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History of Brookhaven Village
A paper written by Mr. Osborn Shaw of Bellport for the Fireplace
Literary Club, and read by him at the Brookhaven Free Library,
October 5th, 1933
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Fire Place
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Introduction
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When Mrs. Post asked me to address you on the history of
Brookhaven Village, I little thought it was so long a subject and as I
already knew the outline of events, I thought it would not take long to
write it down and present it to you. However, I find that the
subject is such a long one, that to do it justice, one could fill enough
pages to make a small book and require weeks -- possibly months -- to
collect and assemble the data from tradition and from the authentic
records of the Town and County, therefore in the scope of this article,
all I can hope to do, is to present a brief and I trust, concise outline
of the history of the village. There is much material easily
available and it should be collected and formulated into readable
shape. I hope to do something of the sort for Bellport in the future
and would welcome coöperation from some here regarding the history of
Fire Place, but whoever elects to collect tradition relating to this
section, should not delay, for with the influx of new comers and the dying
off of the former old residents, all tradition is rapidly being lost and
what little is left is worth getting, even if only fragmentary.
While from authentic records is the only reliable and the only sure way of
compiling a history, yet tradition sometimes is the only basis on which to
assemble the data after it is collected.
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Brookhaven Hamlet Formerly Known as Fire Place
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Brookhaven village as you probably all know, was formerly
known by the name of Fire Place and at one time, the term was applied to
the whole vicinity including South Haven where the grist, saw and fulling
mills are given on the Town map of 1797, as "Fire Place
Mills". The unwise change of name from Fire Place to Brookhaven
occurred about the 1871, when a group of modernizers, or would-be
improvers, started an agitation to drop the ancient name. Meetings
were held and finally it was decided to appropriate the name of the Town,
because as one of the proponents told me some few years ago "there is
a brook along the eastern part, one in the middle and another along the
western part". Of course the brook at the west -- Osborn's or
Dayton's -- can not be considered as anything but in Bellport as it lies
well within the Bellport school and fire districts and the people living
there adjoining it consider themselves Bellporters. However for the
sake of argument at the time, Osborn's or Dayton's Brook was said to be
along West Fire Place and the change in name was made. I have seen
it stated that the name was changed in 1876, but Bayles' "Sketches of
Suffolk Co." published in 1872, states that the change had but
recently been made, so I assume it was about the year 1870 or 1871.
If anyone can give me the exact date, I will appreciate it. Hardly a
worse name could have been chosen, as from early colonial days as early as
1666, Brookhaven was the name of the Town and also the name of the mother
settlement of Setauket as well. In the the town records, in Book B
alone, there are fourteen references to Setauket as Brookhaven and it was
from the fact that Brookhaven was the English name, while Setauket or
Setalcot was the Indian name, that Governor Nicolls in 1666 and Governor
Dongen in 1686, officially named the Town from its then chief
settlement. When Fire Place usurped their old name, indignation was
high in Setauket. The Presbyterian parish there, the oldest of any denomination
in the Town, still bears the official name of "the First Presbyterian
Church of Brookhaven". Before, during, and for a number of
years after the Revolutionary War, the many mentions of the place are
frequently as Brookhaven, sometimes Setauket -- both terms being
synonymous -- and both terms continued to be used according to whether a
person chose to use the Indian or the English name. In like manner,
Setauket was often used as a name of the Town, but in latter years to
avoid the confusion which sometimes arose, Setauket was confined as the
name of the village and Brookhaven used only for the Town. |
Name Change a Mistake
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It was a sad mistake that the historic and quaint name of
Fire Place was dropped and the alternative name of Setauket and of the
Town substituted in it's place. But the error was made and it is to
be hoped that the people of this place will see fit in the near future to
restore its original name and thereby save the confusion and
misunderstanding that constantly arise by the village and the Town both
bearing the same name. To save such misunderstanding, I shall refer
to the village only as Fire Place in the remainder of this article and I
shall also refer to the river on the east only as Connecticut River, its
correct name, and not by its more modern nick name, "Carman's
River". |
05 Jan 2005
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