The Sag Harbor Branch was a branch of the Long Island Rail Road that was the eastern terminal on the south shore line of Long Island from 1869 to 1895 and then was a spur from Bridgehampton to Sag Harbor, New York from 1895 to 1939.
Sag Harbor train station
Photograph of the Sag Harbor freight station in its current use as the flagship tasting room for the Kidd Squid Brewing Company
The former road bed as it begins in Manorville
Road bed in the Long Pond Greenbelt
Sag Harbor is an incorporated village in Suffolk County, New York, United States, in the towns of Southampton and East Hampton on eastern Long Island. The village developed as a working port on Gardiners Bay. The population was 2,772 at the 2020 census.
Sag Harbor street scene
Umbrella House is the oldest surviving house in Sag Harbor. It housed British troops during the American Revolution. It was hit by cannon fire during the War of 1812 (light colored bricks were used to fill in, in lower left corner).
Old Whaler's Church with the 185-foot Egyptian revival steeple intact. The steeple was destroyed in a 1938 hurricane and has yet to be restored.
Old Whaler's Church and Old Burial Ground. The burial ground is the former site of a British fort that was attacked by Patriots in Meigs Raid during the Revolutionary War.