Learn More About the Hamptons!
By Anne Harvester, published Sep 03, 2008
Published Content: 208 Total Views: 11,106 Favorited By: 2 CPs
Embed:
In the old days when harried New Yorkers needed to get out of town for awhile, as often as not they'd head out to the Hamptons. Not to be confused with the Catskills - which is a mountain range - the Hamptons actually consist of a number of small villages (incorporated into two larger towns) located on the east end of Long Island.Interestingly, of the more than thirty small villages that make up the Hamptons, only nine of them - West Hampton Dunes, Northampton, Westhampton, Westhampton Beach, Southhampton, Hampton Bays, Bridgehampton, East hampton and East Hamptom North - actually contain that particular appellation. The two major incorproated areas are Southhampton and East Hampton proper.
The earliest inhabitants of what would ultimately become the Southhampton part of the Hamptons were Algonquin-speaking Indians known as the Shinnekok, part of a linguistic group that covered most of present-day maritime Canada, New England and the upper Mid-Atlantic States. The first European settlers consisted of a small group of Puritans from Massachusetts, who established the town in 1640.
Amazingly, their first trading post, which was built in 1648, is still standing today; called Halsey House, it is named for one of Southampton's first residents, Thomas Halsey, whose grandfather had received a generous land grant in England from Queen Elizabeth I's father, King Henry VIII. Having originally settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony about twenty years earlier, Thomas Halsey was among the founders of Southampton; his home is the oldest English-style house still standing in the state of New York.
East Hampton was home to related group of Indians known as the Montowkett. Their "headman" (the word "chief" is actually inaccurate) was Wyan-Danch, and according to early accounts, it was he who sold the tribe's land to the English adventurer and fortune-seeker Lyon Gardinier - total price, 1 black dog, some gunpowder, musket balls, and three or four Dutch blankets along with other miscellaneous tools and articles of clothing.

You may also like...
- Best Spots to Propose in the Hamptons
- Learn More About the Hamptons
- The Hamptons Real Estate: Not Just for t...
- Fourth of July Celebrations in the Hampt...
- Guide for Tourists Visiting The Hamptons...
- St. Augustine - Not the Hamptons of the ...
- Fourth of July in the Hamptons
- A Summer Vacation in the Hamptons
- Wine Tasting in the Hamptons: Local Flav...
- Fourth of July Events in the Hamptons
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Today's Most Commented On
Advertisment