Footnotes to Long Island History
Early
Names Were Colorful
by
Thomas R. Bayles
Much of the flavor of the early days on Long Island is reflected
in the names of its villages, although several of the more picturesque names,
some chosen by Indians, others by the settlers have disappeared.
Amagansett was named from the Indian name of the
locality Ameng-ensett meaning "the neighborhood of the fishing place."
Aquebogue was known in the early days as Steeple
Church.
Bayport was at one time known as Middle Road.
Bellport was named for Thomas and John Bell.
Thomas Bell erected a house there in 1830 located on a neck of land called
Accombomock.
Blue point was known to the Indians as
Manowtasqoutt.
Brentwood was founded in 1851 by a band of
reformers who bought a tract of land near what was then Thompson's Station. It
was first called Modern Times. The present name was adopted in 1864.
Brookhaven village was known as Fire Place.
Canoe place received its name from the Indian
custom of carrying their canoes across from Peconic to Shinnecock bays. This
isthmus was known to the Indians as Niamuck. Nearby Hampton Bays was called Good
Ground.
Coram or Corum as it was often spelled, is
supposed to have taken its name from that of a local Indian chief.
Cutchogue is named after the Corchaug tribe of
Indians who had a village there.
Glen cove was known as Musceta Coufe
or the "cove of the grass flats" at the time the land was purchased from the
Indians by Joseph Carpenter. It is said that William Cullen Bryant was asked to
name two villages on Hempstead harbor and named them after the two Scottish
valleys of Roslyn and Glencoe, the Coe bring later spelled cove.
Jamesport was developed about 1835, was first
intended to be used as a whaling port, and a few whale ships were sent out from
there.
Lloyds neck was formerly called Horse neck and by
the Indians Caumsett. It was purchased in 1654 from Ratiocan, the sachem of Cow
Harbor. James Lloyd of Boston became the owner in 1679, and from him the neck
received its present name.
Jericho was known to the Indians by the name of
Lusum the land of which the village stands was a part of a purchase made by
Robert Williams in 1653. It was early settled by several Quaker families and was
the residence of Elias Hicks the founder of the Hicksites.
The great South beach was originally known to the
Indians by a name meaning Seal islands, because of the seals that were at one
time abundant on the shores. It is said that Five islands was the name given to
them as there were five islands originally. Fire Island inlet is also said to
have been known as Great Gut, and also called Nine Mile gut because it is said
that the sea made a sweep through the beach about nine miles wide during a
terrific storm in the winter of 1690. The first lighthouse was built there in
1858.
Mt. Sinai was formerly known as Old Man's, and in
Indian times as Nonowantuck. Tradition has it that the name Old Man's came from
the fact that in the early days a small inn was kept by an old man, and an
overnight traveler stayed at the "old man's" so the name was applied to the
settlement.
Selden was once called Westfield.
South Huntington was known in the early years as
Long Swamp.
Speonk is an Indian name meaning "high land near
the water."
Stony Brook was known by the Indian name, Wopowog,
and shells found in this locality is supposed to have been a favorite residence
of the Indians. About the middle of the last century the village was a place of
considerable shipbuilding. The present name came from a small stream which
empties into the Harbor.
Wading River was Pauguacumsuck to the Indians.
This is a very old Settlement, having been settled in 1671by eight men,
according to Brookhaven town.
Yaphank was called at one time Millville. The name
Yaphank or Yamphanke is of Indian origin meaning the "bank of a river."