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Gazetteer
Sag Harbor, NY -- U.S. village in New York
Population (2000): 2313
Housing Units (2000): 1942
Land area (2000): 1.719514 sq. miles (4.453521 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.747920 sq. miles (1.937105 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 2.467434 sq. miles (6.390626 sq. km)
FIPS code: 64485
Located within: New York (NY), FIPS 36
Location: 40.996603 N, 72.292190 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 11963
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Sag Harbor, NY
Sag Harbor
Wikipedia
Sag Harbor (play)

Sag Harbor was a sentimental comedy by American playwright James Herne. It inaugurated Oscar Hammerstein's Theatre Republic, the first Broadway theater on West 42nd Street, on September 27, 1900, starring the author as Capt. Dan Marble. Lionel Barrymore later took up the role

Sag Harbor (novel)

Sag Harbor is a 2009 novel by award-winning author Colson Whitehead.

Sag Harbor takes place in Sag Harbor, a small village in the exclusive Hampton Beaches of New York's Long Island. The novel's main character is Benji, an African American teenager spending the summer in a black enclave of his predominately white and close-knit town along with his brother Reggie. Set in 1985, the novel touches on themes of race, class, and commercial culture.

Sag Harbor (LIRR station)

Sag Harbor was the terminus of the abandoned Sag Harbor Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, and was one of two stations within the village of Sag Harbor, New York. It opened in 1870 with the arrival of the LIRR into Sag Harbor, and was the eastern terminus of the LIRR on the south fork of Long Island until 1895, when the Brooklyn and Montauk Railroad built a line from Bridgehampton to Montauk, thus converting the line into a spur north of Bridgehampton. Besides the standard passenger station, it also contained a freight house, and "express building," two yards, a spur to "Long Wharf" which was owned by the LIRR affiliated Montauk Steamboat Company, a coal trestle, a turntable, and a three-story grain storage building owned by The station was rebuilt in 1909 in a manner similar to such stations as Riverhead, Bay Shore, Manhasset, and Bayside stations, among others. During World War I, it was used to transport torpedoes to Long Wharf in order to test them. It was abandoned in 1939 along with the branch. Today, Long Wharf is Suffolk County Road 81, and the former freight house is now the headquarters of the Sag Harbor Garden Center.

Usage examples of "sag harbor".

Meanwhile, backup squad cars were arriving from Sag Harbor and East Hampton along with the South Fork homicide squad.

He said, 'I told them to stay in Sag Harbor, then go home to Garden City.

She drove most of the way to Sag Harbor, then stopped at a gas station.

Just another tourist trap nowadays, Sag Harbor used to be a whaling port.

He's taking her to a big dinner party for Jackie Kennedy over in Southampton, and then they're going dancing in Sag Harbor afterwards.

As whalemen from New Bedford, New London, and Sag Harbor opened up new whaling grounds in the North Pacific, Nantucketers stuck stubbornly to the long-since depleted grounds that had served them so well in past decades.

But they take up rather more display space, so I keep them at my place in Sag Harbor.

A Sag Harbor ship visited his father's bay, and Queequeg sought a passage to Christian lands.

Mac's father became concerned and flew down from Sag Harbor to check Twilly out.

Also, it was reported that one of Mary Andrea's least-favorite television programs, Sag Harbor Saga, was being canceled after a three-year run.

One evening she read me a passage in which her nine-year-old self had accidentally been locked out of the summer house in Sag Harbor during a thunderstorm while her parents partied within.

No Thomas, your father had a friend, what was his name from back in the old whaling days, they called him the Sage of Sag Harbor and what he used to say.