This is the archive of past programs. Programs are listed with the more recent ones at the top, and going back to 2001 when the website was first developed.
The home
page always shows the next meeting of the NCHS, and the Calendar page contains more recent program meetings. This page page is the archive of past programs. Scrolling down through this list will back in the history of the NCHS to see past program meetings and other events and what has been presented at those events.
Garden City Apostle
House
Sunday, October 25, 2020, 2:00 p.m.
N.C.H.S. Annual Meeting, and a program on “Long Island’s Classic
Suburbs: Garden City and Levittown” Professor Paul van Wie, Molloy College
Levittown
Cape
Program: Garden City and
Levittown are two famous landmarks in the history of suburban America. Located just a few
miles apart on what was once the Hempstead Plains, the two communities were founded in
different centuries, under different circumstances, and for different reasons. Despite their
differences in origin and subsequent development, the two communities share some underlying
similarities. This presentation will explore some of those similarities and differences, and in the
process examine some interesting aspects of the American and Long Island suburban
experience. You may remember that Dr. van Wie spoke to our Historical Society some years
ago on “Nineteenth-Century German Settlements on Long
Island.”
Annual Meeting: We have had to
adjust to the new reality and held our first ever virtual annual meeting on October 25 at 2 p.m.
A brief business meeting was followed by the program on Long Island’s Garden City
and
Levittown.<
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Stevenson Taylor Hall at Webb
Institute
Sunday, May
17, 2020, 2:30 p.m. “Webb Institute‘s Glen Cove Campus” Renne Tremblay and Linda Waters
While the Webb Institute campus was closed
due to the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, we were able to hold our first ever virtual (ie: online)
webinar meeting using Zoom technology. The meeting was recorded and is available for
viewing at: https://youtu.be/0PNFded9pvQ<
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Nestled adjacent to the
Long Island Sound is Webb Institute, a unique engineering school where roughly one hundred
students are educated in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. Hidden behind huge
wrought-iron gates at the entrance to the college is a massive mansion on the grounds that was
once the “Braes,” the country estate of American businessman Herbert Lee Pratt
(1871-1945). Learn about the architectural history of the main building and its transition from a
glamorous 1920s summer home into one-of-a-kind learning center and dorms, as well as the
unique history of the property and additional buildings on
campus.
Our speakers were Webb
Institute seniors. For their “Maritime History of Long Island” course, Renee
Tremblay delved into the history of the Webb Institute’s campus while Linda Waters
studied the architecture of the original mansion, now Stevenson Taylor
Hall.
Although this was a
members only event, due to limits on number of attendees, the meeting was recorded and is
available for viewing at: https://youtu.be/0PNFded9pvQ
Thanks are due to Webb
Institute seniors Renee Tremblay and Linda Waters, who hosted and lead this webinar for us.
There were about 40 viewers and we were very pleased with this turnout and the kindness of
everyone on the
call.
Long Island and the Sea (book
cover)
Sunday,
February 16, 2020, 2:00 p.m. “Long Island and Whaling” Bill Bleyer
Community Church of East
Williston
Bill Bleyer, author of
Long Island and the Sea: A Maritime History, will present a PowerPoint lecture
covering the Native Americans who hunted whales offshore from canoes, to the first whaling
companies in America in Southampton, to the rise of industrial-scale whaling in Sag Harbor,
Greenport and Cold Spring Harbor, to the famous whaler Mercator Cooper and his trip to the
closed society of Japan, to the demise of the industry from the Gold Rush, the Civil War and
the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania. Bill is a retired Newsday reporter who has also
written books on Sagamore Hill, Fire Island Lighthouse, and Long Island and the
Civil War (co-author). Copies of his Long Island and the Sea will be available for
purchase and signing. The snow date is Feb.
23.
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The meeting is in the parish hall of the Community Church of East
Williston, which is located at 45 East
Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Rd. and East
Williston Ave./Hillside Ave./Rt. 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from
Roslyn Rd. or Ward St. (one block north of Rt. 25B), or you can park on Ward Street. Enter the
building using the door closest to the parking lot, opposite E. Williston
Ave.
U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Kings
Point
Sunday,
December 1, 2019, 2:00 p.m. “History of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy” Dr. Joshua Smith
Community Church of East
Williston
Long Island is home to
one of the federal service academies, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, which is located in
Kings Point on the former Walter Chrysler estate. Learn about the creation of the Academy, the
Kings Point neighborhood before the foundation of the USMMA in 1942, why the Academy
was created, and its distinctive war-built campus. The presentation will feature images of the
campus, especially from the 1940s.
Our speaker, Joshua M. Smith, is a professor of Humanities at the USMMA and Director of the
adjacent American Merchant Marine Museum. Dr. Smith is the author of several books on
maritime history and is currently writing “Yankee Doodle Upset,” on Maine and
the War of 1812
.
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The meeting is in the parish hall of the Community Church of East
Williston, which is located at 45 East
Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Rd. and East
Williston Ave./Hillside Ave./Rt. 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from
Roslyn Rd. or Ward St. (one block north of Rt. 25B), or you can park on Ward Street. Enter the
building using the door closest to the parking lot, opposite E. Williston
Ave.
Mt. Rushmore, Black Hills, South
Dakota
Sunday,
October 6, 2019, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. Annual Meeting and Luncheon "A Lightheared Look at the American Presidency"
Peter Bales, historian, professor, author, and comedian
Hendrick's Tavern,
Roslyn
Annual Meeting:
presentation of brief reports, and election of Board Members, will be conducted as per NCHS
By-Laws. The meeting’s business will be conducted between luncheon courses. After
dessert is served, Peter Bales will present his program.
The program for our annual meeting is “A Lighthearted Look at the American
Presidency.” Don't miss this fun-filled talk focusing on some of the American
presidents from George Washington to John F. Kennedy with historian and comedian Peter
Bales, who loves to tell audiences, “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the 21st
Century.” Dr. Bales has a Ph.D. in history from SUNY Stony Brook and is a professor
at Queens-borough Community College of the City University of New York. He is the author
of How Come They Always Had the Battles in National Parks? and a novel, Long Live Long
Island! Professor Bales was a researcher and writer for the History Channel and has been a
featured guest on Comedy Central, Lifetime, A&E, MTV, VH1, and FOX, and in
countless comedy clubs. He spoke at our 1996, 2007, and 2013 annual meetings. We guarantee
you’ll enjoy and learn from his presentation.
Hendrick’s Tavern, formerly the George Washington Manor Restaurant, has been
beautifully renovated. It was the home of Hendrick Onderdonk when President George
Washington visited on his tour of Long Island in 1790. A plaque from our Society by the front
door attests to this history.
The menu is a choice of: chicken paillard; seared salmon over garden salad; sliced steak
sandwich with salad or French fries; omelet with spinach, tomatoes, and cheddar or plain, with
salad; or vegetarian pasta primavera. (You can make your selection at the table.) Dessert is a
choice of cheesecake, vanilla ice cream, or raspberry sorbet. Family-style plated appetizers
with zucchini and eggplant chips and dip as well as soda, iced tea, coffee, or tea are included
and a cash bar is available.
A pdf copy of the meeting announcement is available here for you to view and print out and send in
the RSVP portion with payment for your reservation. Please make your check payable to:
Nassau County Historical Society. Or reserve and pay by credit card using the link below.
Cut off the form at the bottom, and return with your check to the luncheon chairperson:
Madalyn Klein, 27110 Grand Central Pkwy, Apt. 24Y, Floral Park, NY 11005.
Any questions, call Madalyn at 917-742-5229 or
Betsey Murphy, at 516-627-8674.
The price (revised early rate) is $60 if postmarked by Tuesday, October 1st, and $65 if sent
later.
Tickets will not be sent; check-in at the door; open seating.
Sunday,
September 15, 2019, 2:00 p.m. “Camp Upton: Soldier City in the Wilderness” Suzanne Johnson
Community Church of East
Williston
Did you know that one of
sixteen Army cantonments (temporary camps) was located right here on Long Island during
World War I? Camp Upton was established on 9,000 acres out in the wilds of Suffolk County
in 1917. The Camp would train 40,000 soldiers for the “war to end all wars.”
When the war was over, it was all torn down and auctioned off, only to be rebuilt twenty years
later when the United States entered World War II. The site of the camp in Yaphank is now the
home of Brookhaven National Laboratory. Our speaker, Suzanne Johnson, is co-author with
David Clemens of the Arcadia pictorial history of Camp Upton. She will present the history of
Camp Upton, focusing on the WWI years, with PowerPoint images from their recent
publication. Camp Upton books will be available for sale and signing for
$20.
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Be aware that Hillside Ave/25B will be closed for a
street fair from Willis Ave. east to the LIRR tracks on the 15th. Enter the church parking
lot from Roslyn Rd. or Ward St. (one block north of Rt. 25B), or you can park on Ward
Street.
LM-13 (Cradle LM) on simulated lunar surface,
Cradle of Aviation
Museum
Tuesday, June
18, 2019, 6:30 p.m. Curator’s Tour Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Landing on the
Moon Joshua Stoff, Curator
Cradle of Aviation
Museum
This dual event
(curator’s tour and film) is for paid NCHS members only—the
announcement card mailed to your home address will admit the individual(s) printed on the
card to the event. We are unable to accommodate guests at this special event, a perk for
members.
Members who have not yet renewed for 2019, and new members, must have dues postmarked,
or paid via PayPal, by Monday, June 10, 2019.
Questions about your membership may be sent to: Denward Collins, III,
Membership Coordinator
We will have a unique curator’s tour by Joshua Stoff of the Apollo Gallery and see the
new exhibition, Space: A Journey to the Future. Grumman Corporation won the
competition to build the Apollo Lunar Module (LM), the first spaceship to take humans to the
moon and arguably the most historically important vehicle ever built on Long Island. On July
20, 1969, the LM-5 Eagle landed Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon.
After the curator’s tour (and seeing the Cradle’s LM-13), we can watch in the
Museum’s I-Max Theater the Apollo 11 documentary, which includes recently
discovered, 70 mm. archival footage. The 47-minute, 2019 film received rave reviews as
“inspiring and truly awesome.” Members must bring the announcement card
mailed to your home address for admission. Doors open at 6:30 pm with refreshments; tour at 7
pm; movie follows tour at approximately 8:15
pm.<
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Directions: The Cradle of Aviation Museum is on Charles Lindbergh Blvd.
(click link for map), at Mitchel Field in East Garden City. Take exit M4 from the
Meadowbrook Parkway, following signs to Lindbergh Blvd and Museum Row. After going
through the traffic light at Earl Ovington Blvd., turn right when you see the life-size figure in a
space
suit.
WASP Republic Aviation, Farmingdale NY
1944
Sunday, April
7, 2019, 2:00 p.m. “Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) of WWII” Julia Lauria-Blum
Community Church of East
Williston
Since the dawn of
aviation, women have played a crucial role in promoting and participating in its evolution. In
wartime, between 1942 and 1944, over 1,800 women left their homes and jobs from all corners
of the United States for an unprecedented opportunity to become the first women in U.S.
history to fly military aircraft for the U.S. Army Air Forces. They volunteered as civilians in an
experimental program to train women to fly military aircraft and serve as pilots on the U.S.
home front in order to free male pilots for overseas combat duty. They were the Women
Airforce Service Pilots, better known as the WASP. Under the determined leadership of pilots,
Jackie Cochran and Nancy Love, the WASP successfully fulfilled their duties, flying over 60
million miles, in every type of aircraft in the Army Air Force arsenal and in every capacity,
except combat. During this lecture WASP historian, Julia Lauria-Blum, curatorial assistant and
archivist at the Cradle of Aviation Museum, will discuss the history of the WASP, from the
program’s infancy to its untimely deactivation in December
1944.
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward
Street (one block north of Route 25B). Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
Long Island Rail Road: Oyster Bay
Branch
Sunday,
February 3, 2019, 2:00 p.m. “History of the Oyster Bay Branch of the LIRR” David D. Morrison
Community Church of East
Williston
The Long Island Rail
Road was chartered in 1834 and is the oldest railroad still operating under its original name in
the country. It has played a vital role in the history of Long Island during the past 185 years.
The Oyster Bay Branch, built between 1865 and 1889, extends just over fourteen miles from
Mineola and has five of the LIRR’s thirteen station buildings from the 1800s, including
the only Victorian-style station. The Oyster Bay Branch is one of the most historically
significant and picturesque branches of the railroad. The presentation includes an update on the
restoration of the terminal station, turntable, and steam locomotive No. 35 in Oyster Bay.
David Morrison, is a retired Branch Line Manager for the LIRR who has written seven books
on the LIRR. Copies of his photo-history of the Oyster Bay Branch and his newest book on the
LIRR’s Main Line east from Bethpage to Greenport will be available for purchase ($20)
and signing.
Snow date (if needed) is Sun. Feb.
10.
font>
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward
Street (one block north of Route 25B). Please park in spaces closest to church (those near
Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St. Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
Hillwood
Sunday,
December 2, 2018, 2:00 p.m. “Marjorie Merriweather Post and her Long Island estate,
Hillwood” Kenneth G. Mensing, formerly historian at C. W. Post
Community Church of East
Williston
Take a journey back in
time with a historic slide presentation about famed Post Cereal heiress Marjorie Merriweather
Post and her Long Island estate, Hillwood. The estate is now home to LIU-Post College.
Former C.W. Post Historian, Kenneth G. Mensing, uses Post family private photos to reveal a
glimpse into this magnificent former estate and the pioneering businesswoman who called it
home.
This program is free.
Guests are welcome and encouraged to attend; please invite your friends.
Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward
Street (one block north of Route 25B). Please park in spaces closest to church (those near
Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St. Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
Sunday,
October 21, 2018, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. Annual Meeting and Luncheon "Dancing into History with the Castles"
Martha Griffin and Marc Casslar, dance historicans
Hendrick's Tavern,
Roslyn
Annual Meeting:
presentation of brief reports, and election of Board Members, will be conducted as per NCHS
By-Laws. The meeting’s business will be conducted between luncheon courses. After
dessert is served, Martha Griffin and Marc Casslar will present their program.
Irene and Vernon Castle were America’s leading dance couple in the 1910s who
popularized the fox trot, tango and other social dances at “Castles by the Sea” on
the Boardwalk in Long Beach, Long Island.
Dance historians Martha Griffin and Marc Casslar, who are members of the Vintage Dance
“Polite Society,” will introduce us to these celebrities who lived in Manhasset.
They will demonstrate their dances in period costume and explain the significant contributions
of the Castles to dance history. Their program is brought to you by Kandie Carle of K&C
Enterprises, East Haddam, CT.
We are looking forward to a very special afternoon commemorating this legendary couple who
brought charm and much joy to society with their innovative elegant social dances at
magnificent dance palaces. Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers immortalized them in their 1939
film The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle. We will have music from the 1910s for your
listening and dancing pleasure.
Hendrick’s Tavern, formerly the George Washington Manor Restaurant, has been
beautifully renovated. It was the home of Hendrick Onderdonk when President George
Washington visited on his tour of Long Island in 1790. A plaque from our Society by the front
door attests to this history.
The menu includes a choice of: chicken paillard; seared salmon over garden salad; sliced steak
sandwich with salad or French fries; omelet with spinach, tomatoes, and cheddar or plain, with
salad or French fries; or vegetarian pasta primavera. Dessert is a choice of cheesecake, vanilla
ice cream, or raspberry sorbet. Soda, iced tea, coffee, or tea is included and a cash bar is
available.
A pdf copy of the meeting announcement is available here for you to view and print out and send in
the RSVP portion with payment for your reservation. Please make your check payable to:
Nassau County Historical Society. Or reserve and pay by credit card using the link below.
Cut off the form at the bottom, and return with your check to the luncheon chairperson:
Madalyn Klein, 27110 Grand Central Pkwy, Apt. 24Y, Floral Park, NY 11005.
Any questions, call Madalyn at 917-742-5229. Early luncheon reservations closed on October
9th. There are still seats/tables available. We're looking for a minimum of 60 seats, and
currently are just shy of this at 52. Reservations postmarked after the 9th are now $65.00.
Tickets will not be sent; check-in at the door; open seating. Directions: Hendrick’s is at
1305 Old Northern Boulevard in
Roslyn (click link for map). The entrance is just north of the Clock Tower (valet
parking).
Weathervane designed by Architect Olive
Tjaden
Sunday,
September 16, 2018, 2:00 p.m. “Architect Olive Tjaden: Designing Suburbia in Garden City and
Beyond” Millicent D. Vollono and Lauren V. Drapala, authors
Garden City Senior
Center
Olive Tjaden (1904-1997)
began her architectural career at a time when residential architecture was at the nation’s
forefront. Graduating from Cornell University’s architecture program in 1925, Tjaden
was the only female member of the American Institute of Architects for years. Although she
achieved her greatest success as a residential designer, she created buildings for automobile
dealerships, beauty salons, and religious organizations. Forming her own firm in the late 1920s
in Garden City, Tjaden was able to promote her unique status as a female architect to promote
her work and expertise to women, making use of the networks provided by women’s
social clubs. Tjaden was a prolific designer, building over 2,000 commissions in the twenty
years of her New York office and later in South Florida. Our speakers are the authors of an
article on Tjaden in the 2016 Nassau County Historical Society Journal, v.71, pp.1-14. Their
illustrated presentation will include additional information from their continuing research. We
will celebrate Olive Tjaden’s life and career, with special emphasis on her many Garden
City houses, as we uncover one of Long Island's little-known
treasures.
Directions: This joint
program with the Garden City Historical Society will be held in the Garden City Senior Center,
6 Golf Club Lane (click link
for map), NW corner of Golf Club Lane and Eleventh St., across the street from Olive
Tjaden’s own house. After the program, we will go next door to the Garden City
Historical Society’s Apostle House Museum, for refreshments and a tour of their
museum.
Robert Moses, by GaryViskupic
Sunday, June
10, 2018, 2:00 p.m. “The Land of Moses: Robert Moses and Modern Long
Island” Joshua Ruff and Jonathan Olly, Long Island Museum curators
Community Church of East
Williston
The significance and
impact of Robert Moses (1888-1981) on Long Island can hardly be overstated. Previewing their
upcoming exhibition at the Long Island Museum in Stony Brook,
opening June 22, curators Joshua Ruff and Jonathan Olly will provide a reappraisal of the
extraordinary and controversial builder and planner. Prolific, brash, and strategically brilliant,
Moses helped determine the environments in which we continue to live. Moses redefined
transportation infrastructure and recreational and cultural possibilities for generations of Long
Islanders and visitors. His legacies range from his largely realized Long Island State Parks
Commission blueprintin 1924 to his late career challenges and
failures.
Guests are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This
program is free.
Light refreshments follow the illustrated
program.
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located
at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward
Street (one block north of Route 25B). Please park in spaces closest to church (those near
Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St. Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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The Suffragents: How Women Used Men to Get the
Vote
Sunday, April 22, 2018, 2:00 p.m. “The Suffragents: How Women Used Men to Get the
Vote” Brooke Kroeger
Jericho Public
Library
Note: This is a change of date and location
from what was previously
announced.<
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The Suffragents is the untold story of how some of New York’s most
powerful men formed the Men’s League for Woman Suffrage, which grew between
1909 and 1917 from 150 founding members into a force of thousands across thirty-five states.
Ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920 for women’s suffrage culminated more
than 70 years of struggle.
Brooke Kroeger explores the formation of the League and the men who instigated it to involve
themselves with the suffrage campaign, what they did at the behest of the movement’s
female leadership, and why. She details the National American Woman Suffrage
Association’s strategic decision to accept their organized help and then to deploy these
influential new allies as suffrage foot soldiers, a role they accepted with uncommon grace. Led
by such luminaries as Oswald Garrison Villard, John Dewey, Max Eastman, Rabbi Stephen S.
Wise, and George Foster Peabody, members of the League worked the streets, the stage, the
press, and the legislative and executive branches of government. In the process, they helped
convince waffling politicians, a dismissive public, and a largely hostile press to support the
women’s demand. Together, they swayed the course of
history.<
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At least one of the suffragents had a Nassau County, Long Island connection.
James Lees Laidlaw who had a country home in Sands Point was president of the state and
national Men's League for Woman's
Suffrage.
There will be limited copies of the 372 page book available for purchase, $25
per copy, and signing at the meeting. Respond to: webmaster@nassaucountyhistori
calsociety.org by April 5, 2018, if you wish to purchase a book(s), and a copy/copies will
be reserved for
you.
Guests are welcome to attend; invite
your friends. Light refreshments follow the program.
Directions: The Jericho Library is at 1 Merry Lane (click link for map), off (south of) Rt. 25. From Rt. 106
(Exit 41N from the Rt. 495/LIE), go east on 25 a short distance; turn right (south) onto Merry
Lane and the library will be on your
left.<
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SPIES! Exhibit Logo of the Three Village Historical
Society<
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<
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Sunday, February 11,
2018, 2:00 p.m. “The Culper Spy Ring in the Revolutionary War” Beverly C. Tyler
Community Church of East Williston
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After George Washington suffered heavy losses at the
beginning of the war, he realized that reliable information about British troop movements was
vital. General Washington asked Major Benjamin Tallmadge from Setauket to organize a spy
network. Now known as the Culper Spy Ring, it was most active during the years from 1778 to
1781.
Tallmadge first enlisted Abraham Woodhull
(alias Culper, Sr.), who was also from Setauket. Later Robert Townsend (“Culper,
Jr.”) from Oyster Bay (today’s Raynham Hall) who was living in Manhattan
joined the group. SPIES! How a Group of Long Island Patriots Helped George Washington
Win the Revolution is the Three Village Historical Society’s exhibition in their
History Center (93 North Country Road, Setauket). The spy ring has been fictionalized in the
AMC television series, Turn: Washington’s
Spies.
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Beverly C. Tyler is a writer,
author, photographer, and lecturer on local history in Setauket. He conducts walking tours and
field trips as Revolutionary War farmer and spy Abraham Woodhull and as a 19th century ship
captain. Mr. Tyler has appeared on the History Channel’s Histories Mysteries
production “Spies of the Revolutionary
War.”
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A 1778 document in the Three
Village Historical Society collection that every man who stayed on Long Island after the
British took control was required to sign to swear allegiance to the
king.
<
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Mr. Tyler writes a local history
column History Close at
Hand for the Village Times Herald. He has written more than 800 local history articles
over the past thirty years and his articles have been published in a number of Long Island and
regional newspapers and
magazines.<
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Check this link for information
about the Three Village Historical Society exhibit SPIES!
<
/p>
Guests
are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free.
Light refreshments follow the illustrated
program.
Directions:
The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner
of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter
the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward Street (one block north of Route 25B).
Please park in spaces closest to church (those near Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St.
Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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Colorized Postcard of Camp Mills
in World War
One
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/font>
courtesy Jim
McKenna
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Sunday, December 3, 2017, 2:00 p.m. “Camp Albert L. Mills in World War One” Jim McKenna
Community Church of East
Williston
This year is the Centennial of the U.S. entry into WWI. Camp Mills was a major
training camp and embarkation point for US Army troops being sent to France. Built in less
than a week in August 1917, Camp Mills was a major story for the New York and Brooklyn
newspapers—the internet of the times. The soldiers of Camp Mills interacted with the
local citizens of the surrounding villages of Hempstead, Mineola, Garden City, and Westbury,
as well as New York
City.
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Troops at Camp Mills in World
War
One
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/font>
courtesy Jim
McKenna
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/font>
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/font>
The newspapers extensively covered the troops and the camp
throughout the war and the demobilization afterwards. Jim McKenna is the former Director of
Old Bethpage Village Restoration and currently the Assistant Director of Museum Operations
at the Cradle of Aviation and a trustee of the
Society.<
/font>
Guests
are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free.
Light refreshments follow the illustrated
program.
Directions:
The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner
of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter
the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward Street (one block north of Route 25B).
Please park in spaces closest to church (those near Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St.
Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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James Foote as Theodore
Roosevelt
Joni Foote,
photographer
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2017 Annual Meeting
and Luncheon
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Sunday, October 1, 2017, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. Theodore Roosevelt as portrayed by James Foote Stewart Manor Country Club,
Stewart Manor
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Annual Meeting: presentation of brief reports, and election of
Board Members, will be conducted as per NCHS By-Laws.
The meeting’s business will be conducted between luncheon courses. After dessert is
served, Theodore Roosevelt, as portrayed by James Foote, will regale us with his
particular zest for life through stories of his exploits in nature, the military, politics, and as a
husband and father.
Information about menu, and cost has been mailed to NCHS members. A pdf copy of the meeting
announcement is available here for you to view and print out and send in the RSVP portion
with payment for your reservation.
As often is the case with our meetings, guests, friends, and the general public are welcome to
attend this meeting. Since this our Annual Membership meeting, should space become an issue,
preference will be given to NCHS members. If you wish to attend, and are not a currently an
NCHS member, please consider an individual ($25), or family ($40), annual
membership. Include the appropriate membership amount with your payment for the
Luncheon and indicate this on the RSVP form. You'll be added to our membership list
and receive a copy of our 2017 Journal when it is published at the end of this year.
Online Reservations and Payments accepted here. You will have the opportunity to select the
number of reservations after clicking on "Add to Cart".
Your contact information will be requested as you enter your payment information.
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Book Cover for In The
Service
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Elly Shodell,
author
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Sunday, September 17,
2017, 2:00 p.m. In The Service: Workers on the Grand Estates of Long Island, 1890s-
1940s Elly Shodell
Community Church of East Williston
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This illustrated presentation
focuses upon Long Island’s fabled Gold Coast estates from an unusual
perspective—that of those who served as butlers, chauffeurs, dairymaids, gardeners, and
cooks. Although there is no lack of documentation about America’s barons who
emerged from the Industrial Revolution and their magnificent mansions, much less is known
about the lives of the men and women who worked for them. Using oral histories, photographs,
archival tools, and documents, Elly Shodell brings their past to life via her Port Washington
Public Library Local History Center project. She curated an exhibition for the library and wrote
In the Service about these workers on Long Island estates (copies available for sale and
signing).
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Guests
are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free.
Light refreshments follow the illustrated
program.
Directions:
The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner
of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter
the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward Street (one block north of Route 25B).
Please park in spaces closest to church (those near Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St.
Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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Special Bonus Meeting for
members.
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Howard Kroplick who spoke at our meeting on the Vanderbilt
Cup Races has invited us to view his car collection on Sunday, July 16, between 10:30 am and
1:00 pm. You’ll also be able to see more than a dozen vintage cars of the Long Island
Sound Region Classic Car Club of
America.
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Directions:
Exit 29 from Northern State – make a right turn north. From the LIE, it’s Exit 39
if you’re driving west, but stay on the service road for nearly a mile. Turn right at traffic
light onto Roslyn Road (gas station on corner). If driving east, take exit 37 (Willis Ave.) and
stay on service road ½ mile and left at the traffic light at Roslyn Road.
Take Roslyn Road to the end (it becomes Main Street) and turn right just before the clock
tower onto short Tower Street, which runs into Old Northern Blvd. Make an immediate left
onto Lumber Road (The Chase Bank is on the corner). Take Lumber Road to the very end and
follow the signs, “The Waterfront at Roslyn.” Parking in adjoining lot at 45
Lumber
Road.
NCPD - Long Beach raid
1932
photo courtesy: Jonathan
Olly
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Sunday, June 4, 2017, 2:00
p.m. “Midnight Rum: Long Island and Prohibition” Jonathan Olly
Community Church of East Williston
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Prohibition—the thirteen-
year “noble experiment”—affected nearly everyone living on Long Island
during the years from 1920 to 1933. Brooklyn breweries switched to “near beer,”
many residents made their own wine and liquor, and rum running was rampant in the waters off
Long Island’s shores. From cocktails to crime, the era left an indelible impression on
American culture. Jonathan Olly, curator of the recently opened exhibition on Long Island and
Prohibition at the
<
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Brook will speak on this fascinating
topic.
Alco Black Beast wining 1909 Vanderbilt Cup
Race
photo courtesy: Howard
Kroplick
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Sunday, April 2, 2017,
2:00 p.m. “My Hunt for the Vanderbilt Cup Races and the Long Island Motor
Parkway” Howard Kroplick
Community Church of East Williston
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“Chain your dogs and lock
up your fowls!” heralded posters throughout Long Island in announcing the first
international road race ever to be held in America. From 1904 to 1910, six Vanderbilt Cup
Races were held on Long Island roads. Developed from the imagination of William K.
Vanderbilt, Jr., these races were the most prestigious and thrilling auto races of their day,
drawing hundreds of thousands of spectators to Long Island. Town of North Hempstead
Historian Howard Kroplick has researched the Races for more than 13 years, written two books
on the Parkway, and maintains an excellent website (VanderbiltCupRaces.com). His talk will feature photographs from the
private archives of Willy K. Vanderbilt, rare race films, and an assortment of
“Vanderbilia.” A book signing follows; proceeds go to local
charities.
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Book Cover for Images of America: Long Island’s Gold
Coast
Paul J. Mateyunas,
author
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Sunday, February 5, 2017,
2:00 p.m. “Gatsby’s Gold Coast: Then and Now” Paul Mateyunas
Community Church of East Williston
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Travel back in time to the days of
Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby learning about the real families and homes that inspired F.
Scott Fitzgerald. An illustrated presentation by North Shore historian Paul J. Mateyunas about
the history of the Gold Coast and the grand old estate houses. Author of North Shore Long
Island: Country Houses, 1890-1950 and Long Island’s Gold Coast, Mr. Mateyunas will
autograph copies of his books; his paperback, Long Island’s Gold Coast, will be
available for purchase. The snow date (if needed) is one week later, Sunday, February 12
— same time and
location.<
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Book Cover for Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli
Pirates
Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger,
authors
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Tuesday, December 6, 2016, 7:30
p.m.
(Note: the date and time of this event has been changed from what was originally
announced.) “Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates” Brian Kilmeade Cradle of Aviation Museum, Museum Row at
Mitchel Field, East Garden
City
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Long Islander, Brian Kilmeade is co-author of Thomas
Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates, as well as a co-host of the morning television show,
Fox & Friends on Fox News. Come hear him discuss one of our newly independent
nation’s first wars -- a war which saw the founding of both the United States Navy and
the United States Marine Corps. (The Marine Hymn even notes: “... to the shores of
Tripoli.”) His book will be available for sale and the talk will be followed by a book
signing.<
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Guests are welcome to attend;
invite your friends.
This program is free. Light refreshments follow the
program.
Directions: The Cradle of Aviation is located on Charles Lindbergh Blvd.(click link for map) at Mitchel Field
in East Garden City/Uniondale. Take the Meadowbrook Parkway to exit M4. Follow signs to
Coliseum/Museum Row and Charles Lindbergh Blvd. Stay on Charles Lindbergh Blvd., go
through the traffic light at Earl Ovington Blvd. and turn right when you see the life-size figure
in a space suit. Parking lots are on both sides of Museum Drive.
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Book Cover for Historic Haunts of
Long
Island
Kerriann Flanagan Brosky,
author
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Luncheon and Annual Meeting
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Sunday, October 16, 2016, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m. “Historic Haunts of Long Island” Kerriann Flanagan Brosky Davenport Press Restaurant,
Mineola
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Annual Meeting: presentation of brief reports, and election of
Board Members, will be conducted as per NCHS By-Laws.
The meeting’s business will be conducted between luncheon courses. After dessert is
served, Kerriann Flanagan
Brosky, author, will present a program based on her book Historic Haunts of Long
Island; Ghosts and Legends from the Gold Coast to Montauk Point.
Information about menu, and cost has been mailed to NCHS members. A pdf copy of the meeting
announcement is available here for you to view and print out and send in the RSVP portion
with payment for your reservation.
Due to the size of the venue and limited seating, prior reservations will be required for this
event with preference given to NCHS members. If you wish to attend, and are not a currently
an NCHS member, please consider an individual ($25), or family ($40), annual
membership. Include the appropriate membership amount with your payment for the
Luncheon and indicate this on the RSVP form. You'll be added to our membership list
and receive a copy of our 2016 Journal when it is published at the end of this
year.
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Luna Park Tower at
Night
Jennifer Garland,
archivist<
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Sunday, September 18, 2016, 2:00 p.m. “The History of Coney Island” Jennifer Garland
Community Church of East Williston
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Explore the
legendary and colorful past of Coney Island, the “World’s Playground.”
Jennifer Garland is the archivist of the Coney Island History Project. Her illustrated
presentation draws from the book by the History Project’s director, Coney Island:
Lost & Found, as well as many other sources. The talk covers the settlement of Coney
Island, the rise of the resort and amusement area, and the decline and comeback of the
neighborhood. Visit Coney
Island History Project to learn more about the
Project.<
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Book Cover for Peconic Bay: Four Centuries of History on
Long Island’s North and South
Forks
Marilyn E. Weigold,
author
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Sunday, June 12, 2016,
2:00 p.m. “Peconic Bay: Four Centuries of History on Long Island’s North and
South Forks” Marilyn Weigold
Community Church of East Williston
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This illustrated presentation
examines the fascinating evolution of the East End, including its social, economic, and
environmental history. The program will acquaint you with colorful characters of yesterday and
current challenges facing what has been called “one of the last great places.”
Dr. Weigold is professor of history at Pace University, the author of Peconic Bay
(2015), Long Island Sound: A History of its People, Places, and Environment, and
Silent Builder: Emily Warren Roebling and the Brooklyn Bridge.
Book Cover
for Long Island Food: A History from Family Farms & Oysters to Craft
Spirits
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T. W.
Barritt,
author
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Sunday, April 3, 2016, 2:00 p.m. “History of Long Island Food: From Family Farms & Oysters to Craft
Spirits” T. W. Barritt
Community Church of East Williston
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A native of Nassau County, T.W. Barritt is a food writer and
trained amateur chef whose recent book traces the history of Long Island’s agricultural
and maritime past and how factors of sustenance, ethnic diversity, commerce and economy
have influenced today’s new local food sensibility.
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Grossman Farm
Stand
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Jacob Skoglund,
photographer
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This will be an interesting discussion ranging from pickles,
ducks and oysters to roadside joints and fine dining. He will discuss Long Islanders, past and
present, to provide a broader context and understanding about where our food culture is headed
today.
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Luigi Lucioni, Laurelton Hall,
1927
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Long Island Museum
collection
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Sunday, February 7, 2016, 2:00 p.m. “Gilding the Coasts: Art & Design of Long Island’s Great
Estates” Joshua Ruff
Community Church of East Williston
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While some
of the earliest of Long Island’s grandest homes were built after the Civil War, their
heyday was from 1890 through the 1920s. The years since World War II and continuing to the
present have seen the destruction of many of these palatial estates. Joshua Ruff, Chief Curator
of the Long Island Museum in Stony Brook, in his power point presentation will focus on the
artistry of design and detail of these “elegant vessels of history,” including Louis
Comfort Tiffany’s Laurelton Hall, Stanford White’s Box Hill, and William de
Leftwich Dodge’s Villa Francesca in Setauket. Snow date (if needed) will be Sunday,
February 21st.
Joshua Ruff’s program will be based on the recent
exhibit, of the same title, at the Long Island Museum in Stony
Brook.
Guests
are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free. Refreshments will be
served.<
/font>
Directions:
The Community Church of East Williston is located at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for map), adjacent to the NW corner
of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter
the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward Street (one block north of Route 25B).
Please park in spaces closest to church (those near Roslyn Rd. are reserved) or on Ward St.
Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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Sunday, December 6,
2015, 2:00 p.m. “Gardens of Eden: Long Island’s Early Twentieth-Century Planned
Communities” Robert B. MacKay
Bethpage Public Library
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Long Island’s first wave of
suburbanization was in the early 20th century when ambitious real estate developers created
“residential parks.” Robert B. MacKay, Director Emeritus of the Society for the
Preservation of Long Island Antiquities (SPLIA), will discuss how the ideals of the Garden
City Movement were used to attract a growing middle class in search of country living. Dr.
MacKay edited SPLIA’s new book, Gardens of Eden, and wrote 5 of its 21
chapters. Among the Nassau County communities featured in this book are Garden City, the
Plandomes, Munsey Park, Beacon Hill, and several on the Great Neck peninsula, as well as
other planned communities in Queens and Suffolk County. Copies of Gardens of Eden
will be available for purchase ($65). Guests are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free. Light refreshments
will be
served.<
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Directions: The Bethpage Public
Library is located at 47 Powell
Avenue (click link for map), just off Rt. 135. Our program is downstairs in the meeting
room. From Rt. 135 (Seaford-Oyster Bay Expressway), take exit #8 and turn right onto Powell
Ave. Go about 2 blocks to the library which is on the left. Parking is adjacent or in the lot
across the street. The library has an elevator.
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Linda
Singing Colonial Ballads at Federal Hall National
Memorial
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lindarussellmusic.com
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Centennial Anniversary
Luncheon and Annual
Meeting
font>
Sunday, October 18, 2015, 12:00 noon “Catching the Tune: A History of Long Island in Society” Linda Russell, Balladeer
Milleridge Inn, Jericho, New York
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Annual Meeting:
presentation of reports, election of Board Members, and general business will be conducted as
per NCHS By-Laws.
The business will be conducted between luncheon courses. After dessert is served, Linda Russell, Balladeer, will
present her musical program of historical songs, “Catching the Tune: A History of Long
Island in Society.” NCHS members will likely recall Ms. Russell performing at past
NCHS Annual Meetings. We looking forward to welcoming her back for another glimpse of
songs we know from yore, and learning the fascinating stories behind those songs.
Directions: The Milleridge Inn is located in Jericho, entrance on northbound Rt.106/107
immediately before exit ramp to Jericho Turnpike (Rt. 25
east).
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Sunday, September 20, 2015, 2:00 p.m. “The German Settlements of Nineteenth-Century Long
Island” Paul van Wie
Community Church of East Williston
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Today’s Elmont, Franklin Square, New Hyde Park,
Hicksville, Wantagh, and Massapequa Park are among the Long Island villages founded or
settled by German immigrants. Some were even predominantly German-speaking by 1900. A
diverse group, the German immigrants were merchants, professionals, farmers, and hotel
owners. They became Americans, made Long Island their home, and their numerous
descendants remain here to this day. Dr. van Wie is a Professor of History and Political Science
at Molloy College and President of the Franklin Square Historical Society. Copies of his book
on German settlements will be available to purchase. Guests are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free. Refreshments will
be
served.<
/font>
Directions: The Community Church of East Williston is located
at 45 East Williston Avenue (click link for
map), adjacent to the NW corner of Roslyn Road and East Williston Avenue/Hillside
Avenue/Route 25B in East Williston. Enter the church parking lot from Roslyn Road or Ward
Street (one block north of Route 25B). Enter door on the east side for the parish
hall.
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Sketch by Peter Townsend of his uncle Robert (aka Culper Jr)
1813.
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Collection of the Friends of Raynham Hall,
Inc.<
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Sunday, June 7, 2015, 6:00
p.m. “George Washington’s Secret Six” Brian Kilmeade
Cradle of Aviation Museum, Museum Row at Mitchel Field, East Garden City
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Brian
Kilmeade is co-author of George Washington’s Secret Six: The Spy Ring That
Saved the American Revolution, as well as a co-host of the morning television show,
Fox & Friends on Fox News. Four of the “Secret Six” were Long Islanders
and the Culper Spy Ring is an important part of Long Island history. (The current television
series Turn: Washington’s Spies has also increased interest in the topic, though Turn
has often taken dramatic license.) Come hear Brian Kilmeade discuss the history of the Spy
Ring and its crucial role in America’s War for Independence. His book will be available
for sale and the talk will be followed by a book signing.
Preferred seating for Nassau County Historical Society members at 5:30 pm.; please bring the
announcement card mailed to your home to expedite admission.
Guests are welcome to attend; invite your friends. This program is free. Refreshments will be
served.
Directions: The Cradle of Aviation is located on Charles Lindbergh Blvd.(click link for map) at Mitchel Field
in East Garden City/Uniondale. Take the Meadowbrook Parkway to exit M4. Follow signs to
Coliseum/Museum Row and Charles Lindbergh Blvd. Stay on Charles Lindbergh Blvd., go
through the traffic light at Earl Ovington Blvd. and turn right when you see the life-size figure
in a space suit. Parking lots on both sides of Museum
drive.