189 episodes

Interviews with historians, scholars, authors and anyone with a story to tell and a passion for this unique region of New York.

The Long Island History Project Chris Kretz

    • History
    • 4.5 • 36 Ratings

Interviews with historians, scholars, authors and anyone with a story to tell and a passion for this unique region of New York.

    Episode 188: Benjamin Tallmadge with Richard Welch

    Episode 188: Benjamin Tallmadge with Richard Welch

    The Long Island-born, Yale-educated Benjamin Tallmadge seized his moment to shine in the American Revolution. Whether fighting the British on horseback with the 2nd Continental Dragoons or uncovering their secrets through his agents in the Culper Spy Ring, Tallmadge kept up a hectic pace. You can also throw in maritime battles on the Long Island Sound and daring raids behind enemy lines.

    Historian Richard Welch documented Tallmadge's eventful life in his 2014 book General Washington's Commando: Benjamin Tallmadge in the Revolutionary War. On today's episode he explains the significance of this important figure in Long Island and American history. He also helps illustrate the nature of British activity in the New York region, the documentary trail he followed, and what questions were left unanswered.
    Further Research


    General Washington's Commando: Benjamin Tallmadge in the Revolutionary War by Richard Welch (find in a library via WorldCat) Memoir of Col. Benjamin Tallmadge (Google Books) The Battle of Brooklyn/Long Island (American Battlefield Trust) The Death of John André (William Clements library) Audio Footnotes All episodes on the American Revolution

    • 45 min
    Episode 187: The Howard School with Dr. Tammy C. Owens

    Episode 187: The Howard School with Dr. Tammy C. Owens

    Dr. Tammy C. Owens of Skidmore College joins us to discuss her 2019 article "Fugitive Literati: Black Girls' Writing as a Tool of Kinship and Power at the Howard School." Having discovered a treasure trove of letters written in the early 1900s by girls at the Howard Orphanage and Industrial School, Owens was off on a journey to learn more. The research took her from the Schomburg Center in Harlem to Tuskegee University in Alabama and, ultimately, to the doorstep of the Kings Park Heritage Museum.

    What Owens pieced together was the story of young Black orphans forging connections and support networks through a unique institution known by some as the Tuskegee of the North. The letters she found tell personal and sometimes painful stories, often by the details which they leave out. Owens' research brings to light voices that are often overlooked or missing from archival collections. We hear her thoughts on the process, the historians and authors who inspire her, and the story of her life-changing day riding around Kings Park with Leo P. Ostebo.


    Further Research

    Owens, T. C. (2019). Fugitive literati: Black girls’ writing as a tool of kinship and power at the Howard School. Women, Gender, and Families of Color, 7(1), 56–79. https://doi.org/10.5406/womgenfamcol.7.1.0056 Howard Orphanage and Industrial School Photograph Collection (NYPL Schomburg Center) Leo P. Ostebo Kings Park Heritage Museum Tuskegee University History and Mission Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route by Saidiya Hartman (find in a library via WorldCat) Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet A. Jacobs (find in a library via WorldCat) The Bondwoman’s Narrative by Hannah Craft (find in a library via WorldCat) Darlene  Clark Hine

    • 43 min
    Episode 186: In Levittown's Shadow with Tim Keogh

    Episode 186: In Levittown's Shadow with Tim Keogh

    While Long Island developed a reputation for affluence throughout the 20th Century, there has always been a parallel history of the everyday workers and servants who toiled in the shadow of that reputation. The economic boom of the war years and the subsequent population boom in the 1950s did not change that.

    Tim Keogh, assistant professor of history at Queensborough Community College, delves into this history in his book Levittown's Shadow: Poverty in America's Wealthiest Suburb. He documents the influence of federal spending in the 1940s, the questionable building practices of the Levitts, and a host of attempts to alleviate poverty and fight the dominance of single family housing on Long Island.

    Further Research
    In Levittown’s Shadow: Poverty in America’s Wealthiest Suburb (Chicago Press) Suffolk County Online Records Nassau County Land Records Viewer “Business Zone Helps Islip Reclaim a Slum.” (NYT) A Freedom Budget for All Americans (The Atlantic) Audio Footnotes (related episodes): Making Long Island Cold War Long Island Long Island Migrant Labor Camps

    • 43 min
    Episode 185: Loyalists on Long Island with Brendon Burns

    Episode 185: Loyalists on Long Island with Brendon Burns

    No one sheds a tear for the British Loyalists of Long Island, those inhabitants who remained loyal to the crown during the American Revolution. But genealogist Brendon Burns has spent a tremendous amount of effort tracking them down through libraries and archives across the world. The result is his 5-volume series The Loyal and Doubtful: Index to the Acts of British Loyalism in the Greater New York and Long Island Area 1775-1783. It's a meticulous record of people in New York, Staten Island, and on Long Island, acting in support of King George and the efforts to subdue the patriots.

    The Loyal and Doubtful is of a piece with Brendon's work as a genealogist at the Daughters of the American Revolution. He helps vet applications for membership, which includes proving that an ancestor demonstrated "unfailing" service to the revolution. This criteria poses a problem on Long Island where swearing an oath of loyalty or other public acts of support could hardly have been avoided.

    On this episode, Brendon walks us through the DAR process, the challenges of disproving loyal acts, and what the surviving records can tell us about life on Long Island during the war.
    Further Research
    Brendon Burns (APG) The Loyal and Doubtful The Virginia Genealogist Genealogical Research System (DAR) Daughters of the American Revolution Inhabitants of New York by Thomas B. Wilson (via WorldCat) “A List of Persons on Long Island”: Biography, Voluntarism, and Suffolk County’s 1778 Oath of Allegiance by Christopher Minty (LI History Journal) Audio Footnotes: Episode 45 : Loyalist Richard Floyd Episode 137: Lost British Forts of Long Island

    • 35 min
    Episode 184: Long Island's Most Endangered Historic Places with Tara Cubie

    Episode 184: Long Island's Most Endangered Historic Places with Tara Cubie

    Every other year, Preservation Long Island compiles a list of historic places on Long Island that are endangered. Each list is a mix of structures from different periods of time, each with its own history and own preservation challenges yet all worthy of preserving for future generations.
    On today's episode, Preservation Long Island's Preservation Director Tara Cubie joins us to discuss the 2023 list. The seven places are: the Stepping Stones Light House (Kings Point), the Coindre Hall Boathouse (Huntington), the Shutt House (Brentwood), Kings Park Psychiatric Center (Kings Park), the Eliphalet Whitman House (Smithtown), the Mill Pond House (Oyster Bay) and the Perkins Electric Generating Plant (Riverhead). 
    Tara talks about the sites, the groups who nominated them, the struggles that each of them face, and the reasons why you should care about their survival.
    Further Research
    Preservation Long Island Friends of Caleb Smith Preserve Great Neck Historical Society Coindre Hall Preserve KPPC (Facebook) Brentwood’s Endangered Historic Places The Perkins Local History Collection Audio Footnotes Episodes about preservation

    • 38 min
    Episode 183: Long Island Kansas with Carrie Cox

    Episode 183: Long Island Kansas with Carrie Cox

    There is a Long Island just below the Kansas border with Nebraska, between the Elk and Prairie Dog Creeks. It's apparently the creeks that gave the area its name. When swollen with rain, they cut off the land in between until it appeared to be an island rising from the surrounding plains. 
    Long Island is also the home town of Carrie Cox and on today's episode she describes what it was like growing up in a small town on the family farm. We discuss the local sites and legends, the value of history in the tourism industry, and the success of the Northern Valley Huskies.

    Further Research

    Travel Tales from Long Island, Kansas Monument Rocks, Kansas Northern Valley Huskies Sports Long Island, Kansas Meteorite Grasshopper Plague of 1874

    • 21 min

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5
36 Ratings

36 Ratings

Praise and a request ,

So glad to have stumbled upon this

This is a great podcast on the history of Long Island. I have met some of the guests such as Judge Cohalan, and it just makes me happy to tie this all together. Question: as a resident of North Sea in Southampton, is there any chance that you could do a podcast on Feversham? The few accounts that I have read suggest that at one point it was the busiest port in what would become America. I live not far away from where that is supposed to have been. I would love to hear from someone who knows more about this subject than I have been able to garner myself.

foxnewsjunkie ,

-Thank you

Excellent podcast of our great Long Island!!! So much that I didnt know and love learning all of this Long Island history!

J Akane ,

Intro song…

Great content; awful intro song. Like, it evokes a repulsive feeling in my cold black heart.

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