Port Jefferson, New York Port Jefferson, New York Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson a view of shops on Main Street, monument commemorating the village's maritime past, Port Jefferson Village Hall, A ferry passes a small-town power plant en route to Bridgeport, Connecticut, Port Jefferson Free Library a view of shops on Main Street, monument commemorating the village's maritime past, Port Jefferson Village Hall, A ferry passes a small-town power plant en route to Bridgeport, Connecticut, Port Jefferson Free Library Port Jefferson is positioned in New York Port Jefferson - Port Jefferson Port Jefferson (informally known as Port Jeff) is an incorporated village in the Town of Brookhaven in Suffolk County, New York on the North Shore of Long Island.

Officially known as the Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson, the populace was 7,750 as of the 2010 United States Census. Port Jefferson was first settled in the 17th century and remained a non-urban improve until its evolution as an active ship assembly center in the mid-19th century.

The port remains active as end of the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry, one of two commercial ferry lines between Long Island and Connecticut, and is supplemented by the end of the Long Island Rail Road's Port Jefferson Branch.

It is also the center of the Greater Port Jefferson region of northwestern Brookhaven, serving as the cultural, commercial and transit hub of the neighboring Port Jefferson Station, Belle Terre, Mount Sinai, Miller Place, Poquott, and the Setaukets.

The deed encompassed the region of intact Port Jefferson along with all other lands along the North Shore from the Nissequogue River eastward to Mount Misery Point. Port Jefferson's initial name was Sowasset, a Native American term for either "place of small pines" or "where water opens. This home, titled Egerton, was a grand abode on the end of Mount Sinai Harbor at Mount Misery Neck. The first settler in Port Jefferson's current downtown was an Irish Protestant shoemaker from Queens titled John Roe, who assembled his still-standing home in 1682.

Despatch sent their boats into the harbor under cover of darkness and captured seven sloops. To protect small-town interests, a small fortress was set up on the west side of Port Jefferson Harbor. Concurrently, the village was rechristened from "Drowned Meadow" to "Port Jefferson" The name choice was with respect to Thomas Jefferson, who provided momentous funds for this project. Numerous shipyards advanced along Port Jefferson's harbor and the village's ship assembly trade became the biggest in Suffolk County.

These two works list every vessel and every voyage undertaken by American whaling vessels from colonial days until the 1920s, none of which began or ended at Port Jefferson.

However two whaling vessels were assembled for New Bedford at Port Jefferson in 1877 (ship Horatio and bark Fleetwing), and a Port Jefferson assembled schooner (La Ninfa) was later converted into a whaling vessel at San Francisco. Port Jefferson's chief part as a port in the 19th Century was to build and support vessels engaged in the coastal freighting trades.

Many of Port Jefferson's remaining homes from this reconstructionwere owned by shipbuilders and captains.

This includes the Mather House Museum, a mid-19th century home once owned by the Mather ship assembly family that now serves as the center of a exhibition complex and command posts for The Historical Society of Greater Port Jefferson.

Barnum Avenue now runs though the region that was once his land, and one of the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry boats is titled the P.T.

During this period, lower Port Jefferson's chief section of commerce was positioned on what is now East Main Street.

The section of town at the intersection of the two streets, then known as Hotel Square, became an active center of Port Jefferson's early tourism trade in the mid-19th century.

With the 1923 sale of the Bayles Shipyard to the Standard Oil Company and demolition of all but two of its structures, Port Jefferson's ship assembly trade came to a close.

Port Jefferson Harbor was repurposed for the petroleum transit and gravel industries and, since the 1940s, as the site of a Long Island Lighting Company (LILCO) coal-fired power plant.

It would not be until well into the 20th century that Port Jefferson rehabilitated its economy with tourism as its major focus.

The Port Jefferson Village Center, amid the final phase of Harborfront Park's assembly The village of Port Jefferson was incorporated in 1963. The revitalization of Lower Port Jefferson soon followed as small-town tourism brought increased revenues and the village adjusted itself to its new economic part .

Harborfront Park, a universal completed in 2004, similarly transitioned the site of a shipyard turned Mobil Oil terminal into a enhance park with picnic grounds, a cyclic ice skating rink and a promenade. Concurrent to the park's assembly was the stone of a former shipyard warehouse into the Port Jefferson Village Center, a new enhance space for affairs and recreation.

Since the early 1990s, a section of Upper Port Jefferson advanced into a Latin American immigrant neighborhood with inhabitants and business-owners from the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Puerto Rico and El Salvador.

A number of historic buildings were encompassed in the Port Jefferson Village Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. Separately listed are the Bayles Shipyard and First National Bank of Port Jefferson building. The Village of Port Jefferson is positioned on the North Shore of Long Island, 60 miles east of New York City.

Boats in Port Jefferson Harbor These are known as Lower Port Jefferson and Upper Port Jefferson, in the order given the waterfront and the barns station sections of town.

Further from Main Street, the remainder of Port Jefferson consists of a several residentiary neighborhoods defined by the hills on which they sit.

This neighborhood is situated in the edge of Mount Sinai Harbor and contains the Port Jefferson Country Club at Harbor Hills.

Brick Hill is the neighborhood directly west of the Lower Port Jefferson commercial center and was first advanced by the noted circus owner P.T.

Within Port Jefferson is Port Jefferson Harbor, a natural deepwater harbor.

Barnum, one of the three ferries that is directed by the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry, was titled after the famous circus master.

The Port Jefferson train station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Jefferson Branch opened in 1873.

Port Jefferson features a primary ferry route, a Long Island Rail Road terminus, multiple bus lines, and an extensive network of roads.

The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry is one of two routes connecting Long Island to New England.

Port Jefferson's ferry business was established in 1883 and was championed by influential circus owner P.T.

Barnum, who owned lands in both Port Jefferson and Bridgeport, CT, became the new company's first president. The village extraly serves as the easterly end for the Long Island Rail Road's Port Jefferson Branch.

The average commute from Port Jefferson to Manhattan via the Long Island Rail Road takes approximately 2 hours.

Train service to New York City first reached Port Jefferson in 1873.

Port Jefferson's chief street forms a section of New York State Route 25 - A, a scenic and historic route through Long Island's North Shore that is locally known as North Country Road and continues westward to New York City.

Port Jefferson has been home to the annual Port Jefferson Village Dickens Festival every year since 1996.

Students from the Port Jefferson Middle School and High School submit poetry and art that are used in the festival.

Both artists produced various depictions of Port Jefferson and its harbor.

In keeping with its seafaring heritage, Port Jefferson hosts its own annual boat race series known as the Village Cup Regatta, with proceeds benefiting cancer research.

The Port Jefferson Union Free School District covers Belle Terre and most of Port Jefferson.

Edna Louise Spear Elementary School (Pre-K to 5th), also known as Port Jefferson Elementary School or Scraggy Hill School.

Port Jefferson Middle School (6th to 8th) Vandermeulen High School (9th to 12th), also known as Port Jefferson High School Port Jefferson Middle School and High School share the same building.

Port Jefferson UFSD is bordered on the west by Three Village CSD, on the south by Comsewogue UFSD, and on the east by Mount Sinai UFSD.

In Season Two of Netflix's House of Cards there are ongoing negotiations regarding the financing of a bridge from Port Jefferson to Milford, Connecticut. It is referred to in the series as the "Port Jefferson Bridge." The idea is similar to many proposals that have been made over the years, collectively referred to as the The Long Island Sound Link, including one universal proposed from Port Jefferson to Bridgeport, Connecticut.

Port Jefferson's Main Street and East Main Street were featured as part of National Public Radio's "Mapping Main Street" universal in spring 2010. Chris Colmer, American football offensive lineman; born in Port Jefferson "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Port Jefferson village, New York".

"PORT JEFFERSON, LI - The History of Port Jefferson, Long Island, New York".

Port Jefferson Historical Society Newsletter, October 2000 to January 2001, confirmed using the ship's logs in the British National Archives.

"Newsday, Port Jefferson: Ships Were King in 'Drowned Meadow'".

"Profile for Port Jefferson, New York, NY".

"Port Jefferson New York".

"The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson ferry: History".

"Port Jefferson Officials Mull Village Shuttle".

"Port Times Record, North Shore of Long Island | News, Sports, Blogs, Events, Businesses & Coupon Deals".

Village of Port Jefferson official website Blue Point Brookhaven Calverton Canaan Lake Center Moriches Centereach Cherry Grove Coram Crystal Brook Cupsogue Beach Davis Park East Moriches East Shoreham Eastport Farmingville Fire Island Pines Hagerman Holbrook Holtsville Lake Ronkonkoma Manorville Mastic Medford Middle Island Miller Place Moriches Mount Sinai North Bellport North Patchogue Ocean Bay Park Point O' Woods Port Jefferson Station Ridge Rocky Point Ronkonkoma Selden Shirley Sound Beach South Haven Stony Brook Strongs Neck Terryville Upton Wading River Water Island West Manor Yaphank

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Brookhaven, New York - Villages in New York - Long Island Sound - Populated coastal places in New York - Port Jefferson, New York - Villages in Suffolk County, New York