisted of 22 acres, including 1,000 feet of shoreline on Huntington Harbor.  The “remodeled and modernized Colonial mansion” had “7 master’s bedrooms and 4 master’s bathrooms, which will appeal strongly to gentlefolk seeking a delightful country place of charm and pleasing atmosphere.” The property included the mansion, three cottages, a large greenhouse and a bungalow on the shore.

The lucky buyer was Thomas H. Roulston of the eponymous grocery store chain. Roulston’s father was an Irish immigrant who started the company in the 1880s.  The chain grew to boast hundreds of stores throughout Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island, including stores in Huntington, Huntington Station and Greenlawn.  Roulston was active in several Huntington organizations, serving on the boards of The Huntington Association (a forerunner of the Chamber of Commerce) and Huntington Hospital.  He also opened his gardens as a fundraiser for the New York Congregational Home for the Aged.

In 1939, the 65-year-old Roulston married Marjorie Hillis, the 49-year-old author of the best selling book, Live Alone and Like It, which provided advice for unmarried women on how to enjoy single life.  After the wedding, she said she would become an “old-fashioned housewife” at the couple’s Brooklyn mansion and Long Island estate.  Roulston died at High Lindens in 1949 and his widow sold the house soon thereafter.

David and Sue Davidson Lowe purchased the house.  Sue Davidson Lowe is a former theatre producer, playwright and editor and also the grandniece of the photographer Alfred Stieglitz.  In 1983, she published a biography of Stieglitz.  As a child, she had spent a lot of time with Stieglitz and his wife, the painter Georgia O’Keffe.  The Lowes sold the property to Joseph and Jean Mack in 1954.

Joseph Mack was a sculptor and his wife was a painter.  The couple met at the art school of Charles H. Woodbury in Ogunquit, Maine and later both studied at the American School of Design in New York City.  They briefly operated the Jean Mack Studios in New York where they created commercial murals, sculpture and illustrations.  Joseph Mack later founded Joseph Mack Associates, which was a promotion company that specialized in dimensional design for national advertisers.  In the early seventies, after Mr. Mack suffered a life-threatening car accident, the couple started the Huntington Fine Arts Workshop at High Lindens.  Five rooms in the basement were converted into sculpture studios and drawing and painting were taught in the ballroom.  The school was originally opened to adults as well as children.  But they “realized the real need was with the high school people,” Mr. Mack recalled, “young artists who needed help to get into college.” In 1978, it became the Huntington School of Fine Arts and eventually moved to a 5,200 square foot former boathouse on Huntington Harbor.  The school is now located in the former South Huntington Library building at the intersection of Melville and Depot Roads.

Joseph Mack, predeceased by his wife, died at High Lindens in December 2007.  The house was featured on the Huntington Historical Society’s 2008 house tour.