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The History of 28 Hart Street - Lynbrook, NY
11563-1711 Copyright Protected © 1986-2008 by Art Mattson Art Mattson, Lynbrook Historian for almost twenty years, has published the book, The
History of Click on the book's front-cover above for a description of the book and how to order it. ____________________________ Mr. Mattson will soon publish his next book, Water & Ice the forgotten shipwrecks of the
Mural in the (Looking north up
Frank Short "Shorty The Cop" (ca. 1930) and |
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A “Brief History of Lynbrook” by
Art Mattson appears
at the end of this web-page. __________________________________________________ (Letters from vistors to this site) |
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For historical Information about the Village of Lynbrook, New York, established in 1785, incorporated in 1911, and formerly known as Pearsalls, Pearsall's Corners and Bloomfield, click on one of the following topics: (From Rechquaakie to Near Rockaway to Parson's Corners to Bloomfield to Pearsall's Corners to Pearsall's to Pearsalls, and finally in 1894 to Lynbrook) The Rockaway Indians ONE MILLENNIUM AGO How the
Rechquaakie of East Rockaway, Whittaker Chambers' Home in Lynbrook A paper covering Whittaker
Chambers' years in The History and Ownership of 71 Union Avenue Lynbrook's
most historic house, home to a Civil War hero and many of Read
about Lynbrook's Historical Markers - Texts and Locations ·
·
·
THE · THE MARINERS BURYING GROUND The Wreck of the Sailing Ship Bristol - November 21, 1836 Read two
horrifying contemporaneous newspaper accounts of the wreck of the sailing
ship |
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Links to Related Sites Historical Society of East Rockaway and Lynbrook 13th Independent Battery - NY Light Artillery - David Driscoll's Civil War Unit Pearsalls Corner (L Harvey's Website) Hutton Preservation Society -- in Hutton, Brentwood, Essex, ENGLAND Robert Herrmann has written an autobiography, Code Blue - Officer Down, which presents his often dangerous, sometimes hilarious life as a Lynbrook Patrolman in the 1950, 60s and 70s. E-mail Bob at retpo@frontiernet.net to get a copy of his off-beat book. |
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E-Mailing me Available by E-Mail request: An 1888 (scanned) map of Lynbrook, with locations shown for property owners: Abrams, Allen, Bedell ,Box, Brower, Burtis, Cornell, Cowper, Davidson, DeMott, Doxey , Dredger, Ehredorf, Furman, Graef, Hughes, Hutchinson, Jones, Kuen, Langdon, Lee, Leach, Mott, Pearsalls, Plinkington, Rider, Seeley, Shaw, Simonson, Smith,Van Deusen, Watts,Wood, Wricht (Wright). |
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A Brief History of By Art Mattson Copyright Protected © 2008 Permission to republish required. Source: The
History of For
hundreds of years before English and Dutch settlers arrived, the Rockaway
Indians, an Algonquin group, lived in the area we today know as Around 1830-40, a young
businessman from East Rockaway, Wright Pearsall, opened a general store and
post office at the Five Corners.
His store prospered so much so that, by 1850 he and his family owned
almost all the land around the Five Corners. The name Pearsall’s Corners took
hold. In 1853, the When
the Southern Railroad extended its line through Pearsall’s Corners in
1867, it brought big changes. For
starters, the railroad shortened the name of the hamlet to Pearsalls. Other changes were more
profound. Previously, the village
had an economy based primarily on shipping non-perishable goods such as milled
wheat and corn to On
April 4, 1894 a group of newcomers to Pearsalls pushed through a name change
– to Lynbrook, which is “ The
year 1911 formally marked the end of
In recent years, a new library, village hall, recreation center and
community pool have been constructed.
The downtown business center has been revived with the help of a
federal grant. For the past 20 years, with little land available for
development, Lynbrook’s Most Famous People
Henri Charpentier ran
Henri’s French Restaurant, on
Wright Pearsall -- Wright Pearsall was the founder
of Important Events in A Revolutionary War Battle was fought at The party of The Rockville Cemetery on Lynbrook’s eastern
border has a memorial to the tragic loss of over 200 Irish, Scottish, Welsh
and English immigrants who drowned in the winter storms of 1836-7 in wrecks
off Long Island’s
Lynbrook’s Official Mottos: “The
Village That Leads the Way” and “Een Draght Mackt Maght”
The latter is Dutch for: “In Unity there is Strength,”
which is also Lynbrook’s Official Song: “ Source is LIPA [http://www.lipower.org/community/index.html#Pop.%20Survey] ================================ |
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