Dutch and English Settlements The western portion of Long Island was settled by the Dutch, who named it '
t Lange Eylandt, which translates to
the Long Island in old-Dutch. They also had early settlements in the 17th century on what are now Manhattan and Staten Island. On April 22, 1636,
Charles I of England ordered that the
Plymouth Colony, which had laid claim to the island but had not settled it, give the island to
William Alexander. Alexander through his agent James Farret (who personally received
Shelter Island and
Robins Island) in turn sold most of the eastern island to the
New Haven and
Connecticut colonies. English settlers first arrived at Southold in eastern Long Island in 1636/37 and were involved in the distillation of turpentine resins. Among those who first settled in Southold were Matthew Sunderland, William Salmon, Thomas Reeve, Thomas Terrill, Thomas Benedict, and Henry Whitney, with Sunderland, Salmon, Whitney, and Benedict taking equal ownership of land tracts Sunderland had received from Farret.
Lion Gardiner was among the first English settlers as he settled on
Gardiners Island in 1637. Farret arrived in
New Amsterdam in 1637 to present his claim of English sovereignty and was arrested and sent to prison in Holland where he escaped. English attempted to settle at Cow Bay at what today is
Port Washington in May 1640 but were arrested and released after saying they were mistaken about the title. English settlements on the east end began in earnest shortly thereafter.
Puritans from
New Haven, Connecticut, arrived in present-day Southold on October 21, 1640. Under the leadership of the Reverend
John Youngs (1598–1672), with Peter Hallock, the families of
Barnabas Horton ( 1600–1680), John Budd, John Conklin (1600–1684), William Wells, John Tuthill, Thomas Mapes, Richard Terry, Matthias Corwin, Robert Akerly, Zachariah Corey and Isaac Arnold planted the first English and first white settlement in eastern Long Island. They purchased the land in the summer of 1640 from an Indian tribe named the Corchaugs. The Corchaug name of what became Southold was
Yenniock. Southampton was founded when settlers from Lynn, Massachusetts established residence on lands obtained from local Shinnecock Indian Nation also in 1640. The first settlers included eight men, one woman, and a boy who came ashore at Conscience Point. Dutch complaints did not matter. Officials of the Colony of
New Netherland did not make immediate efforts to expel the English from such a remote place. Southold remained under the jurisdiction of New Haven until 1662, and of Connecticut until 1674. When the English handed over the colony of New York to the Dutch in 1673, the eastern towns, including Southold, Easthampton and Southampton, refused to submit. The Dutch attempted to force the matter by arms. The English colonists repelled them with assistance from Connecticut settlers. When New York became English again in 1674, these eastern towns, whose people were Yankee by background, preferred to stay part of Connecticut. Although Connecticut agreed, the government of the Duke of York forced the matter. Governor Sir
Edmund Andros threatened to eliminate the settlers' rights to land if they did not yield, which they did by 1676. This was chiefly the result of the Duke of York's grudge against Connecticut, as New Haven had hidden three of the judges who sentenced the Duke's father
King Charles I to death in 1649. Long Island contained three of the original twelve counties of the English
Province of New York organized in 1683: Kings, Queens, and Suffolk. At that time, Queens County included all of present-day Nassau County and a small portion of western Suffolk County. Residents in Long Island towns conducted several
witch hunts, including one involving the daughter of Lion Gardiner in
East Hampton. Early
colonial figures on the island include
Wyandanch,
William "Tangier" Smith, Captain
William Kidd,
Lion Gardiner, and
John Underhill.
Revolutionary War The
Battle of Long Island, the largest
Revolutionary War battle, ranged across Kings County, now the Borough of
Brooklyn in New York City. Apart from espionage and raids across
Long Island Sound, there was limited military action in Queens and Suffolk County. Throughout most of the war, Long Island was controlled by the King's forces. As was customary, they billeted
Hessian and regular troops with local households, who had to provide bedding and food for soldiers. In
Oyster Bay, Major
John André was visiting the headquarters of Lt. Col. James Simcoe at
Raynham Hall, the family home of Robert Townsend, one of George Washington's
Culper Ring spies. Townsend family legend holds that Robert's sister Sally overheard André and Simcoe discussing Benedict Arnold's treasonous plan to turn West Point over to the King's forces. Colonists conducted numerous raids on Long Island during the war,
usually by whaleboats from Connecticut. The most famous raid was the
Sag Harbor or
Meigs Raid in 1777. Possibly the last battle of the American Revolution was the "Boat Fight" of December 1782. ==Nineteenth century==