Fort Pond Bay

Fort Pond Bay

Fort Bond Bay is a bay off Long Island Sound at Montauk, New York that was site of the first port on the end of Long Island.

The bay has a long strategic history.

The bay was first listed by name in a 1655 map published in 1680 by John Scott which makes note of a Montaukett Native-American fort on its banks.

Early settlers in the area raised cattle and sheep on the bluffs above the bay. During the American Revolutionary War during the Siege of Boston British warships sailed into the bay in 1775. Local militia under Capt. John Dayton, feigned they had more men than they had, turning their coats inside out as they marched back and forth on top of a high hill to the south. The tactic is called Dayton's Ruse. [http://archive.easthamptonstar.com/ehquery/981119/hist3.htm]

Long Island was occupied throughout the war and the bay was used by the British for their blockaide of Connecticut. In 1781 the HMS Culloden (1776) ran aground while pursuing a French frigate during a January storm. The ship, which survived the initial ground hit a rock and had to be scuttled in the bay at Culloden Point and burned with its canons thrown overboard. Its debris field and wreck site is now the only underwater park on Long Island.

The small fishing village of Montauk was established at the southeast corner of the bay.

In 1839 the Amistad anchored in bay (also at Culloden Point) when the surviving crew tried to convince their revolted slave captors that they had returned to Africa as they went for provisions in the village of Montauk. The ship was seized by the USS Washington (1837) in the bay.

In the 1890s Austin Corbin extended the Long Island Rail Road from Bridgehampton, New York to the Montauk fishing village (the line extension was called the Fort Pond Railway). His friend Arthur Bensen purchased 10,000 acres (40 km²) of Montaukett land around the village and the LIRR began advertising that it could cut a day off ship travel by docking in Montauk and taking the train rather than going to New York. Corbin built a steel pier into pond for the overseas ships (even as the Corps of Engineers continued to caution against using the bay because of rocks.

The dream was to never materialize and the U.S. Army bought the land for Camp Wikoff. Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders were to come by transport into the bay following the Spanish-American War at the camp to be quarantined over concerns about Yellow Fever.

The rail line along the bay and the fishing village were obliterated in the storm of the Great Hurricane of 1938. The Navy took over the area for a seaplane and dirigible base during World War II (the dock is still in use). The fishing village was moved a mile south closer to the Atlantic Ocean.

In the 1960s the bluffs above the bay were used to build Leisurama homes as inexpensive second homes that had been inspired by the Kitchen Debate between Richard Nixon and Nikita Kruschev.

The bay is no longer used for boats because of flooding and rocks. Boats now dock in the dredged Lake Montauk.

External links

* [http://thehamptons.com/indians/montaukets/native.html Native American History]
* [http://archive.easthamptonstar.com/ehquery/981119/hist3.htm East Hampton Star History]


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