History & Culture
East Hampton Holds Both Common and Point
East Hampton's place identity runs from a 1648 village common pattern to Montauk's Atlantic and Block Island Sound edge.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
East Hampton is not one single postcard. It starts with a very old settlement pattern and stretches all the way out to Montauk weather.
East Hampton Village says the village layout still reaches back to 1648, when houses and barns were placed around a wide common and the outlying land was divided for crops, pasture, salt hay, and timber. The village history also says that broad common is now Main Street, north of Hook Pond. The town’s 375th-anniversary page keeps the same 1648 founding date in view.
Then the town keeps going. At Montauk Point State Park, NYS Parks puts you where the Atlantic Ocean meets Block Island Sound, with the “race” of converging tides visible from shore. That is a different kind of East Hampton: wind, water, lighthouse country, and a horizon that feels bigger than the village green.
The lovely part is that both pieces belong to the same town. A person can notice old home lots, windmill-era preservation, farm memory, bays, shore roads, and Montauk’s open-water edge without leaving East Hampton.
So if East Hampton feels layered, that is not an accident. Its map holds a common, a main street, salt hay memory, Hook Pond, ocean weather, and a point where two bodies of water meet. The town is orderly in one place and wild at the edge, and that is a pretty good way to remember it.