The exact date of the building of La Grange Inn is unknown, but it was established around 1750. It was named in honor of General Lafayette's home in France. The property on which the Inn is located was owned by the Higbie family from the time the original inn was built until about 1918. Clinton Higbie was the first proprietor of the Inn. The next proprietor of La Grange was Richard Terry Higbie, who conducted it until his retirement in 1871. It was then leased for many years by the family until sold. During early prohibition days it was sold to the late Eugene Freund who operated it until his death.
Samuel Higbie operated a stagecoach line between Brooklyn and Patchogue and made La Grange a stopover point. When Richard Terry Higbie was conducting the inn and the railroad had been built on the main line as far as Deer Park, he ran a stagecoach to the Deer Park station.
The structure was threatened by steady deterioration in the early 2010s, after CVS leased the property for a new retail store. It stood vacant and neglected. In 2012, the drugstore chain CVS created a plan accepted by the town to rehabilitate the inn while moving it away from Montauk Highway and turning it toward Higbie Lane.
The West Islip Historical Society opened the West Islip History Center in the restored LaGrange building on September 8, 2018.
Sources:
Catalano, Chris. “La Grange Inn.” West Islip Historical Society, westisliphistoricalsociety.org/index.php/la-grange-inn. Accessed 30 Dec. 2024
Esposito, Nick. “West Islip Historical Society Celebrates Its New Home in the La Grange Inn.” Greater Long Island, 10 Sept. 2019, greaterlongisland.com/west-islip-historical-society-celebrates-its-new-home-in-the-legrange-inn
“La Grange Inn, Town of Islip, Suffolk County Saved!” Preservation Long Island, 22 Mar. 2018, preservationlongisland.org/la-grange-inn-town-of-islip-suffolk-county