Legend has it that Carleton Kelsey visited the Montauk Library when he was in his 90s to see if it was “worthy” of receiving a portion of his prize collection of historical photographs and postcards. It was, he determined not long before he died, so he donated what he had that was relevant to Montauk, creating one of the library’s most robust archival collections, with more than 300 photographs and postcards offering rare views of the growth of Montauk from the mid-1890s through the 1950s.
An Amagansett native, Kelsey was for 12 years the East Hampton Town historian and for 35 years director of the Amagansett Library, and he was the author of two pictorial histories of the hamlet and a founder of the Amagansett Historical Association. His Montauk collection of photographs is particularly rich in images from the 1930s, also focusing on the former fishing village on Fort Pond Bay; Teddy Roosevelt and the soldiers sent to recuperate at Camp Wikoff after the Spanish American War; the Navy’s activities during World War I on Fort Pond Bay; the Lighthouse, the Montauk Association houses, and the rugged ocean landscape; as well as what during the Cold War was known as the Camp Hero Air Force base.
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Tents at Camp Wikoff, 1898, and tents at Hither Hills State Park, 1930s. | Carleton Kelsey Collection, Montauk Library Archives
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A 1915 postcard promoting Montauk and a circa-1920s one of the Carl Fisher Office Building. | Carleton Kelsey Collection, Montauk Library Archives
“Carleton’s passion for history was contagious … he collected traditions and folklore, myths and legends, and thousands of postcards and photographs relating to the East End,” says the introduction to a Youtube video that highlights his donations to the Montauk Library. Take a look!
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