Timeline: History of the Fire Island Pines

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Also see: Bibliography: The History of the Fire Island Pines

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Earliest listed first.

1952, August 15

"Fire Island Store Sites Sold." New York Times.

Home Guardian Company of New York sells land/store sites at the Pines to Vincent P. Fair, William R. Stryker, and Warren E. Christopher who will build a general store, and Clarence F. La Fountaine, who will open a plumbing supply and gasoline service store.


1952, August 20

"Sites Bought at Fire Island". New York Times.

Home Guardian Company of New York sells five more sites in its Fire Island Pines development, on Long Island. Buyers are Florence Pitcoff of the Bergdoff-Goodman store, Captain Ken Stein, ferry service operator; Dr. Paul Benedict of Glen Cove, Guy O. Walser of Bay Shore, and Milton J. Hopper of Huntington, L.I.


1959, May 31

The Fire Island Pines Yacht and Dune Club, and a hotel and store operated by Miss Peggy Fears, former Ziegfeld show girl, is destroyed by fire. See 1951, June 1.


1959, June 1 "Blaze on Fire Island. Clubhouse, Hotel and Store Are Razed by Flames." New York Times.

See 1952, May 31


2003

Crayton Roby (Director). "Where Ocean Meets Sky." (Documentary Film) Starring Carson Kressley, Laura Hartstein, Michael Hartstein. Directed by Crayton Robey. With Laura Hartstein, Michael Hartstein, Dino Georgiou.

Storytellers include Larry Kramer (renowned dramatist, author, and gay activist), Carson Kressley (beloved fashion expert and TV personality from Queer Eye For The Straight Guy), Jerry Herman (composer and lyricist of hit Broadway musicals, Hello Dolly!, Mame, and La Cage Aux Folles), Hal Rubenstein (fashion director for In Style magazine), Alan Poul (ground breaking executive producer of Six Feet Under, Tales of the City, and My So Called Life), Wakefield Poole (pioneer film director of “Boys in the Sand”), Mart Crowley (author of the groundbreaking gay classic “The Boys in the Band”), Tedi Thurman (TV’s first weather girl, Miss Monitor on the Jack Paar Show), Gilbert Parker (retired, powerhouse William Morris Literary Agent) Jim Pepper (founder of the Stonewall Foundation), Scott Bromley (architect of Studio 54 and Creator of the circuit party), Howard Rosenman (distinguished film and television producer) and Alice Thorpe.[1]


Notes

  1. See: Crayton Roby Productions and www.imdb.com/title/tt0410890/

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