350th Anniversary

Past Issues

August 13, 1998
August 6, 1998
July 30, 1998
July 23, 1998
July 16, 1998
July 9, 1998
July 2, 1998
June 25, 1998
June 18, 1998
June 11, 1998
June 4, 1998
May 28, 1998
May 21, 1998
May 14, 1998
May 7, 1998
April 30, 1998
April 23, 1998
April 16, 1998
April 9, 1998
April 2, 1998
March 26, 1998
March 19, 1998
March 12, 1998
March 5, 1998
February 26, 1998
February 19, 1998
February 12, 1998
February 5, 1998
January 29, 1998
January 22, 1998
January 15, 1998
January 8, 1998
January 1, 1998

East Hampton Town
350th Anniversary Celebration

JULIA GARDINER: WIFE OF A PRESIDENT
Julia Gardiner Tyler's attitudes raised a widening gap between her and the Gardiner's Island Gardiners.

THE TASTE OF HISTORY
'Tis the season to think about what the Ladies Village Improvement Society authors were thinking about in the "Preserves and Jellies" section of their 70th anniversary cookbook.

What's In A Name?
TALKHOUSE WALK

THE WALKERS
The third installment in the Autumn Project's series of oral history interviews did not air on LTV last month as planned because of a scheduling problem. The interview, with three of the Walker siblings of Sayre's Path in Wainscott, will instead be shown at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow, 9:15 p.m. on Monday, and 10:15 p.m. on Wednesday.

ON EAST END WRITERS
Constance Ayers Denne will give a historical overview of writers who have lived here during the past 350 years on Sunday in the next lecture in the 350th anniversary series.

A CORRECTION
Sharp-eyed readers keeping track of their history pages may have noticed that the 32nd in the series was misidentified recently as the 33rd.

EVENTS

ROBIN GULDI, SOUVENIR CENTRAL
Even with the red-white-and-blue bunting on the windows and the tricentquinquagenary flag out front, not everyone realizes that the East Hampton train station is doing double duty this year as a retail outlet for souvenirs of the town's 350th anniversary.

NO FAVORITISM
Order and harmony were probably the primary values of the early settlers' town meetings. Division of land, for example, was done with an eye to preventing controversy. When three men were appointed to lay out Occaboneck Meadow in July 1651, they were urged to use "their best light and discretion."

Vanished Places


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