Brookhaven/ South Haven HamletsChapters Throughout this site this icon indicates a note. Clicking it will take you to or return you from the note. Your browser will have to be JavaScript enabled -- most are.
|
© 2000-2008 John B. Deitz Build: 080511.1 Hosting 
| |
[ Up to Parent ] [ Shaw's History - page 2 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 3 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 4 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 5 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 6 ] [ Shaw's History Page 7 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 8 ] [ Shaw's History - Page 9 ]


Other Early Families
|
Members of the Hulse
family from Setauket also became settlers at an early date and they were
followed by members of the Hawkins family also from Setauket. But
on a whole, the settlement was small and continued small for a number of
years. By 1790, the Federal census taken that year, shows quite
some growth and the heads of families of Fire Place and South Haven
taken together, gives the following names: Mordecai Homan, Francis
Bates, James Greenfield (a Scotchman) (sic), Joseph Terry, John Rose
(owner of the land on which this Library building stands), Timothy Rose,
Zepheniah Conklin, Margaret Jayne, Jesse Rose, Joseph Hawkins, Isaac
Overton, Henry Hulse, David Rose, Benajah Hobart, Joseph Swezey,
Jeremiah Hobart, Stephen Swezey, Thomas Colley, Ezekiel Hand, Nathaniel
Hulse, Nathan Rose, Barnabas Rider, Abigail Hulse, Eunice Rider, Richard
Hulse, William Rogers, Abigail Woodruff, Abraham Corey, David Homan,
Morris Homan, Daniel Rose, Mary Gee, George Lambert, Thomas Ellison,
Jonathan King and Samuel Carman. It is unfortunate that the census
does not give the villages in which these listed lived, but it is
fortunate that the names do not appear in alphabetical order, but are in
the order in which the persons lived along the various streets and by
some little study, it is possible to ascertain from the census, with
quite a degree of certainty, the name of the heads of families of the
villages and settlements of any town or county in the State. It
should be remembered that in 1790, South Haven was the largest
settlement on the south side of Brookhaven Town and that probably most
of the above names, were residents of that place. |
1855
|
In 1855, on the map of
the county, (an enlarged copy of which may be seen in the Brookhaven
Planning Board office in Patchogue), there are given the names of
property owners. From Alfred Brown's to Snow's corner or Yaphank
Ave., along the South Country Road, there are 27 owners; 13 on Beaver
Dam Road; 1 on the School House Road, or whatever you now call it, and
none on Bay Road -- evidently an omission for we know that Capt.
Augustus Hawkins lived on it at the time. The Stump road is not
given at all and none of the roads have names on the map. |
Street Names
|
In regard to the names
of your streets, in the Long Island Atlas of 1872, Beaver Dam Road
appears as "South Street", School House Road as "Beaver
Street", Bay Road as "Atlantic Avenue" and the old Fish
Road running to Bellport depot from Post's corner as "Ruland
Avenue". In the 1888 atlas, the name of but one road appears
and that is Beaver Dam Road which appears as "Brookhaven
Avenue". From some of the notes left by my late uncle, Dr.
Edward Shaw, I learn that an old name of this road was "Fire Place
Neck Road" and I vaguely recall hearing it also called the
"Squassucks Road" when I was a boy. |
05 January 2005
[ Back ] [ Up to Parent ] [ Next ]
|