Natalie’s guidebook

Natalie
Natalie’s guidebook

Neighborhoods

The land that Miller Place occupies was purchased from the native Setalcott tribe in 1664 by settlers of Setauket. The parcel also included what would become Mount Sinai, New York, an adjacent community of similar character with which Miller Place would share a variety of functions throughout its history. The first known dwelling in the area was constructed in the 1660s by Captain John Scott, an important figure in Long Island's early history. This house was named Braebourne and features on a map of the New England region credited to Scott, who served as a royal advisor and cartographer among other occupations. This abode, on the eastern side of Mount Sinai Harbor, was one of three houses John Scott commissioned, and the actual occupier is unknown.[2] The William Miller House, with sections dating from 1720 to 1816 While the original settler of Miller Place is unknown, the settling of the region is largely accredited to the original Miller family. In 1679, an East Hampton settler named Andrew Miller purchased a 30-acre (120,000 m2) plot. Miller was a cooper by profession, and records indicate that he had emigrated from either Maidstone, England or Craigmillar, Scotland. By the early 1700s, the community had become known as Miller's Place. The Miller family expanded well into the 18th century and continually developed houses in the northern part of the hamlet. The Millers were in time joined by members of such families as the Helmes, Robinsons, Burnetts, Hawkins, Woodhulls, and Thomases. Many roads in the present hamlet have been named after historical families. The oldest extant house is the home of William Miller, Andrew Miller's grandson, composed in three sections between 1720 and 1816 at a prominent location on North Country Road. The hamlet's many extant historical structures are centered on this thoroughfare, forming the core of the Miller Place Historic District. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976,[3] it became the first historic district in the Town of Brookhaven. Separately listed is the Samuel Hopkins House.[3] The 1785 Timothy Miller house The American Revolutionary War divided the town, with the majority siding with the Patriot cause but families being split across both lines. A number of midnight raids occurred, one of which resulted in the shooting of a teenaged Miller who had peered out of his window to check on the commotion. The march of Benjamin Tallmadge, who led eighty men to the victorious overthrow of a British stronghold at Manor St. George, traversed along the town's western border. In 1789, the neighboring communities of Miller Place and Mount Sinai organized a Congregational church on the town border. While the Mount Sinai Congregational Church building (an extant structure from 1807) is technically in Mount Sinai, the house for its minister was built in Miller Place and continues to be used for that purpose. The first two public schools in the hamlet were established in 1813 and 1837. In 1834 the Miller Place Academy, a private school, was established under the leadership of a Yale graduate. Though the academy itself closed in 1868, it served as a public school from 1897 until the 1937 opening of what is now the North Country Road Middle School. The Miller Place Academy structure remains as one of the community's symbols and currently houses a free library.
Miller Place
The land that Miller Place occupies was purchased from the native Setalcott tribe in 1664 by settlers of Setauket. The parcel also included what would become Mount Sinai, New York, an adjacent community of similar character with which Miller Place would share a variety of functions throughout its history. The first known dwelling in the area was constructed in the 1660s by Captain John Scott, an important figure in Long Island's early history. This house was named Braebourne and features on a map of the New England region credited to Scott, who served as a royal advisor and cartographer among other occupations. This abode, on the eastern side of Mount Sinai Harbor, was one of three houses John Scott commissioned, and the actual occupier is unknown.[2] The William Miller House, with sections dating from 1720 to 1816 While the original settler of Miller Place is unknown, the settling of the region is largely accredited to the original Miller family. In 1679, an East Hampton settler named Andrew Miller purchased a 30-acre (120,000 m2) plot. Miller was a cooper by profession, and records indicate that he had emigrated from either Maidstone, England or Craigmillar, Scotland. By the early 1700s, the community had become known as Miller's Place. The Miller family expanded well into the 18th century and continually developed houses in the northern part of the hamlet. The Millers were in time joined by members of such families as the Helmes, Robinsons, Burnetts, Hawkins, Woodhulls, and Thomases. Many roads in the present hamlet have been named after historical families. The oldest extant house is the home of William Miller, Andrew Miller's grandson, composed in three sections between 1720 and 1816 at a prominent location on North Country Road. The hamlet's many extant historical structures are centered on this thoroughfare, forming the core of the Miller Place Historic District. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976,[3] it became the first historic district in the Town of Brookhaven. Separately listed is the Samuel Hopkins House.[3] The 1785 Timothy Miller house The American Revolutionary War divided the town, with the majority siding with the Patriot cause but families being split across both lines. A number of midnight raids occurred, one of which resulted in the shooting of a teenaged Miller who had peered out of his window to check on the commotion. The march of Benjamin Tallmadge, who led eighty men to the victorious overthrow of a British stronghold at Manor St. George, traversed along the town's western border. In 1789, the neighboring communities of Miller Place and Mount Sinai organized a Congregational church on the town border. While the Mount Sinai Congregational Church building (an extant structure from 1807) is technically in Mount Sinai, the house for its minister was built in Miller Place and continues to be used for that purpose. The first two public schools in the hamlet were established in 1813 and 1837. In 1834 the Miller Place Academy, a private school, was established under the leadership of a Yale graduate. Though the academy itself closed in 1868, it served as a public school from 1897 until the 1937 opening of what is now the North Country Road Middle School. The Miller Place Academy structure remains as one of the community's symbols and currently houses a free library.

Food scene

Historic local restaurant with delicious cocktails and food
Savino's Hideaway
258 N Country Rd
Historic local restaurant with delicious cocktails and food
Nantuckets
9 Trader's Cove
9 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Orto
90 N Country Rd
9 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Rocco's
5507 New York 347
Do Eat Chinese Food
33 Route 25A
33 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Toast Coffeehouse
46 E Main St
33 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
9 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
The Fifth Season
34 E Broadway
9 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Barito Tacos & Cocktails
201 Main St
11 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
McNulty's Ice Cream Parlor
153 N Country Rd
11 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳

Shopping

Breathe Gifts, Inc
116 E Main St
Luna Nova
230 East Main Street

Activities

14 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Cedar Beach Nature Center
Harbor Beach Road
14 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
great activity for the whole family
Suffolk County Farm and Education Center
350 Yaphank Ave
great activity for the whole family
Long Island Explorium
101 E Broadway
41 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Pindar Vineyards
37645 NY-25
41 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Satterly Landing Park
195 Shore Rd

Sightseeing

MPMS Historical Society
75 N Country Rd
If you enjoy hiking through the woods to the beach on the property formerly belonging to the holiday house / harbour house
Cordwood Landing County Park
Cedar Drive
If you enjoy hiking through the woods to the beach on the property formerly belonging to the holiday house / harbour house
59 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳
Port Jefferson
59 명의 현지인이 추천하는 곳