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The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD M O U N T S I N A I • M I L L E R P L AC E • S O U N D B E AC H • R O C K Y P O I N T • WA D I N G R I V E R • S H O R E H A M
Vol. 36, No. 51
July 8, 2021
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The tradition is back! Port Jefferson Fire Department Independence Day Parade resumes after 2020 hiatus — A7 & A8
A blast from the past Miller Place teacher sends out letters to students
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Julianne Mosher
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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
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Town
Hahn hosts personal care item drive
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In partnership with Long Island Cares, Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) will be hosting a personal care item drive to benefit veterans in Suffolk County from now until July 30. All donated personal care items and household cleaning supplies will then be donated to Long Island Cares’ Veterans Project and distributed to veterans in need across Suffolk County. The Veterans Project was established in 2010 to assist veterans who might be having financial difficulties and to provide humanitarian aid to our veterans. Hahn’s office will be accepting packaged sponges, household cleaning supplies, dish detergent, laundry detergent, hand towels, shampoo and conditioner, soaps, toilet paper, paper towels, sanitary items and other new and unused personal care and household cleaning items. All donations must be unopened, in its original packaging with no rips or tears and
Kara Hahn at her office with pet supply donations accepted for a previous drive for Long Island Cares. Photo from Kara Hahn’s office
should be dropped off Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. to 306 Main Street in Port Jefferson by 4 p.m. on Friday, July 30.
The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD (USPS 004-808) is published Thursdays by TBR News Media, 185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733. Periodicals postage paid at Setauket, NY and additional mailing offices. Subscription price $59 annually. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
BEHIND ON RENT DUE TO COVID-19? Emergency Rental Assistance Can Help This program can pay up to 12 months of past due rent and up to 3 months of future rent. It can also pay 12 months of past due utility bills for Brookhaven residents. Did you lose income/wages due to the COVID-19 Pandemic?
Were you unable to work because you or someone in your household was sick?
Is your household income at or below 80% Area Median Income?
Have questions? Call us at 844-NY1RENT (844-691-7368) or fill out an inquiry form at BrookhavenNY.gov/rent. Visit otda.ny.gov/ERAP to fill out an online application. Please apply today!
Funding is provided through the United States Treasury Department.
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JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3
Community
Former Miller Place teacher mails each student a memory
BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Singles Night at Sonny’s Piano Relaxation Center Every Friday 5:30-8pm Starting July 17th
No Charge, No Cover! Refreshment Kathy McLeod retired back in 2013, but she still kept a tradition of mailing her former students a keepsake when it was their turn to graduate. Photo by Julianne Mosher
previously remembered. “I wrote to myself that I’d be a professional Islander player,” he said. “Now I’m going to Emerson College for musical theater.” Bova said it was a blast from the past and reading what he thought of his life when he was 8 years old was nostalgic. He said can’t thank her enough for this fun memory. “She’s by far my favorite teacher,” he said. “I really appreciate her.” Ariel Martin, another student, said that her 8-year-old self thought she would have pink streaks in her hair and would be going to Harvard after high school. She decided instead to Chapman University in California for film production. “I just want to give her a big ‘thank-you’ for holding onto these and sending them out to all of us,” she said. “To this day, she’s my favorite teacher.” MacLeod said it’s bittersweet that she won’t have to head to the post office with a large envelope in 2022. “I just wanted to remind them how proud I am of them, how creative and fun the class was,” she said. “But this class in particular, they were such a creative, loving bunch. It wasn’t an easy last year and a half, and I just think they came through with flying colors.” To see more photos visit tbrnewsmedia.com.
Live Music with Sonny & Friends Chair Massage by Licensed Massage Therapist Socializing With Other Locals and be Entertained By Sonny and Friends Playing Live Piano! Get De-Stressed, Relaxed and Happy! Kids lessons now starting
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Kathy MacLeod taught in the Miller Place School District for 36 years. Mostly a fourth-grade teacher, she created years ago a project that would eventually become a tradition for her students and their families. “The students had to write a letter to themselves that I would save and mail to them when they were ready to graduate from high school,” she said. “And they were just adorable.” MacLeod would have the students write to their future selves about their families, hobbies, what they learned in school and what they thought they’d be doing as a senior. “Sometimes, they were very funny, like, I’ll be driving a Lamborghini or, you know, I’ll be playing Major League Baseball,” she said. “And some would be more realistic, saying that I’ll be driving a car or working at McDonald’s.” The first batch of letters had to wait eight years to eventually be mailed out, with a reminder of the graduating year when they were to be dispatched. And the majority of the time, MacLeod said, the students forgot the assignment from their elementary school days. The Miller Place High School graduating class of 2021 was different, though, as this was MacLeod’s last batch of letters. In 2013, she decided to retire, but retirement didn’t mean stopping from sending out the last eight batches of letters her students wrote. Over the last eight years, she sent the envelopes back to them with copies of what the children wrote to themselves. Sadly, this was her last group to graduate. “The parents love it,” she said. “They’re very emotional when their kids are getting ready to graduate, and it’s like a voice from the past.” MacLeod is so devoted, she always finds a way to get the letter into the right hands — one former student she had to track down in Arizona, and the girl was thrilled. “Teaching there was the best job I could have had in the best school,” MacLeod said. “It really was a wonderful place to work.” Along with the letter and the self-portraits she encouraged them to draw, MacLeod attaches a photo from the students’ fourth-grade class picture. The kids look different now. “I remember them like it was yesterday,” she said. “It’s so funny seeing them grown up.” Of the class that has just graduated, the students recently received their letters that their previous teacher mailed out. Andrew Bova, 17, said the blast from the past was very different than what he
Port Jefferson
PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
Village
Suwassett Garden Club partners with Port Jefferson library for plant swaps BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Sharing is caring. Recently, the Suwassett Garden Club partnered up with the Port Jefferson Free Library to bring the community together with plants. “What we’re doing is we are encouraging the community to swap plant cuttings,” said Susan Lobacz, co-president. “We’re asking people to bring them in, and then take a new one home.” Inside the library, a small table stands with mason jars filled with leaves and roots. Plastic cups are on the bottom shelf, so people who want to plant something different at home can bring a piece of it back with them. The fun and different idea comes with the hope that new members could potentially join. “We’re hoping that with this collaboration, we’ll be able to encourage people to become part of this Suwassett Garden Club,” said co-president Kim Olenick. “So, there’ll be applications right next to the plants.” The Suwassett Garden Club is a small local club, started in the 1940s, that serves Port Jefferson, Belle Terre and the surrounding communities. Known for their annual fundraisers, Antiques and Garden Weekend — with the historical society — and wreath
makings for holidays and the Port Jefferson Dickens Festival, things were different over the last year. Lobacz said that pre-pandemic, the club would host field trips and hands-on gardening tips. They have sponsored fashion shows, luncheons and participate in an annual “garden therapy” program with veterans at the Stony Brook Veterans Association. Alternate years, the garden club plants a tree in either Port Jefferson or Belle Terre and on Arbor Day this year, they planted a new one by the basketball courts near Rocketship Park. On top of all that, the Suwassett Garden Club also sponsors a high school scholarship and maintains the flower garden at the Mather Museum. They are currently supporting a new children’s garden that is being pursued by the village. Meetings are usually the first Wednesday of the month at 11 a.m. in the Belle Terre Community Center. Due to COVID, meetings have been held via Zoom. Past co-president Joanne Wright said she joined the club years ago because it sounded different. “I had recently retired and wanted to meet new people,” she said. “Even though I was local, I didn’t know a lot of people and it was a
Susan Lobacz, Joanne Wright and Kim Olenick at the new Port Jefferson Plant Cutting Swap Station inside the library. Photo by Julianne Mosher
good way to meet new people.” Other perks are learning new things with different workshops.
People who are interested in joining can pick up a plant at the library, or email suwassett2020@gmail.com.
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JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5
New BYOG spot opens up Down Port BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
It’s time to bring your own glass to Port Jefferson village. Lisa Harris — owner of several village dining spots including Torte Jeff Pie Co., East Main & Main donuts, Prohibition Kitchen and the new taco shack at East Beach — has just opened up her newest endeavor, BYOG Wine Bar. “I haven’t seen anything like this on Long Island yet,” she said. The idea, Harris said, is for customers to bring their own glass and taste from 20 different wines she and her team handpicked. “The reason that it’s bring your own glass is because we can’t have a dishwasher
here,” she said. Glasses are available, but if a customer brings their own there’s a discount. In the space, five machines hold four different bottles of wine. Customers redeem their credit cards for a wine card, which allows them to taste, sample or grab a full glass of any of the 20 wines. “We did a pretty extensive research to come up with 20 of what we think are the best wines that are a blend of very affordable, up to a little bit more exclusive,” she said. “They are bottles that you would never normally be able to taste by the glass unless you purchase the bottle, so this system allows you to do that.” But it isn’t just wine — charcuterie boxes are available to snack on, as well as desserts, like their donut fondue. BYOG Wine Bar is now in the spot where Harris’ donut shop originally was at 250 E. Main St. “The synergy between the pie shop and the donut shop during COVID made the most sense to cut back on staffing and be able to incorporate the two businesses together,” she said. After combining the two earlier this year, she thought about what could go in her new empty space. “I thought because
Above: Customers use these tech-savy machines to sample, taste and pour any of the 20 different wines; Below: A group of happy customers at BYOG’s opening night. Photos by Julianne Mosher
of the limitations, there aren’t a lot of businesses that can run in this type of space,” she said. While visiting South Carolina, she found a place with a similar experience. “We fell in love with it,” she said. While Prohibition Kitchen also has a collection local of wines, Harris said BYOG will have a different variety. “It’s more about the smaller batch lines that you won’t necessarily see in national
distribution,” she said. “They’re more exclusive and unique.” Compared to other spots throughout the village, she said the new wine bar is just a different setting for wine drinkers. “I think this is a different type of experience,” Harris said. “This is an experience that you can share with friends when it comes to your tastes, purchase something you really enjoy, and also chat about the wine.”
Finally reopened, PJ Cinemas makes up for lost movie time After many gloomy months in quarantine, movie theater-starved citizens can now return to PJ Cinemas. The Port Jefferson Station-based theater, owned by Phil Solomon, officially reopened May 28 after tentative operation and eventual closure during quarantine. PJ Cinemas has long been a cornerstone of Port Jefferson life. Many Port Jeffersonians grew up in front of its screens, snacking on popcorn, splurging on candy and laying back in the dimmed theater to enjoy a movie with family and friends. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic suspended its operation, halting these happy excursions. Deprived of their local movie theater, many residents have not seen a film on the big screen in more than 15 months. Most businesses were affected by the
COVID-19 virus, and PJ Cinemas was no exception. Although closing was less than ideal, manager Brian Fiederlein recognized that it was necessary in order to “do our part for the community” and “ensure the safety of the staff as well as the patrons.” With the worst of the pandemic behind us, Fiederlein is optimistic and excited about reopening. However, the process has not been easy. Seven months after the initiation of quarantine, PJ Cinemas experimented with reopening for a brief time in October, but was forced to close again soon after. Kyle Barr
BY SABRINA ARTUSA DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
In regards to this latest reopening, Fiederlein said that it is “energizing to get back to working” but the process of getting acclimated to the state guidelines required “a lot of hustle.” This time around, however, reopening is more promising. Fiederlein said he has a “more solid belief that things are safe.” In December there was no “light at the end of the tunnel” — vaccinations were not yet released and there was not any indication of the virus alleviating, so remaining open was unsustainable. Fiederlein feels that he and his staff have
a moral obligation to secure the safety of moviegoers. So, in determining when to reopen, Fiederlein posed the question: “How can we get people back to the movies safely?” Increasing vaccination rates helped answer this question. The PJ Cinemas staff had several factors to consider in the reopening process: infection rates, hospitalization rates, product and vaccination availability. Presently, the movie theater is under little restriction — patrons can watch a movie mask-free, as long as they are vaccinated. Since reopening, the theater has been awash in accounts of filmgoers’ excitement to be back. “Every day there are more stories about how long people have been waiting,” Fiederlein said. He added that although incoming business is “nowhere where it was pre-COVID,” he is happy to be “getting excitement back into the place — but also safely.” “There is a buzz in the community,” Fiederlein said. “It’s good to be back.”
PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
LEGALS
To Place A Legal Notice Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com Far mingville, New York 11738 on July 23, 2021 at 10:00 A.M. Please note, the new auction rules for the Tenth Judicial District and all applicable COVID-19 Health and Safety Protocols will be in effect at the auction. Please visit: http:// ww2.nycour ts.gov/cour ts/ 10jd/suffolk/index.shtml for additional information. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York known as District: 0200; Section: 093.000; Block: 06.00; Lot: 035.000 will be sold subject to the provisions of filed Judgment, Index No. 607085/2017. The approximate amount of judgment is $1,272,909.61 plus interest and costs. FRIEDMAN VARTOLO LLP 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC AUCTION Supreme Court of New York, SUFFOLK County. U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF10 MASTER PARTICIPATION TRUST, Plaintiff, -against- JOHN K. WESSELS A/K/A JOHN WESSELS; JUDITH A. WESSELS A/K/A JUDITH WESSELS A/K/A JUDITH A. ARONICAWESSELS A/K/A JUDITH ARONICA-WESSELS A/K/A JUDITH ARONICA A/K/A JUDITH A. ARONICA; JUDITH A. WESSELS AND JOHN K. WESSELS, T RU S T E E S , OR THEIR SUCCESSORS IN TRUST, UNDER THE JUDITH A. WESSELS LIVING TRUST, DATED FEBRUARY 28, 2006, AND ANY AMENDMENTS THERETO; THE PERFORMANCE ARTS STUDIO OF NY LTD; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; STATE BANK OF LO N G ISLAND; AMERICAN EXPRESS CENTURION BANK; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA O/B/O INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE - CO - ATC; CHRISTIAN WESSELS; NOAH WESSELS, Index No. 607085/2017. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated, January 31, 2020 and entered with the Suffolk County Clerk on February 26, 2020, Cornelius Rogers, Esq., the Appointed Referee, will sell the premises known as 111 Crystal Brook Hollow Road, Mount Sinai, New York 11766 at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill,
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Proposal forms and instructions may be obtained at the same office daily from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM, except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays or by calling 631-821-2413 or emailing dcarlson@swr.k12. ny.us
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Educational Consulting, Assessments (Educational and Psychological), Assistive Technology Consulting, Professional Development 2021-2022 Proposals will be received until 2:00 PM on July, 20 2021 at the Office of the Purchasing Agent, Shoreham-Wading River Central School District, District Office, 250B Route 25A, Shoreham, New York. Proposals will be opened on the stated date and time, but will not be read aloud. Any interested party may attend. There will be no discussion at the time of the opening of the proposals.
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period beginning on January 1, 2020 and ending on December 31, 2020 have been examined by an independent public accountant and the report of said external audit has been filed in the Office of the District Secretary of the Fire District, with the Town Clerk of the Town of Brookhaven, and the New York Office of the State Comptroller. Said report is available as a matter of public record for all interested persons, who may obtain access to it at said firehouse, during normal business hours, Monday through Friday, 746 Mt. Sinai Coram Road, Mt. Sinai, New York, pursuant to Section 35 of the General Municipal Law. The Board of Fire Commissioners may, in its discretion, prepare a response to the report of the independent public accountant and file said response in the Office of the District Secretary of said Fire District, as a matter of public record for inspection by all interested persons.
KYLE BARR
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said mortgage be and they are hereby, ORDERED to show cause at a term of this court appointed to be held at an IAS Part 12, to be held in and for the County of Suffolk, to be held at the Courthouse located at 1 Court Street, Riverhead, New York, 11901, or by remote/tele/video conferencing as the Court may direct, on August 18, 2021 at 11:30 in the forenoon or as soon thereafter as counsel can be heard, why said Mortgage should not be discharged of record, and it is further, ORDERED, that this order shall be published once a week for 4 successive weeks in The Village Beacon Record, PO Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733, (631) 751-7744, a newspaper published in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, and it is further, ORDERED, that mailing copies of the Petition, Order and papers on which this order is based to ROLAND LaSPINA, is hereby dispensed with. Signed this 17th day of June, 2021. ENTER: JOHN H. ROUSE, ACTING J.S.C. GRANTED June 17, 2021, JUDITH A. PASCALE, Clerk of Suffolk County
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the County of Suffolk at the Courthouse thereof located at 1 Court Street, Riverhead, NY, 11901 on the 17th day of June, 2021, P R E S E N T: JOHN H. ROUSE, ACTING J.S.C. In the Matter of LUKE O. TRAVIS, JR., ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE to Discharge an ancient mortgage pursuant to Section 1931 of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings L a w, I n d ex N o . : 611358/2021, On reading and filing the Petition of LUKE O. TRAVIS, JR., verified on the 14th day of June, 2021; the Affidavit in Support of the Petition of ANTHONY M. PARLATORE, ESQ., dated June 14, 2021 and the official search and certificate of Lake Coast Abstract, Inc. showing assignments of record, if any, and it appearing therefrom that a mortgage dated and acknowledged on June 8, 1991 which was entered into between LUKE O. TRAVIS, JR., and BRENDA E. TRAVIS, his wife, as Mortgagors and ROLAND LaSPINA, as Mortgagee given to secure the payment of $45,000.00 and recorded on July 10, 1991 in the Suffolk County Clerk’s Office in Liber 16866 Page 53, being in the Township of Brookhaven, 6 Harbor Hill Road, Setauket, NY 11733, and it appearing to my satisfaction that the Petitioner has made reasonable effort to ascertain the time and place of death of ROLAND LaSPINA, as set forth in the Petition affixed hereto, ORDERED, that all persons interested in the
JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
Village Port Jefferson Fire Department Independence Day Parade finally makes a comeback BY JULIANNE MOSHER JULIANNE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM With restrictions finally lifted, people from across Suffolk County — and even Connecticut — were able to finally celebrate the Fourth of July with a favorite tradition. The Port Jefferson Fire Department Independence Day Parade was cancelled, along
with most other events, last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But this year, things seemed back to normal with hundreds of people gathered on the sidewalks of Port Jefferson village, decked in their most patriotic wear, to celebrate America’s birthday. “I’m just glad that we’re back to some sort of normalcy,” said Todd Stumpf, department chief. Continued on page A8
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
Independence Day Parade is Back Continued from page A7 “We’re glad to see the public back together to help celebrate the country’s birth.” Vintage cars drove down the road, waving American flags out of their windows as excited kids and their families waved from the sidewalk. Children ran to their parents who marched in uniform when they spotted them from the sidelines. Dancers waved red, white, and blue pom poms whiles pipes and drums played their sounds. Even the Batmobile made an appearance.
Although the parade included Port Jeff and Terryville, members from South Shore, eastern, and western Suffolk County departments joined together to march along Main Street on July 5. Since the Fourth of July was on a Sunday this year, the fire department decided to host the parade a day later, on Monday, to respect the local churches throughout the village. “From our end it ran really smooth,” said Steve Erland, third assistant chief. “It’s just so nice to bring it back to the community.” ALL PHOTOS BY JULIANNE MOSHE
JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
From Cold Spring Harbor to Wading River – TBR NEWS MEDIA • Six Papers...Plus Our Website...One Price
CLASSIFIEDS 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 • tbrnewsmedia.com FRIDAY-SUNDAY, 7/9-7/11, 9am to 4pm, PORT JEFFERSON 102 OAKES ST. Antiques, collectibles, clothes, furniture, comic books, baseball cards, music, something for everyone. II ACTS THRIFT Christmas in July. Christmas items 50% off. Summer clearance. See store for details. No donations please. Cash Only. Thursday, Friday, Saturday 10AM-2PM. 152 Main St. East Setauket.
Antiques & Collectibles ANTIQUE LOVERS TAKE NOTE! BRIMFIELD IS BACK ALL SHOWS! July 13-18. New shows open daily. Visit www. BrimfieldAntiqueFleaMarket. com for info on individual shows. Next Show Dates: September 7-12.
Automobiles/Trucks Vans/Rec Vehicles
Auto Services DRIVE OUT BREAST CANCER: Donate a car today! The benefits of donatingyour car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response Tax Deduction E a s y To D o ! C a l l 2 4 / 7 : 855-905-4755
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Novenas PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never Known To Fail) Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven, blessed mother of the Son of God, immaculate virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me & show me here in, you are my mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity There are none who can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. (3 times). Oh Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands. (3 times). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can obtain my goals. You gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me, and that in all instances of my life, you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your mercy toward me and mine. Thank you Holy Spirit and St. Jude. The person must say this prayer 3 consecutive days. The request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor has been granted. N.G.
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PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
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TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & E. Northport • Huntington • Greenlawn • Halesite • Lloyd Harbor • Cold Spring Harbor
• Miller Place • Sound Beach • Rocky Point • Shoreham • Wading River • Baiting Hollow • Mt. Sinai
The Village TIMES HERALD
The Port TIMES RECORD
• Stony Brook • Strong’s Neck • Setauket • Old Field • Poquott
• Port Jefferson • Port Jefferson Sta. • Harbor Hills • Belle Terre
The TIMES of Smithtown • Smithtown • Hauppauge • Commack • E. Fort Salonga • San Remo
• Kings Park • St. James • Nissequogue • Head of the Harbor
The TIMES of Middle Country • Selden • Centereach • Lake Grove
©98994
• Northport • E. Northport • Eatons Neck • Asharoken • Centerport • W. Fort Salonga
The Village BEACON RECORD
JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted
FRONT DESK/DENTAL ASSISTANTPART-TIME
About the Job: Family of three and three small dogs looking to employ a housekeeper immediately.
FOR LOW-KEY PORT JEFFERSON DENTAL SLEEP MEDICINE AND TMJ PRACTICE
SOME EXPERIENCE NECESSARY BUT WILL TRAIN GREAT CANDIDATE COMPUTER KNOWLEDGE A MUSTHOURS: THURSDAY/SATURDAY 10:00AM – 3:00 PM PLEASE FAX RESUME TO 631-743-9091
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The Selden Fire District is looking to hire Part Time Custodian(s) 20 hours bi-weekly Monday – Friday night shift 6–10PM Any interested applicants should call the District Office at (631) 732-5570 Ext #3 for information on how to receive an application packet to complete. An interview, medical screening and past employment review will be required for this position.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT TBR News Media, a north shore multi media community news organization is seeking a full time sales professional. Call Ad Director at 631-751-7744. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION FRONT DESK/DENTAL ASSISTANT Part-time for low key Port Jefferson Dental Sleep Medicine and TMJ practice. Please fax resume to 631-743-9091SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION
SEEKING HOUSEKEEPERGREENLAWN, NY Family of 3 and 3 small dogs. 4 days/wk, 6-7 hours/day. SEE DISPLAY FOR MORE INFORMATION.
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Responsibilities are as follows: kitchen cleaning, dishes, sweeping/mopping floors, laundry etc.; assisting wife and daughter with physical disabilities in and out of the house. Prior housekeeping experience a plus. Must be dog friendly and willing to take care of three small dogs; all under 11 pounds. 4 days a week, 6-7 hours/day. TEXT 631-978-6435 and 646-385-4403
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PUBLISHER’S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Gov’t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
SEEKING HOUSEKEEPER – GREENLAWN, NY
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Are You Hiring? LOOKING FOR A NANNY, MEDICAL BILLER, CHEF, DRIVER, COMPUTER PROGRAMMER, PRIVATE FITNESS TRAINER ...? Take advantage of our North Shore distribution. Reach over 169,000 readers. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIALS Place your ad by noon Tuesday and it will appear in that Thursday’s editions ©105739
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PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Exterminating
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Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES AND PAINTING. Dependable, Honest, Professional. No job too small. Call Steve 631-831-3089. SEE DISPLAY AD FOR MORE INFORMATION.
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Landscape Materials SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
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©105748
Cable/Telephone
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All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
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PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
Editorial
Letters to the Editor
Are you awake or woke Fourth of July: Exciting or daunting
Fourth of July is a time meant to be spent with friends and family while barbecuing some of the best American meals. It’s also the one holiday a year where lighting off fireworks from morning to night time is completely acceptable — even encouraged. This countrywide celebration of America may be enjoyable for most but for others, such as combat veterans and first responders suffering with Media Origins captured post-traumatic stress disorder, it can the fireworks from the be an extremely stressful day. And Village of Asharoken. when fireworks are set off on other days, it can be even more unnerving for them and others. Is celebrating this national holiday at the cost of our own heroes? According to a National Health and Resilience in Veterans Study, 87% of veterans have been exposed to at least one potentially traumatic event and experience on average of 3.4 such events throughout their service. The National Institutes of Health also recorded that an estimate of 400,000 first responders in America have at least some symptoms of PTSD. The degree of exposure varies from person to person, therefore affecting the magnitude of their illness. The sounds of fireworks — loud, sudden and reminiscent of traumatic events — may trigger PTSD, making it difficult for some who experience symptoms to enjoy their holiday. Lighting off fireworks throughout the month or late at night could additionally put a veteran or first responder into a bad spot. Even weeks after the Fourth of July is over, sleeping troubles or nightmares may persist. Paws of War, located in Nesconset, rescues and trains shelter dogs to become service dogs for Long Island veterans and first responders. With the mental pressure of dealing with the holiday, a service dog can also serve as a calming aide to those coping through a PTSD episode. One way to make sure a veteran doesn’t become triggered is to involve them in lighting the fireworks so the shock of hearing the fireworks won’t be unexpected. Many veterans choose to light fireworks for their family. There are many other ways to celebrate the Fourth of July and summer that don’t involve setting off fireworks. Fishing, boating, visiting historical parks, watching patriotic movies and barbecuing are just some of the alternate options that families can do together to celebrate. However, if you’re still itching for fireworks, sparklers are noise free and easy to bring anywhere you go. So next Fourth of July, being sensitive to veterans and first responders could turn their nerve-racking holiday into a happy one.
WRITE TO US … We welcome your letters. They should be
no longer than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village Beacon Record P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Change for the sake of improvement or common-sense advancements is good. Change, just for the sake of change, is not. Changes being proposed by the radical left-wing puppeteers of the “Socialist” (former Democratic) Party in our inept U.S. Congress, and dictated through their puppet’s executive orders, are dangerous to the future of our constitutional republic. Even the courts are turning a blind eye to core fundamental constitutional issues. Is every branch of our government corrupt? They’re obviously not representing “We the People.” Those who don’t have voters remorse by now must be glad that gas prices are shooting up faster than a Biden vote count at 2 a.m. The “wokeness” agenda which has become so pervasive in today’s society keeps chipping away at societal norms which have held our country together for generations. And those “woke” so-called people’s representatives are catering to that segment of the population who believe in unwarranted change. Corporations are following suit in order to placate the ridiculous demands of a
delusional few. How does removing Aunt Jemima from a syrup container improve anything? And, of course, removing a Native American image from a butter package will definitely improve the lives of all Americans, Native or otherwise. Can we still order black coffee? Are brownies being taken off the shelf? Is White Castle changing its name? Can we still play Chinese checkers? Cracker Barrel will probably be boycotted unless it changes its name. When will this foolishness end? Even Coke is woke. Executives of Coca-Cola have recently advised their employees to be “less white.” What is that supposed to mean? Should they use a product called Man Tan in the winter when they can’t tan on the beach? Oh, that’s right, that will not be allowed until the product name is changed to “Neutral Gender Tan.” Ridiculous. Manwich will be the next product to be deemed offensive. It will probably be changed to “Gender Neutral Meat Sauce.” Following this trend, the Mr. Potato Head toy is being rebranded by dropping the “Mr.” from the name. Seriously.
The up-and-coming board members of like-minded corporations were likely exposed to wokeness indoctrination in schools and universities, so it may only get worse. I am reminded of an editorial cartoon which I had seen. The voice of a teacher saying, “And that’s why white people are bad.” One student says to another, “What class am I in? I’m supposed to be in calculus.” The other student replies, “This is calculus.” I know, that may be a little far fetched, but there certainly seem to be many students who have been systematically indoctrinated with leftist ideas by the time they graduate and enter the workforce. In the future, the woke generation might be looked upon as a failed generation because it was burdened with a socialist ideological belief which always fails. I hope not. I am generally optimistic, as well as politically incorrect — and proud of it. Become more awake to what’s going on, America. And let woke fall by the wayside. Art Billadello East Setauket
Bill failed to pass for good reason The proposed Elder Parole Bill before the New York State Legislature failed to pass for good reason, it treats every incarcerated person the same, regardless of the crime they committed. If passed, the Elder Parole legislation would give a green light to all incarcerated people aged 55 and older to go before the NYS Parole Board for release consideration, regardless of their crime, as long as they have served 15 years of their sentence — even if they have not served their minimum sentence. Crimes are differentiated in the penal code for good reason. As the severity and societal impact of the crime increases, so too does the crime degree and subsequent potential sentence when convicted of a crime. There is a stark difference between an opioidaddicted offender in need of treatment who commits a non-violent property crime to feed an addiction, and a sexual predator who abducts, rapes, murders and dismembers a child, or someone who executes a police or other law
enforcement officer, or violent gang members who hunt down teenaged girls and hack them to death with machetes, as occurred here in Suffolk County. These offenders cannot and should never be treated the same for purposes of possible release. Advocates in support of the Elder Parole Bill argue that every offender should be treated the same, and that if passed, the law would not allow for offenders to be released, but would instead give them an opportunity to plead their case before the parole board. If that were to happen, then victims, surviving parents and families of those who were victimized would have to argue their case every two years before the parole board as well — in fact, maybe decades before they would have had to, depending upon the original sentence that offender received. The proposed law would in essence be clawing back on the original sentence and granting those violent offenders who committed horrific crimes eligibility for parole hearings every two
years — requiring victims, surviving family members, and in some cases, entire communities to relive horrific traumas in ongoing fights to continue to keep violent predators behind bars, when in fact they should have never been eligible for that parole hearing in the first place, but for this new law. Let’s not forget that victims have rights too, as do the families that suffer for generations after a heinous victimization occurs. According to Cornell Law, criminal justice is a term that refers to the laws, procedures, institutions and policies that come together before, during, and after the commission of a crime. Changes to any part of the criminal justice system must not ignore or dismiss the impact that any such change will have on a victim, their surviving family members, and the communities that support them. Laura A. Ahearn Port Jefferson Executive Director of The Crime Victims Center, Inc.
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
JULY 8, 2021 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A19
Photographer Gerard Romano captured this seasonal scene in Port Jefferson Harbor of charter fishing boats using a 10.6mm wide angle lens.
Opinion FANTS, HEFY and EFTEW: a few new acronyms for a new age
I
recently spoke with several scientists about work they were doing for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or NASA. In chatting with them, it became clear that researchers love acronyms the way my dog loves anyone willing to toss him a few morsels of food. I was just thinking about how much time I’d save in my life if I could start my own set of acronyms, all designed to create word efficiency and to develop the equivalent D. None of an insider’s club. For starters, how of the above about OKWAM? As in, BY DANIEL DUNAIEF this place is definitely OK without a mask because they don’t mind if you walk around with your face uncovered. Then, perhaps, there’s MAPH as in masks are
preferred here. You don’t necessarily have to wear a mask, as you might on, say, a commercial airliner, but you would make the owners of the establishment happy and feel safer if you did. In the world of politics, President Joe Biden (D) merits his own set of acronyms. If you think he’s bringing back civility, you might appreciate the chance to tell someone that you believe BMAC, for Biden makes America civil. Now, of course, Biden, as with his predecessor, has numerous detractors. The New York Post is as eager to capture his daily verbal stumbles as the left-leaning papers and news organizations were to seize on former President Donald Trump’s (R) “covfefe” and other scrambled words. In that case, you might see Biden as a PINOE, as in a president in need of an editor, or a PINOC, as in a president in need of a compass. Trump deserves his own set of acronyms. Borrowing from the redundant wording of the movie “Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story” (2004), supporters of the 45th president might say TIARA, as in Trump is
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email julianne@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2021
always right, always. Those who find the former president slightly off kilter, however, might believe he has a FANTS problem, as in facts are not Trump’s strength. TOSID seems appropriate for both sides. That one stands for the other side is deceptive. That applies to Democrats and Republicans, each of whom sometimes reflexively suggest that the other side can’t possibly be honest because, if they were, the argument they’d like to make isn’t as powerful. In the wonderful world of summer weather, how about HEFY, as in hot enough for you, or perhaps, CIRN, as in can’t it rain now? Yankee fans are probably bracing for another mediocre, at best, half of the baseball year. Sure, we have talent, and we get periodic glimpses of adequacy, but we wind up looking like a fourth-place team. I have the feeling it’s NOY or not our year. Parents have spent almost two years struggling with child care, education and their sanity amid a pandemic that has caused
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Julianne Mosher LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton
COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Minnie Yancey SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia
their children to become more like homebased barnacles than school-based students. To that end, and you can pronounce this one however you’d like, how about FCTKSIS, for fingers crossed to keep school in session? Children, of course, couldn’t control whether their schools opened, which left them even more powerless to act out against the rules, tests or social pressures that follow them around like Pigpen’s dust storm from the Charlie Brown comics. They are now struggling with the need to EFTEW, or to emerge from the electronic world. Many of us made normal hygiene habits optional. These days, we should consider recommending a SMIYL to our friends, as in a shower might improve your life. While disconnecting during a phone call, turning off our video momentarily or covering our computer camera were options from home, we sometimes find ourselves stuck in conversations or interactions that aren’t working for us. We might need to beg someone to SAM or stop annoying me.
ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray
CLASSIFIEDS Joann Brady BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano
PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 8, 2021
History
Revolutionary Soldiers from Old Mans BY EDNA DAVIS DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
Old Mans (Mount Sinai) was a small hamlet of 16 families in 1775, but seven young men volunteered for service during the Revolutionary War. Two sets of brothers were among this group. All of them traveled to parts of the country they never would have done if not for the army, including northern and western New York, Canada, Pennsylvania, and finally Yorktown, Virginia. Often armies walked for miles before a battle, food was always short, clothing did not meet the needs of the weather, and illness was always present. By the end of the war most of the men were worn out. New York including Long Island was finally evacuated by the British Nov. 25, 1783. All New York units were disbanded Nov. 15, 1783 at Newburgh, New York. The men had to find their own way home, and once home, there was little time to rest and recuperate from the war as they had to support themselves and their families. All seven of the men survived the war, but not all of them moved back to Old Mans. Each of them did return to work, most were laborers, but one was a tailor, one a boatman, and one a farmer. They could work as they expected, but as they grew older, they were finding the effects of deprivations during the war started to affect their abilities. But they had to continue as there was no other income for their families. This changed in 1818. Congress was divided on the issue of providing pensions for the veterans. It was a contentious debate for 30 years, but by 1818 the pension act was passed. Veterans could apply for pension relief, as could their widows and the disabled. The major portion of the application was a deposition from the veteran or his widow given in front of a Justice of the Peace, written by a clerk. Other individuals could provide supporting evidence of service. Oral histories were required as few records survived or were not available to the individuals. Few of the men could find any paperwork including their discharge papers. The deposition had to include dates of service, which unit or units, officers, battles, discharge. Recall of this amount of information, especially after 30 years, proved to be difficult for some men more so than for others. To qualify man had to have served at least nine months, must be “in reduced circumstances” and “in need of assistance from their government.” All seven men proved they qualified for a pension. Richard Davis, age 18, was the first to sign up in May of 1775. He was assigned to the 2nd Regiment of the New York Line of the Continental Army. When his term of enlistment was up, he reenlisted for the duration of the war. He achieved the rank of sergeant. At the Battle of Saratoga in 1777, he received a scalp wound from a musket ball, but he was
able to continue to fight and was at the surrender of British General John Burgoyne and his entire army. He participated in many of the major and minor battles with the final battle at Yorktown where General Charles Cornwallis surrendered. Richard was discharged on June 6, 1783. He settled in New York City where he worked as a boatman. By 1790 he had moved back to Old Mans where he married and raised his family and continued as boatman. In 1818 he applied for a pension due to his “bodily infirmities being afflicted with rheumatism and was frequently incapable of attending to his business.” Upon his death his wife, Temperance, applied for a widow’s pension which she received based on the information she knew of her husband’s war time activities. They are buried in the Phillips-Davis Cemetery on North Country Road, Mount Sinai. Jeremiah Kinner, age 18, enlisted for one year in the militia company of Captain Selah B. Strong in February 1776. His first assignment was to a lookout post at Mt. Misery (Belle Terre) to watch for possible invasion of the British and Tories by way of Long Island Sound. In August 1776 he was pulled with his company to the west end of Long Island as a part of the regiment commanded by Colonel Josiah Smith, Brigade of General Nathaniel Woodhull. Their assignment was to collect all the cattle and drive them east out of the reach of the British. This activity was thwarted by the British and resulted in the capture of General Woodhull. Jeremiah with many of the other militia men were able to reach the patriot lines in Brooklyn and were evacuated to Manhattan where they fought with the rest of the army while retreating north up Manhattan to the Bronx and Westchester. When his year enlistment was up, he was discharged by Lieutenant Caleb Brewster and returned home to Old Mans. He remained home “until the British took possession of that part of Long Island.” He left the island moving to Goshen, Orange County, New York. Once he settled in, he joined the local militia under Captain McDowell of Colonel Tuston’s regiment. At the Battle of the Minisink he was wounded in the knee and was next to Colonel Tuston when the colonel was killed. Jeremiah was sent back to Goshen to recover from his wound which took six months. For the rest of the war the militia unit joined the Continental Army in battles in western New York. At the end of the war he returned to Old Mans where he married and raised his family. He was a laborer and did not apply for a pension until 1833 when he was 74. Nathan Phillips, age 22, enlisted for one year in the 4th Regiment of the New York Line Captain Daniel Roe’s company in March of 1776. He served as the company fifer. When he was discharged in March of 1777, he returned home where he spent the rest of his life. He married
and raised his family. He was a laborer by trade. He applied for a pension “owing to my bodily infirmities being afflicted with rheumatism and in indigent circumstances.” Chapman Davis, age 17, younger brother of Richard, enlisted in the spring of 1776 and assigned to the 2nd Regiment of the New York Line of the Continental Army. He participated in the Battle of Saratoga and the surrender of General John Burgoyne. He fought throughout the war and was at the final battle at Yorktown and the surrender of General Charles Cornwallis. After the war he married and moved to a farm in Aquebogue. He applied for a pension and received it in 1819 but was required to reapply in 1820. By that time, he was a widower with four children the oldest being 20 years old. He was suffering from ill health and having difficulty working his farm. His farm was 250 acres worth $2,788, but his mortgage was $2,800. He gave his deposition before David Warner one of the judges in the Court of Common Pleas, however by 1820 the paperwork was a printed form which had to be purchased. The Judge requested the Pension Board to accept the handwritten application as “Mr. Davis is a very poor man and not able to be at the expense of making out a new declaration.” Joshua Davis, age 19, joined the 4th New York Line as a private in April 1776 where he served until 1778 when General Washington had him, he transferred to the Whaleboat service under Captain Caleb Brewster. Brewster chose the men he wanted in his unit and “he would choose Long Island men as they knew the harbors and waterways of Long Island.” Joshua grew up on the family farm adjacent to Old Mans harbor. It is also probable that he and Brewster knew each other as Brewster grew up in Setauket. Caleb Brewster is known for his activities as a member of the Culper Spy Ring, but that was not all he did. He made frequent forays to Long Island to collect intelligence of British activity on Long Island. One such foray had him observing the Maryland Loyalist Militia which was bivouacked in Miller’s Place 1778. He also fought British and Loyalist ships that were sailing on the sound. During Benjamin Tallmadge’s raid on the Fort at the Manor of St. George, Joshua Davis was one of the men guarding the boats in the Old Mans Harbor. His discharge papers included a Badge of Merit for his faithful service. After the War Joshua became a tailor, married, and raised his family in Greenfield, Fairfield, Connecticut. As he grew older his eyesight started to fail him and his general infirmity caused him to find employment for more than one day a week. He also had lameness in his left leg and back making it impossible to rise from his bed. He is buried with his family in Greenfield, Fairfield, Connecticut. George Norton, age 22, grew up on Shore Road. He enlisted in the 4th Regiment of the New
York Line of the Continental Army in the spring of 1776. He entered as a private, but eventually was promoted to sergeant and served for seven years. Upon discharge he also received the “Badge of Merit for seven years of faithful service.” After the War he returned to Old Mans, married, and raised a family. By 1818, he is in indigent circumstances. In 1820 he was brought into court and upon examination by the judges he is declared insane and incapable of taking an oath. His wife, Elizabeth, appeared in the court stating he is generally insane and incapable of attending to his business. She had been taking care of everything. Two of their sons, wives, and children, and their own 14-year-old son lived in the house. His support comes mainly from the several properties he owned. Jonathan Kinner, age 18, younger brother of Jeremiah, enlisted in the Continental Army being assigned to the 4th Regiment of the New York Line in 1777. In 1778 General Washington ordered Jonathan transferred to the Whaleboat service, Captain Caleb Brewster where he served for the rest of the war. Again, he was chosen because he was “a Long Island man.” When he was a child his family moved from Brooklyn to a farm on Old Mans Harbor adjacent to the farm of Joshua Davis’ family. When he was discharged, he also was awarded the “Badge of Merit for length of service.” He remained in Connecticut, married, and raised his family in Weston. He applied for and received a pension in 1819 but was required to reapply in 1820 giving a detailed inventory of his property and household goods. He is buried in Connecticut with his family. The Revolutionary War brought about freedom from Britain, but the long years of fighting took its toll on many of the men and their families. Edna Davis Giffen is the Recording Secretary of the Miller Place-Mt. Sinai Historical Society. She enjoys doing history research of Mt. Sinai and Miller Place, and helping others learn about their community.