History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Rye Town Is Park, Beach, and a Careful Map
Rye town identity is tied to Rye Town Park, Oakland Beach, Long Island Sound, and a municipal map that needs care.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Rye Town is a good reminder that local maps can be trickier than local names. The town sits where Long Island Sound borders Connecticut and New York, and its offices are in Port Chester. Visit Westchester describes the town as including Port Chester, Rye Brook, and the Rye Neck section of Mamaroneck.
The city layer adds one more twist. Rye Brook’s history says Rye Village incorporated in 1904, then became a city in 1942 and left the town. That is why Rye Town can feel odd on paper: the name is familiar, but the municipal shape takes a minute.
The waterfront is easier to feel. Rye Historical Society tells the story of Oakland Beach before the park, when William B. Halsted built the Oakland inn in 1880 and summer bungalows later spread along the shore. In 1907, voters approved a proposition for a town park. New York authorized the town to acquire the Halsted property in 1908, and the park and beach opened for the 1910 summer season.
That gives Rye Town Park a nice before-and-after picture. A bungalow village and private beach world became a public green space with rolling paths, a pond, bathhouses, pavilions, and Oakland Beach beside the Sound.
So Rye Town is both a careful civic map and a shore place people can actually use. The map asks for patience. The beach is simpler. It gives Port Chester, Rye Brook, Rye Neck, and the wider town story a shared edge by the water.