The rolling hills of the North Shore of Long Island were laid down as
terminal moraines by the receding glaciers of the last ice age roughly 10,000 years ago. The
Algonquian tribe that settled the area, spanning from Flushing to Setauket, called the area "hilly ground" or Matinecock and as a result the Algonquian Indians who settled there became known as the
Matinecock Indians. In 1667,
Captain John Underhill negotiated with the Matinecock Indians to purchase land for a settlement that he and his fellow colonists would call Buckram. The town name lasted for nearly 200 years, until in 1856 the name was changed to Locust Valley based on the number of locust trees located in the area. With the arrival of the Long Island Rail Road, a commercial center developed and thrived around the
Locust Valley station and the nearby intersection of Forest Ave/Buckram Road and Birch Hill Road. As the North Shore of Long Island grew into the
Gold Coast in the early 20th century, the commercial center grew to serve the
great estates that were being established in the surrounding communities of Bayville, Centre Island, Lattingtown, Mill Neck, Matinecock, Muttontown and The Brookvilles. In the 1940s and 50s, Locust Valley was the country home of
Robert A. Lovett, a partner (with
Prescott Bush) in
Brown Brothers Harriman Bank on Wall Street and a former
United States Secretary of Defense;
Elizabeth Shoumatoff, renowned portrait painter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and other local luminaries; and finally,
Leonard Hall, The National Chairman of the Republican Party. The hamlet was also a regular stop for rest and relaxation for
Edward VIII and
Cole Porter. As the commercial center, with the railroad station for the surrounding Gold Coast communities, the geographically small Locust Valley became the name of reference for all surrounding areas between Glen Cove and Oyster Bay. This larger community, which now constitutes the Locust Valley School service area, was associated with the upper-class accent prevalent on the great estates: "
Locust Valley Lockjaw." While the accent is not heard as much as it once was, Locust Valley remains a social center for upper-class New Yorkers. Many are members of the exclusive clubs in the area:
Piping Rock Club, The Creek, Beaver Dam and the
Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club. Figures ranging from the
Duke of Windsor to
Franklin D. Roosevelt have spent considerable time in Locust Valley. ==Geography==