Red Creek Community In Hampton Bays Rich With History - 27 East

Real Estate News

Real Estate News / 1404093

Red Creek Community In Hampton Bays Rich With History

icon 11 Photos
Students visit the Red Creek Schoolhouse in 2014. EMMA BALLOU

Students visit the Red Creek Schoolhouse in 2014. EMMA BALLOU

The oldest, one-room schoolhouse in Southampton Town was built in Red Creek around 1850 and now resides on the grounds of the Southampton Historical Museum.  DANA SHAW

The oldest, one-room schoolhouse in Southampton Town was built in Red Creek around 1850 and now resides on the grounds of the Southampton Historical Museum. DANA SHAW

Sag Harbor Superintendent Katy Graves.  DANA SHAW

Sag Harbor Superintendent Katy Graves. DANA SHAW

A system being installed in Flanders.  DANA SHAW

A system being installed in Flanders. DANA SHAW

The oldest, one-room schoolhouse in Southampton Town was built in Red Creek around 1850 and now resides on the grounds of the Southampton Historical Museum.  DANA SHAW

The oldest, one-room schoolhouse in Southampton Town was built in Red Creek around 1850 and now resides on the grounds of the Southampton Historical Museum. DANA SHAW

The kitchen and living area.  DANA SHAW

The kitchen and living area. DANA SHAW

South Winds. MICHELLE TRAURING

South Winds. MICHELLE TRAURING

South Winds. MICHELLE TRAURING

South Winds. MICHELLE TRAURING

authorAmanda Bernocco on Jan 23, 2017

French brothers Francois and John Fournier were among the first people to arrive in Red Creek—a small community nestled in northern Hampton Bays—during the American Revolution. After settling in the Colony of New York in August 1776, the young men joined the patriots to fight Britain in the Battle of Long Island. Despite their best efforts the Fourniers were captured by the British and forced onto a prison ship in Gravesend Bay in Brooklyn, recounted Brenda Sinclair Berntson, the president of the Hampton Bays Historical & Preservation Society. The Fourniers managed to escape and take a small boat to sail across the Long Island Sound, through Peconic Bay, and into Red Creek, where they ultimately hit a reef that completely wrecked the ship.

Stuck there, the Fourniers used the wood from the shipwreck to build their house.

Other structures from early Red Creek still exist, including the Red Creek Schoolhouse that will be restored with a grant recently awarded to the Southampton Historical Museum in Southampton Village.

Nestled between Peconic Bay and Red Creek Pond, Red Creek was among several hamlets—including Southport, Squiretown, Newtown, Canoe Place, Ponquogue, Springville and Tiana—that would come to be collectively known as Good Ground before the area’s name was changed to Hampton Bays.

When the Fourniers were living in Red Creek it was much different from the way the quiet, wooded area looks today. It was a busy little town with workers building whaling ships, manning a fish oil factory, and running a trading post. Red Creek was populated by people of many trades including carpenters, farmers and fishermen.

It was also home to the Red Creek Schoolhouse, which was built in the 1830s. The Southampton Historical Museum bought the schoolhouse for $400 in 1953 from William Hubbard, who had been using it to store boats. The schoolhouse was then moved to Southampton Village. The structure had to be lifted off its foundation and moved onto a barge, which floated the building through the Shinnecock Canal and into Shinnecock Bay, and then to Southampton, according to Emma Ballou, a curator and registrar at the museum.

Last month the Robert D.L. Gardiner Foundation, which supports nonprofit historic foundations that promote New York State history, awarded a $50,500 matching grant to the museum to restore the schoolhouse, which sits on the grounds on the museum’s Rogers Mansion on Meeting House Lane.

The schoolhouse has become a popular attraction for Southampton students who visit the museum to learn about the education and work activities of children nearly two centuries ago.

Red Creek also had its own small cemetery sitting on the north side of Red Creek Road—though the graveyard’s official name is disputed by local historians. Some believe it was named “Fournier Cemetery,” after the notable French family buried there, while others suggest it was called “Squires Burying Ground,” as a member from the Squires family is interred there as well.

Though the name of the cemetery is unclear, there is one thing that will never be disputed: Red Creek was rich with history.

About a century before the Fourniers arrived at Red Creek, the area was occupied by the Yeanocock Indians, who were best known for being “money makers,” according to Ms. Berntson. She explained that they would make money called wampum out of clam shells, so they could make transactions with other tribes, including the Shinnecocks.

When the area was occupied by Native Americans, it was referred to as Tow Youngs, according to a report about the Red Creek Schoolhouse written last year by Sally Spanburgh, who chairs the town’s Landmarks & Historic Districts Board. She compiled the report to show that the schoolhouse is, indeed, a historic structure.

Ms. Spanburgh explained in the report that Red Creek was a coveted area to the Native Americans, as it was one of the rare places that were filled with shells for wampum.

The area was also used as a landing for ships importing and exporting goods, explained Southampton Town Historian Zach Studenroth. These landings inspired some of the road names that still exist in the Hampton Bays—including West Landing Road and East Landing Road.

“These landings were quite common around [Red Creek],” Mr. Studenroth said.

You May Also Like:

WATCH: Taking the Pulse of the Hamptons Real Estate Market

During an Express Sessions discussion of the state of the Hamptons real estate market last ... 19 Feb 2025 by Brendan J. O'Reilly

Waterfront Nantucket-Style Home in Quogue Sells for $5.5M

A waterfront home in the Village of Quogue with a dock and views over Quantuck ... by Staff Writer

Top 10 Hamptons Real Estate Sales West of the Canal, 2024

The Hamptons real estate market west of the Shinnecock Canal, like the market east of ... 17 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

Home Improvements and Other Deductions May Lower Homeowners’ Tax Bills

It’s time to start getting your tax information in order. Thankfully, there are a few ... 14 Feb 2025 by Joseph Finora

Pulse Real Estate Roundtable 2025

Though the Federal Reserve began to cut interest rates in 2024, mortgage rates are about ... 13 Feb 2025 by Moderated by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Homes Susceptible to Extreme Weather and Disasters Are Under Scrutiny

About 480 people in the East Hampton zip code 11963 live on “exposed land,” which ... by Joseph Finora

NAR Settlement Brings Changes to Real Estate Industry

The National Association of Realtors last year settled a class action lawsuit in which the ... by Brendan J. O’Reilly

Taking the Pulse of Hamptons Real Estate | 27Speaks Podcast

Jonathan Miller, the president and CEO of real estate appraisal and consulting firm Miller Samuel ... by 27Speaks

Hamptons Top 10 Real Estate Sales of 2024

An auction, a Community Preservation Fund purchase and a vice presidential retreat are among the ... by Staff Writer

Jonathan Miller Weighs In on the Hamptons Real Estate Market

In 2023, real estate market watcher Jonathan Miller described the U.S. market as “The Year ... by Brendan J. O’Reilly