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Arrgh! The pirates of Turlock...if any.

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  • Arrgh! The pirates of Turlock...if any.

    Recently I was in Turlock, at the far east end of Long Island. There was A LOT of pirate stuff in the gift shops: coffee mugs, key chains, that kind of stuff.

    Does anyone know if Turlock was a big pirate lair at one point? It would seem to be in a good location for pirates...well out of the cities but poised to sweep down on ships leaving New York or Connecticut.

  • #2
    Search for buried treasure.
    “As a lifelong member of the Columbia Business School community, I adhere to the principles of truth, integrity, and respect. I will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”
    "Capitalism ho!"

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    • #3
      I think the pirates mostly sailed from the south at that point in time.
      Modern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
      The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
      The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila

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      • #4
        I went to Turlock High School. Of course my Turlock is located on Highway 99, 10 miles south of Modesto, Ca.

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        • #5
          Wow! Now it's at the far end of Long Island. Must have been one heck of an earthquake!
          Last edited by Zkribbler; July 12, 2008, 19:17.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Zkribbler
            Wow! Now it's at the far end of Long Island. Must have been one heck of an earthquake!
            We did have a small earthquake here about 2 to 3 weeks ago. I will have to drive down there and see if our Turlock is still here.

            I few over Long Island back in 1979 and only saw gravel pits, etc at the end of the Island. The Pop centers show up after about 10 min or so later. So it look like the Island was only pop for the first 70 to 80 miles from NYC. We were flying from New London to Kennedy at about 10 to 15000 on Pilgrim Airlines.

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            • #7
              Holy smokes! I am an idiot!!!

              I meant Montauk!! I don't know how it came out Turlock.

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              • #8
                When European settlers first came to Long Island in the early 1600's, they found the island inhabited by Native Americans of the Algonquian group, loosely divided into bands, grouped together into a confederacy under the leadership of the Montauk Sachem, who was considered to be the ruler from Montauk to the western end of the island. Prior to contact, the Montauks, like many Native Americans, did not reside in one place but ranged over a territory. What we know about these early inhabitants is meager, since they did not have a written language. They ate abundantly from wild game such as deer and wild birds, from fish and crustaceans, and grew corn, squash and beans, gathered berries, herbs and roots. They hunted whales in canoes and used the entire whale including whale oil, which they burned in large clamshells or rocks. It was the Native American who taught the Europeans how to whale. They built forts, and one of the largest was on the hill where the Montauk Manor now stands. The Montauks were quite friendly with the early settlers, however disease ravaged their tribe. Their numbers declined and the tribe was eliminated by order of the State Supreme court in 1910.


                The first European settlers in East Hampton were a group of English men and women who came here from Massachusetts. The settlers purchased land from the Montauk Indians in 1648, which extended from Southampton's eastern boundary to Napeague beach. It wasn't until 1665 that Wyandanch, the grand sachem of the Montauk tribe, gave the settlers the right to pasture their livestock on Montauk. In 1686 the Montauk Indians sold Montauk to a group of East Hampton settlers, known as the proprietors, who owned the land in joint trust for almost 200 years.

                So began Montauk's history as a summer pasture for cattle, sheep and horses. The annual cattle drives were on May 1 (going on) with a return on November 1 (going off). These annual cattle drives in which some 1200 to 1500 cattle would come from all over Eastern Long Island were a big local event, and townspeople went out in numbers to watch the riders herd their livestock.

                While on Montauk, the keepers guarded the herds. Three houses were built to house them. Except for the lighthouse, they were the only buildings on Montauk until the late 19th century. First House, located just where the hills called the Nominicks rise from the flat plain of Napeague, burned down in 1774 and was never rebuilt. Second House, built in 1797, is now a museum run by the Historical Society. Third House, overlooking Indian Field on the grounds of Theodore Roosevelt County Park, dates to 1806 and is now run by Suffolk County as a museum.

                The Montauk Lighthouse was commissioned by George Washington and built in 1797. It was a Coast Guard station for many years and its signal light and foghorn warned ships to stay clear of the treacherous rocky shoals that extend outward from the point. The lighthouse is now operated as a museum by the Historical Society and is visited by a million visitors annually.


                Pirates and Smuggling
                Legend has it that treasure chests of pirate booty are buried in Montauk. Captain Kidd supposedly left two chests of his loot in Money Pond. No pirate loot has ever been found
                , however in more recent history plenty of loot, in the form of liquor, could be found on Montauk's beaches. During the 13-year prohibition period, the Rum Runners, as they were called locally, used Montauk as a drop-off place for liquor. Old timers remember signals from ships moored out past the legal limit rousing the men to sea in small boats to bring in the cargo under the cover of darkness. The cargo, liquor, was brought to the sand dunes in small boats, where it was dug into the dunes, to be later picked up and transported to New York City in armed trucks.


                Montauk Tourism
                Began when the heirs of the early proprietors sold Montauk for $151,000 to Arthur Benson who brought out his influential friends and built a few houses at the point. They called themselves the Montauk Association. These houses now enjoy historic landmark designation. Carl Fisher, who purchased Montauk from the heirs of Arthur Benson in 1926, fell in love with Montauk in the 1920's whose rolling hills with little vegetation reminded him of moorland in England. He built the Montauk Manor, the office building in town, the golf course, the yacht Club, Tudor style homes and even a Tudor village for the workmen in anticipation of a summer playground for the elite. His grand vision of Montauk as the Miami Beach of the north ended with the Stock Market Crash of 1929, but Montauk's popularity as a tourist attraction continues to grow.

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