Throwback Thursday – Queen of the Fleet

Throwback Thursday – Queen of the Fleet

Built in 1896 in Wilmington, Del., the “Shinnecock” was long recognized as ‘the Queen of the Fleet” and, as Ron Ziel wrote in Steel Rails to the Sunrise, “one of the finest American steamboats.” Certainly her debut in Sag Harbor stirred up excitement: “The air was full of noise of steam whistles and the cheers… Read more »

Throwback Thursday — And Now for Your Listening Pleasure…

Throwback Thursday — And Now for Your Listening Pleasure…

Most of the historic audio materials in the Montauk Library’s archives consist of recordings of oral history interviews, lectures, and local community organization meetings captured on cassette. But hidden among the stacks was a copy of Old Montauk: The Song for People Who Love It on vinyl record. Old Montauk is a country-inspired ballad performed… Read more »

Throwback Thursday – Recreating That Leisurama Vibe

Throwback Thursday – Recreating That Leisurama Vibe

Leisuramas were small, cookie-cutter vacation homes built in the Culloden Shores subdivision of Montauk in the early 1960s. They were designed to be affordable and came conveniently pre-furnished from top to bottom. “All you need is a key and a six-pack,” Frank Tuma, who managed their construction, was rumored to have said. The marketing of… Read more »

Throwback Thursday – Bob-E and the Book Fair

Throwback Thursday – Bob-E and the Book Fair

Barbara Metzger (1944-2023) was an award-winning novelist, editor, writer of greeting card verses, artist, and longtime volunteer with the Friends of the Montauk Library. It was in that last capacity that Bob-E, as she was known, was instrumental in organizing book fairs on the Montauk Green on July Fourth weekends from 1980 to 2014.  In… Read more »

Throwback Thursday — Slice of an Era

Throwback Thursday — Slice of an Era

Everything about this photo is perfect, from the fringe on the awning to the automobiles to the freestanding phone booth. The year was 1960, a slice of an era that was nearly as cool as these sunglasses. Note the lattice-y gridwork in the background behind the phone booth and the flag. For decades that grid… Read more »

Throwback Thursday — Ladies Who Fish

“Sportfishing, even for the biggest fish, was not just a man’s sport,” Bill Akin wrote in The Golden Age of Montauk Sportfishing. “Women had always been part of the picture.” Women – particularly the partners of wealthy sportfishermen – boated some impressively large specimens. One was Chisie Farrington, the wife of the sports journalist and… Read more »

Throwback Thursday – Blessing the Fleet

Throwback Thursday – Blessing the Fleet

Montauk’s first Blessing of the Fleet – born as the “Blessing of the Boats” – was in 1956 and the brainchild of Vinnie Grimes, a charter boat captain and Navy veteran who’d seen Portuguese tuna fishermen blessing their boats before they headed out to sea on the West Coast. “It is an old European custom… Read more »

Throwback Thursday — On Sandpiper Hill

Throwback Thursday — On Sandpiper Hill

The house that used to stand on Sandpiper Hill, an oceanfront estate just west of Ditch Plains, was built for a Wall Street broker named Walter P. McCaffray in 1928, during the same gilded age that enticed Carl Fisher to stick shovels into the wild Montauk landscape. In fact, Fisher’s architect, Richard B. Webb, also… Read more »

Throwback Thursday — R.I.P. Maria-Louise Sidoroff

An earlier version of this post was published on August 30, 2023. It has been updated with additional images and information to reflect the passing of Maria-Louise Sidoroff, Ph.D., on May 9, 2024 at the age of 87. Maria-Louise Sidoroff, Ph.D., an anthropologist, was working as a waitress at Gosman’s Restaurant, whose owners she was… Read more »

Throwback Thursday – Montauk History on Tap.

Throwback Thursday – Montauk History on Tap.

Before Frank Tuma Sr. bought the Montauk Tavern 90 years ago, it was run as a sweet shop that “pulled off a clandestine existence during the Prohibition beginning in 1927” — at least according to a story in Dan’s Papers. “The speakeasy survived six years until 1933 when the ban of spirits was finally lifted,… Read more »