Friday, March 27, 2026

Baseball Player Carlton Edwards

Carlton Edwards was born on October 23, 1929, in Stony Brook. His mother Marjorie Edwards, his grandmother and his brother moved to Chicken Hill area of Setauket soon after. He was a gifted all-around athlete, best known for his pitching. He pitched for the all-Black Setauket Giants and later for the newly integrated Setauket Athletic Club, carving out a reputation as a dependable and accomplished pitcher. In 1951, he received an offer from the Brooklyn Dodgers, a moment that hinted at how far his baseball career might go. That same year, however, his life took a different turn when he was drafted into the United States Army.

That commitment to service extended well beyond his military years in the Korean War. Edwards was deeply involved with the American Legion Irving Hart Post 1766, which was founded after World War II to serve Black and Hispanic servicemen. In order to satisfy the 15-member requirement to keep the legion in operation, Edwards would often pay for other members

Edwards had a 40-year career with the Three Village Central School District. He was very active in the Three Village Historical Society. On Sundays, he greeted visitors at the historical society, digging up lesser known details about the Chicken Hill area.

In 2023, Edwards’ lifetime of athletic and community contributions was formally recognized with his induction into the Suffolk County Sports Hall of Fame. Carlton Edwards died on January 17, 2026 at the age of 96.


Sources:

Artusa, Sabrina. “Obituary: In Remembrance of Carlton ‘Hub’ Edwards.” TBR Newsmedia, 21 Jan. 2026, tbrnewsmedia.com/obituary-in-remembrance-of-carlton-hub-edwards

Vaccaro, Chris. “Suffolk Hall of Famer Carlton ‘Hub’ Edwards, Baseball Pioneer, Dies at 96.” Suffolk Sports Hall of Fame, 23 Jan. 2026, www.suffolksportshof.com/suffolk-hall-of-famer-carlton-hub-edwards-baseball-pioneer-dies-at-96


Thursday, March 12, 2026

Squire Farm - Plainview

The Squire farm was originally built by the Whitson family. A windmill for pumping water was erected in 1907 by Irving Squire. This was not the first wind machine on the property. According to an 1859 map, the Whitson family operated a grist mill there in the 1850s. It would be used as a post office and a polling place in the late 19th Century.

The farm produced carrots, cabbages, onions, beets, potatoes, spinach, corn, cucumber and dill. The cucumber and dill were grown specifically for Karp & Fueschel pickleworks. The entire farm covered 330 acres extending along both sides of Old Country Road.

The farmhouse had seven bedrooms, two baths, a poolroom, a parlor, kitchen, and a dining room. During World War I, a teacher at Bushwick High School arranged with the farm for boys from the city would come to the farm and learn how to work it. They called them “farm camp boys.” The boys cooked and served their own meals in a separate building which they called B. H. S. Camp Squire. The boys would plow, seed the ground, and thin and weed the row for harvesting. The goods from the farm were sent overseas to the boys serving.

No trace is left of the windmill or dwelling.

 

Source:

Gibbs, Iris & Alonzo. “B. H. S. Camp Squire.” Long Island Forum. March, 1973