Northport Harbor
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I spent most of the day just driving around Northport, East Northport, and Greenlawn, also having lunch at the house I grew up in. First, the Village Dock in Northport at the end of Main Street.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Lobster traps on the dock.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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More of the harbor.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Posing seagull.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Closer–up.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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The People’s Float.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Long view of the dock.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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End of dock with man in a rowboat.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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World War I memorial.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Vietnam War Memorial.
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Northport Harbor
Northport Harbor
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Chess table in the park.
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Northport Harbor
My Old House
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Before exploring the rest of the area, I went to have lunch at the house that I lived in from 1945 to 1962. One way to get to the house is go under this train trestle. You can see in the photo that its been tagged. This was very upsetting as THIS WAS MY TRESTLE––I walked or drove under this trestle constantly. I used to give people directions to my house––go under the trestle and then look at the top of the hill for a big white house and go up the driveway.
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My Old House
My Old House
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This was my big white house on the top of the hill––but you can no longer see it from the street. A number of very large houses have been built on the bottom of the hill and so many trees have been planted that you can no longer see the house through the trees. I even had some trouble finding the driveway to the house. (When I visited my old house in 1994 with Eddie, there were no trees or houses blocking the view.)
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My Old House
My Old House
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The back of the house. The small building to the left is known as “The John.” It was the original john when the house was built about 200 years ago. Now it is used for storage. The middle building is known as “The Freezer House.” We had a very large freezer in it (to freeze our blueberries, raspberries, and 100 chickens––our chickens freaked out and smothered, so we ate them two per week for a year). Before the freezer was put in, it was my grandfather’s laboratory in which he made gum for my sister and me. The freezer house no longer has a freezer in it, but the name has stuck. The plants in the front and right of the photo are peonies, the bulbs of which my mother planted at least 60 years ago.
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My Old House
My Old House
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The Old Red Barn, now made into a house. This was my father’s publishing office.
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My Old House
My Old House
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This English walnut tree has certainly grown in the last 45 years (for some of you who remember this tree for various reasons, it is not an apple tree). I am so very lucky that I know the people who bought my old house and I am able to visit it again. I was served a most excellent lunch on my visit and was able to tour both the property and the inside of the house.
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My Old House
James Street Beach
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After visiting My Old House, I went back to driving around. First, to James Street Beach. We spent our junior high school summers at this beach––then, there was just a gravel path to the beach.
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James Street Beach
James Street Beach
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What, no swimming allowed here anymore?
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James Street Beach
James Street Beach
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The beach. There was a float to swim to and also to push people off from. The greatest fun here were the jelly fish fights when the harbor was full of them in August. They were small and not poisonous, but if one hit you in your eye, it stung. Jackie Endres Harned and I used to swim far off this beach into the harbor where the boats were––we were very adventurous. For the first summer that this was our hangout, we didn’t have a lifeguard. The next summer I guess the city fathers were worried about having at least 100 teenagers swimming without supervision, so we were given a lifeguard––Joe Corliss, Eddie’s brother for those who know the name.
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James Street Beach
James Street Beach
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Not only is there a big house now fronting the beach (it used to be an empty space), there are also houses on the side of the pathway leading to the beach.
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James Street Beach
Asharoken Beach
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We went to this beach sometimes during our high school years.
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Asharoken Beach
Asharoken Beach
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Even though the gates to the parking lots at some of the beaches had opening and closing hours, I do not remember there being “beach hours” at any of the beaches.
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Asharoken Beach
Asharoken Beach
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Not only can’t you swim here if no lifeguard is on duty, you can only swim in a specified area––see white floats. In the 50s and 60s, you could swim out as far as you wanted.
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Asharoken Beach
Asharoken Beach
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Those are condos in the background––another Northport change of landscape.
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Asharoken Beach
Asharoken Beach
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Looking to the right of Asharoken Beach.
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Asharoken Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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This was the main beach that we went to during our high school years. Its pavilion has been redone.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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And a fountain and gardens added.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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The beach.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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It’s low tide––you need to walk out pretty far just to get wet to your knees––almost all the way to Connecticut across the Long Island Sound from Crabmeadow Beach. When the tide was low, you had to be careful not to step on the tail of a horseshoe crab––these crabs are over 12 inches across and have nasty stingers.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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The boardwalk.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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The sand here right off the boardwalk was our claimed spot of the beach.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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The rocks that we had fun climbing on.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Crabmeadow Beach
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Inside the pavilion where we used to get snacks (there now is also an upscale restaurant here). We used to dance here at night during the summer––it had a jukebox playing rock and roll music.
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Crabmeadow Beach
Northport
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St. Paul’s Methodist Church, where I went to kindergarden and first grade. The regular elementary school was too crowded, so some of us were sent to school here. I still remember who some of my classmates were: Jackie Endres Harned and Bonnie Berglund Wine.
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Northport
Ocean Avenue Elementary School
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Where the Northport kids went to elementary school. Patti LuPone’s father was the principal of this school.
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Ocean Avenue Elementary School
Larkfield Elementary School
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Where the East Northport kids went to elementary school. I went here. It is now a rest home.
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Larkfield Elementary School
Laurel Avenue School
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he original high school, then a junior high for both Northport and East Northport kids. It has been renamed the William J. Bronsnan School after a popular retired school superintendent. The renaming resulted in a letter writing campaign against it by ex–Northporters. They lost.
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Laurel Avenue School
Northport
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I was a freshman here when it first opened as a high school. However, the population of the area had already expanded to more than the capacity of the new high school, so freshmen went to school in the afternoon and the rest of the grades went in the morning. It was built as a campus style school––a nice design in warm weather areas, but not great for the winter snow and cold and ice in NY. Today, it is a junior high. I had to take buses to all the schools that I went to. I envied the kids who could walk to their schools. Today, an elementary school and the high school are both in walking distance from my old house.
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Northport
Northport
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St. Phillip Neri Church, where some girls went to high school.
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Northport
Northport
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First Presbyterian Church???
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Northport
Northport
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My dentist’s office was in this house.
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Northport
Northport
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An old house in Northport. As I drove around Northport, I was almost shocked to discover that it had had “An Invasion of the Yuppies.” There were many, many new, some quite large, very attractive houses on every piece of land available. But I was also impressed with how nicely the old houses have been fixed up, such as this one. I used to have to explain to people where Northport was––”it is near Huntington,” a large neighboring town. No more––if I say that I grew up in Northport, now people say “Wow!” This is not to say that old Northporters are all pleased with the changes in Northport––overdevelopment, not enough roads to handle the increased traffic, and very high property taxes.
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Northport
Northport
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Another old Northport house.
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Northport
Northport
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The Oldest House in Northport––the Skidmore House, built in 1761. There was a 1700s house near my old house, but I was told that it had burned down. Maybe it was older than this one.
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Northport
East Northport
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The main street of East Northport has not been yuppyfied. In most places, it looks like it hasn’t been touched since the 1960s. Photo: the shopping center. I think that market once was Bohacks.
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East Northport
East Northport
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The train track crossing in East Northport.
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East Northport
East Northport
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The Northport train station in East Northport.
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East Northport
Greenlawn
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Even though I attended Northport/East Northport schools, we lived closest to Greenlawn, population 2000 when I left. This is where we would do most of our simple shopping. Greenlawn also was our fire department and we had a post office box there.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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The Greenlawn train station.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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It was quite a surprise to find that Greelawn has been yuppyfied. Turning into Broadway.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Farther down Broadway.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Still farther down.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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And to the end near the tracks.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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The old post office is now a restaurant. I remember when the postmistress of this post office lived in a house behind it and she kept goats to keep her grass mowed. You could see the goats when you took the train to and past the Greenlawn station.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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The train track crossing in Greenlawn.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Now on Boulevard. Wasn’t that great deli in this building?
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Farther down Boulevard.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Farther along.
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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Wasn’t this used to be my sister’s and my favorite candy store?
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Greenlawn
Greenlawn
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With the number of houses that have been torn down and new houses built, I was very surprised to see that Bernice’s house is still standing. (Some of you may remember Bernice––if you were going to give a special luncheon or dinner, you called Bernice to help you.)
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Greenlawn
Huntington
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Huntington Historical Society building.
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Huntington
Huntington
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More of the building. I didn’t take many photos in Huntington, but it appeared to be a very nice shopping area in the same formation as in the 50s and 60s.
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Huntington
The Old Pink Poodle
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I drove back to Northport to use the computer in Doody’s office––to check my e–mail and the California earthquake site. No new quakes except for some small aftershocks. I went out to dinner with Doody, Lynn (Doody’s wife), Bobby Vaughn (who I had met in Albuquerque just three months ago and didn’t recognize––I sure it was because he was wearing a baseball hat in New Mexico), and Lynn’s friend Kathy. We went to Robke’s. This used to be the Pink Poodle––our lunch hangout when we were in high school.
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The Old Pink Poodle
The Old Pink Poodle
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Doody, Lynn, and Bob at Robke’s.
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The Old Pink Poodle
Band Concert
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After dinner, I met Jane Boudreau at the Northport Community Band Concert at Northport Park. She was there with a group of 1963 Northport High School graduates who were having a reunion in Northport. Jane is the main reason why I decided to come home. The plan was hatched in Las Vegas when I was having dinner with Jane, who lives there now, and my cousin, Meg. I told Jane that I really should go back home. She said that I should go when she was there visiting her daughter who now lives here. So here I am. I have put three movie clips of the band concert on this website: “Patriotic Music,” ” New York Medley,” and “Gypsy Medley.” Go to Movies, United States, New York. The music from Gypsy was played in honor of Patti LuPone, native Northporter, who is starring in Gypsy now in NYC. Her high school music teacher, Esther Scott, was also introduced at the concert.
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