
Colonial Post Rider delivering the mail.
During the first years of the
settlement of Long Island, before the days of the stage coach and
railroad, mail was brought from New York to the villages on the east
end of the Island by "post riders" on horseback once or twice a
week.
Later on, when the stage coaches came
into use, it was carried by them along with the passengers. From the
records in 1830 we find that mail was sent from New York to Coram,
Middle Island, and Riverhead every Monday and Friday at 4 p.m. The mail
was very light in those early days, and usually there was not more
than half a dozen letters sent out from Middle Island in one mail.
The postage at first was collected on the delivery end as there were
no postage stamps then. It cost 16 cents to send a letter to Smithtown.
Middle Island was the first post
office in Brookhaven Town and was established in 1796.The old house
that stood where Horton's cement block works has been for
several years was than post office for a good many years before it
went to Pfeiffer's store where it was for over 50 years.
Before the railroad opened through
to Greenport in 1844 the stage coach was the only land
transportation that could be used by people coming from New York or
Brookhaven to eastern Long Island. It took from two to three days to
make the trip through the Island which was afterwards made in a
couple of hours by the railroad trains.
In those days the arrival of the
mail stage was an exciting event in the villages it passed through,
and the stage driver was an important man. A journey to the big city
was an important event and a man who had been down to York as they
called it was called on for a week to tell what he had seen and
heard in the city.
It was a long and tiresome
journey from the city to the villages out this way and the driver of
the mail stage performed many duties. He acted as driver, baggage
master, expressman and conductor. He carried money for people to
deposit in banks, and bought goods in the city for people along the
way.
The Inn operated by Thomas Hallock
in Smithtown was the overnight and halfway stopping place for the
stages that ran from Fulton Ferry, Brooklyn, to Riverhead, Southold
and the Hamptons. Hull Conklin was driver of the stage line between
Brooklyn and the east end villages for several years before the
railroad opened and was always on time .Twice a week he would leave
one end of the Island or the other at 4a.m. and arrive at Hallock's
Inn at Smithtown that night where the passengers stopped over night.
The post office here was a small room back of the bar in the hotel
where the mail would be left over night and picked up again in the
morning with the passengers to continue the rest of the trip which
was finished by night. On one trip, Hull drove the whole length of
the Island in 24 hours, changing horses five times, Hull's mail
stage always went through and " neither snow nor rain nor gloom of
night" prevented him from getting through on time.
The old Hutchinson house which we
have mentioned where Horton's cement block factory has been was a
meal stop for the stage coaches as well as post office for many
years. Pfeiffer's store was another stage coach stopping place for
the stages that went through the middle of the Island.
Hamilton's trip through Long Island
on horseback in 1744 mentions stopping at one Brewster's (Pfeiffer's
store) Middle Island and he said, "where we put up all night and in
this house could get nothing either to eat or drink so were obliged
to go to bed fasting and supper less. I was conducted upstairs to a
large bed room. The people in this house seemed quite savage and
rude," The next morning he said "when I awoke I found two beds in the
room where I was in which lay two black beards. I took them for
weavers as there was a loom on each side of the room. In the other
bed was a raw boned boy, who with the two lubbers, huddled on their
clothes and went reeling down the stairs making as much noise as
three horses".
The taverns along the route at which the stages
stopped for meals and a night's lodging were centers of interest in
the communities, for it was there that some of the prominent men of
the day could be found, and the people gathered to talk about the
latest news brought in by visitors from the outside world. It was
also here that the letters and packages for people in the
settlements round about were left. One of the mail stage drivers who
operated in the Patchogue section after the railroad was opened to
Greenport was Chauncey Chichester of Center Moriches. The railroad
was not opened to Patchogue for several years so he met the trains
at Medford and took the mail to Patchogue and villages east to East
Moriches. The mail was all put in one bag and at each post office
the bag was unlocked and the mail for that office sorted out and the
rest put back and the bag locked and taken on to the next post
office. An old time table of the railroad in 1860 carried the
following instructions for employees:" When passenger trains are
more than one hour behind time, a freight train may proceed with
care, but must fall, send a flagman ahead around all curves."
Also: "A very good reason must be
given for killing cattle or a part of the damage will be charged to
the engineers."