Forgotten Tales of Long Island
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About this ebook
Richard Panchyk
Richard Panchyk holds a master�s in anthropology from the University of Massachusetts. He is the author of numerous books for young adult readers, having written Engineering the City, Our Supreme Court, and several titles for the �For Kids� series, including Archaeology for Kids, World War II for Kids, Galileo for Kids, and Franklin D. Roosevelt for Kids. He is also the author of A History of Westbury, Long Island (History Press, 2007).
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- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5A worthless list of inane statements which could pertain to any location in the world. Very glad I didn’t have to pay for this.
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Forgotten Tales of Long Island - Richard Panchyk
patience.
INTRODUCTION
Presented here is a collection of odd, quirky and mostly forgotten true stories from throughout Long Island’s long and fascinating history. Most of these vignettes are from what are now Nassau and Suffolk Counties. Some of them take place in present-day Queens County (of which Nassau County was a part until Queens was annexed by New York City just before the turn of the twentieth century) and Brooklyn (also considered part of Long Island until annexed by New York City). These little stories are interesting both as social commentary and as forgotten history. I have culled them from numerous period sources, including newspapers, books and historical records.
I have enjoyed reading exactly this type of book since I was a kid. In fact, the first piece of writing I ever sold was a four-page trivia booklet I wrote by hand in leaky blue ballpoint pen on a piece of loose-leaf and sold to a thoughtful third-grade classmate for a nickel. As I grew older, I perused fact books, record books and almanacs religiously. For my college newspaper I compiled with relish brief news stories, odd items about train wrecks, storms and other occurrences from around the country.
Naturally, this book was a delight to write.
I hope that the reader has as much fun with this book as the writer did.
COMBINED, IT ADDS TO 205
It was reported that a former slave named Peggy Case died in Greenport on October 11, 1870, at the ripe old age of 103. Her husband Jason, also a former slave, had died eight years earlier on Shelter Island. He was 102. The couple had lived there in relative poverty for 50 years. Because they were so poor, in 1860, Jason Case had still been providing his services as a farm laborer at the age of 100.
THE SCORE IS RED BALL TO BLUE BALL
Warren Augustus Browne of Hempstead thought he had a good idea. In fact, he thought he had an excellent idea. He applied to the U.S. Patent Office in 1889, and on September 30, 1890, United States patent number 437,562 was granted to him for his invention of a new scoring device for baseball games. Browne claimed that this invention would make it easy for spectators of any intelligence level to see the score. The contraption consisted of a tubular socket and pole driven into the ground. It utilized red and blue blocks affixed to the pole to show how many runs each team scored in a particular inning. A system of pulleys was used to hoist the blocks into place. If a team did not score, a special striped block could be used. It is no great shock that this invention never quite caught on, losing out instead to scoreboards that had actual numbers on them.
THE HORSES MADE IT
On a Wednesday evening in March of 1854, a severe thunderstorm passed through the Huntington area. A local paper mistakenly called it a hurricane. Though it did not last very long, the wind and heavy rains caused heavy damage, especially in the Melville (also known as Sweet Hollow) area. Emerging from his house after the monsoon, farmer Daniel Baylis of Melville was dismayed to find his barn and an adjacent building blown almost completely down, its debris instantly burying four horses and three cows. The horses were buried alive under several tons of hay. It took some effort and several hours, but Mr. Baylis and his neighbors managed to dig the horses out alive, though badly injured. It was not reported how the cows fared.
THE DISAPPEARING CORPSE
An unfortunate black cook drowned off the steamship Vicksburg near Fire Island in the winter of 1874–75. His body was soon recovered and transported back to land by a nearby ice boat. Well, almost. It seems that the ice boat lost the cook’s body into the chilly waters on its way to the shore. Nothing more was seen of the drowned cook until the body was rediscovered by a man named Norton Jones in August of 1875, near where the poor man had originally drowned. Mr. Jones placed a buoy to mark the body, and hurried off to get help in recovering it. When he returned, the body had disappeared again, floating away in the current.
TWO PLANE CRASHES IN ONE DAY
In November 1929, a small plane that had taken off from a popular nearby airfield (Roosevelt Field) crashed in the heart of downtown Westbury Village, at the intersection of Post Avenue and Maple Avenue. The plane smashed into the porch of Daniel McLoughlin’s real estate business, and the twisted wreckage of the plane wound up in the center of Maple Avenue. Miraculously, only the pilot, James Pisani, was killed. Not two hours later, another plane crashed, this time in the neighboring village of Carle Place, less than two miles away from the site of the first crash. In this case, the aircraft was a large Fokker thirty-passenger craft. The plane crashed into the home of Arthur Wicks on Jamaica Avenue and destroyed it. The neighboring home of Joseph De Biever was also set ablaze and destroyed. Even though there were children playing on the street nearby at the time of the crash, nobody but the plane’s pilot, S. Marshall Boggs, was killed. Thousands of spectators were drawn to the site. Following the accident, Captain Eddie Rickenbacker, American flying ace and hero of World War I, visited with those whose homes had been destroyed.
SING WHEN THE WAR ENDS
A little-remembered war between the French and the English took place in the 1740s. Called Queen Anne’s War, it had Long Island colonists nervous about a possible menace by French ships. At that time there were 614 men from Suffolk County in the provincial militia, along with 601 from Queens and 280 from Brooklyn. When the French surrendered in July 1745, there was quite a celebration. As reported from Jamaica in the New York Weekly Post-Boy on July 20, 1745:
The Good News of the Surrender of Cape Breton coming to us in the Middle of our Harvest obliged us to defer the Time of Publick rejoicing until yesterday: when the Magistrates, Military Officers and many other Gentlemen &c. of this County met at this Place and Feasted together, and at night gave a Tub of Punch and a fine Bonfire, drank the publick Healths and especially of the Valiant commander immediately concern’d in this great Action, and joined in Chorus to the following Song,
"Let all true subjects now rejoice
The seventeenth day of June
On Monday morning in a trice
We sang the French a tune.
A glorious Peace we shall have soon
For we have conquer’d Cape Breton
With a fa-la-la!
Brave Warren and Pepperell
Stout Wolcott and the rest
Of British Heroes with Good Will
Enter’d the Hornet’s Nest.
A glorious Peace &c.
A Health let’s to King George advance
That he may long remain
To curb the Arrogance of France
And Haughtiness of Spain.
A glorious Peace &c."
HORSE RACES AND OTHER AMUSEMENTS
Horse races were quite popular in colonial days on Long Island. The Hempstead Plains, a great flat expanse near present-day Uniondale, Garden City and New Hyde Park, was seen as the perfect locale. In the 1660s, the British governor of the New York colony laid out a horse racing course there. He offered a valuable silver cup to the winner of the annual race; the March 1668 silver cup is still in existence and is one of the oldest existing racing trophies in the world. Racing continued on the plains for hundreds of years. Many truly massive races were run there over the years. For example, a great horse race was run on the Hempstead Plains on the first Friday of May in 1750. Dozens of spectators came all the way from Manhattan, taking seventy chairs with them across the East River on the Brooklyn ferry. Numerous horses were also transported on the ferry. It was estimated that the total number of horses at the races that day on the plains exceeded one thousand. Other fun activities of the eighteenth century included bull baiting, an activity that was advertised in 1774 as taking place in Brooklyn Heights every Thursday at three o’clock.
A LAMB A YEAR KEEPS THE MORTGAGE PAID
Gardiner’s Island was purchased in 1639 by Lyon Gardiner, who bought an Indian claim to that land for some blankets, a gun and bullets, a dog and some rum. At first he paid a sum of five pounds annually to the British Lord Stirling. The price was later reduced to one lamb per year.
DON’T TELL THEM ABOUT THE WHALE UNTIL MONDAY
In 1644, Southampton passed laws pertaining to whales that washed ashore on the town’s beach. The regulations said that the spoils of the whale must be shared among the townsfolk rather than be awarded only to the finder. The regulations provided that the discoverer of a beached whale would receive five shillings for his efforts, unless the magistrate or other appointed official decided it was not worth five shillings, in which case the finder would get nothing. According to the laws, anyone who found a beached whale on