Greenlawn: A Long Island Hamlet
By Louise Dougher and Carol Bloomgarden
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About this ebook
From the archives of the Greenlawn-Centerport Historical Association comes this striking visual history of the north shore Long Island hamlet of Greenlawn.
Originally known as Oldfields, the area was settled in the early 1800s by farmers. The extension of the Long Island Railroad through the farmlands in 1867-1868 provided the impetus for the development of a profitable pickle and cabbage industry, the growth of the community, and the arrival of vacationers, many of whom soon became year-round residents. Greenlawn includes stories of the Halloween eve conflagration, the Adirondack-style vacation retreat, the opera house, the farmhouse murders, the vaudevillians, and the Pickle King, among others. Today, houses cover the old farmlands; yet Greenlawnwith -one main street of small shops, a railroad crossing that halts traffic throughout the day, and many historical buildings-still retains its small-town charm.
Louise Dougher
For Greenlawn, Louise Dougher, longtime director of the Greenlawn-Centerport Historical Association, and Carol Bloomgarden, a librarian and an association trustee, have employed vintage photographs and documents, oral histories, and written recollections-particularly the research of Russell Brush, the association's founder and first president. Sure to be treasured by everyone interested in Long Island's past, this compilation will serve as both a historical portrait and a tribute to Greenlawn.
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Book preview
Greenlawn - Louise Dougher
Jamaica.
One
THE FARMS
Before the 1870s, the farmers of Oldfields worked large tracts of land and were self-sufficient, producing almost everything they needed for their families and for their livestock. When the Long Island Rail Road came through in 1868, the farm economy changed. With city markets now easily accessible, farmers could grow surplus products to sell. Pickles and cabbage became the most important cash crops.
John Scudder Baylis settled in Oldfields c. 1830, and his descendants lived on the family homestead until 1916. The large farm consisted of 225 acres west of Salem Ridge Drive, between Greenlawn Road and 25A. In 1866, John’s son Orlando built this fine Federal-style farmhouse for his bride, Elizabeth Miner. This photograph was taken c. 1910.
Shown at this Orlando Baylis family gathering are, from left to right, the following: (front row) Edith Horton, Walter Duryea, Mildred Baylis, and Emma Baylis; (back row) Mrs. Duryea, Orlando Baylis, Carrie Baylis Horton, Mrs. Orlando Baylis, and Evelyn Baylis Cornwell.
This aerial view of the Baylis farm was taken in 1954, when it was still a working farm. The farmhouse and outbuildings, including the cow barn, the chicken house, and the corncrib, can all be seen.
The Orlando Baylis farmhouse still stands at 115 Greenlawn Road, just west of Salem Ridge Drive. It is now the home of the James Campbell family.
Adjoining the Baylis farm was that of Walter Brush, who moved to Oldfields from Huntington in 1835. His homestead encompassed the area between Renwick Avenue and Salem Ridge Drive, running north almost to 25A. This farmhouse, which was at the junction of Old Field and Greenlawn Roads, burned down in the late 1950s.
When Samuel Brush married Anna Ketcham, he acquired the large farm adjacent to Walter’s that had been settled by his father, Thomas Brush, in 1835. The original part of the dwelling, distinguished by its five lay-on-your-belly windows, was built in the early 1800s. A west wing was added c. 1930, and an east wing was built c. 1950. Later, Dr. Walter Carpenter purchased the property. The house still stands on Old Field Road.
In 1867, Frederick Brush acquired the 196-acre farm across the road. In 1885, he built the farmhouse that stands today. Frederick sold off the east half of the farm along Broadway in 1904 and left the rest to his son, Selah. Selah and his wife, Angeline Smith, raised their five children, Russell, Helen, Selah Jr., Ethel, and Harold, on the farm. This photograph of the farmhouse was taken c. 1920.
This view of the Frederick Brush farmhouse was taken in 1977.
The home of George William Brush was situated at the curve of Greenlawn Road where it intersects with Dunlop Road. The original farmhouse was the small section on the left, built by the Conklin family, who occupied the farm from c. 1760 to 1835. The larger section was probably added c. 1851, when the George William Brush family moved there. The 162-acre property extended from Old Field Road, west of Tilden Lane, south almost to the railroad tracks.
In 1918, Theodore Rowehl purchased the George William Brush farm. In the early 1950s, the Rowehls remodeled the farmhouse, removing the 18th-century wing and a porch. The house’s stark appearance contrasted with its bucolic setting. Forty-four acres of the farm were sold to the Harborfields School District in 1964 as the site for Oldfield Middle School. The last 8 acres of the farm were sold in 1980, and three houses were built on the property. In the late 1990s, the farmhouse was expanded and completely remodeled by its new owners.
When George William Brush’s son Luther married in 1863, he received as a gift 60 acres of his father’s farm. There, he built the smaller section of this house, which still stands at 344 Greenlawn Road. In 1877, Luther sold the house to Divine Munger, who added the larger Victorian wing. In the early 1920s, when the two-room school across the road became overcrowded, the district rented the living room and parlor of the farmhouse for classroom space. In the late 1980s, Richard and