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While I fully realize
that I have already made this article more lengthy than perhaps you care
to have it, I cannot properly close without telling of a grist mill, of
a calamity, of your old schools and of the beginning of your two
religious organizations. I will begin with the mill. |
Grist Mill
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At the town meeting held
5 May 1724, the people voted that Nathaniel Brewster should have the
stream called Beaver Dam on which to build a grist mill and fulling mill
to be begun within two years and the right to the stream to be his and
his heirs, but only as long as it was used for mill purposes, otherwise
to revert to the town. At the time, Justice Brewster was the owner
of, and was probably living in, Little Neck adjoining Fire Place Neck on
the east and which he had bought of the Trustees at public auction 15
May 1716 for £40/13 shillings. He was then 65 years old and it
was very probably (sic) that after securing the grant for the stream, he
considered it too great an undertaking to build and maintain a mill and
dam at his age in life and that he dropped the project. At any
rate, on the 25th of March 1742, the trustees regranted Beaver Dam River
north of John Hulse's land, to William Helme, Jr. for a grist mill on
the same conditions as given in the former grant. There seems to
be some evidence that he did build the mill, but it probably was not
much of a success either because of the competition of the mill at South
Haven or the lack of proper power due to an insufficient head of water,
to get which would have flooded the road on the east of the stream which
we all know is not much above the level of the bank of the stream.
The mill dam is today used as a road bed over the creek. |
Terrible Calamity
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Of the terrible calamity
that befell this community, there is not an old family in this section
but knows about it. On Friday night, the 5th of November 1813,
eleven men from this vicinity went as a fishing crew over to the South
Beach. Just what happened will never be definitely known, but from
what was printed in the "Long Island Star" of 10 Nov. 1813 and
from what my late grandmother and father and the late Capt. Chas. E.
Hulse have related to me, the men went through "Old Inlet" and
hauled their boat on the "dry shoal" in the ocean opposite the
inlet. The shoal was bare at low water but covered at high
tide. While busily engaged in shanking out their net, they did not
notice that the tide was rising under their boat and it being not
properly secured, it floated away in the swift current running through
the inlet. When the realized their predicament, they began calling
for help, and set up such a howling that their cries were heard over
here in Fire Place, it being a clam moon-light night. One woman
here, went to a neighbor's and remarked that something must be wrong
over on the beach, as she was sure she recognized her husband's
voice. It is told that another rival crew was at the time, also on
the Beach, and that they were fiddling and drinking and some of their
members were drunk. Some one of them heard the cries of the
imperiled men and suggested going to their aid. He was greeted
with the remark: "Damn 'em, let 'em drownd" from another
member and the eleven men were left on "dry shoal" with the
tide gradually rising over them. Every man was drowned and there
were six or seven women left as widows here the next morning. The
names of the men were: William Rose, Isaac Woodruff, Lewis
Parshall, Daniel Parshall, Benjamin Brown, Nehemiah Hand, James Homan,
Henry Homan, Charles Ellison, James Prior and John Hulse. The boat
came on shore in pieces and eight of the bodies were recovered. I
have located the tombstones of some of them. William Rose was
buried on the ground on which this building stands, but was removed some
few years ago to the present village cemetery; Isaac Woodruff's stone is
in St. John's Cemetery in Oakdale; the two Parshall boys have a stone in
the old Patchogue Cemetery on Waverly Avenue; Benjamin Brown's body and
stone were removed to the Bellport Cemetery; Nehemiah Hand's stone is in
the Presbyterian Cemetery in South Haven. If the other five have
stones, I have failed in finding them. |
05 January 2005
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