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Port Jefferson, also known as Port Jeff, [2] is an incorporated village in the town of Brookhaven in Suffolk County, New York, on the North Shore of Long Island. Officially known as the Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson, the population was 7,962 as of the 2020 United States census .
In 1873, the Long Island Rail Road arrived to provide service to nearby Port Jefferson, providing the hamlet with its present-day name. The primarily farming community began to experience suburban growth following the construction of Nesconset Highway in the mid 1950s. [3] By the early 1970s, it had become a primarily suburban community.
In 1902, the Port Jefferson Company purchased the Oakwood estate with the purpose of creating an exclusive waterfront development of fifty houses to rival the communities of Long Island's traditional Gold Coast. The well-connected real-estate developer, Dean Alvord, was chosen as president of Belle Terre's estates, which was incorporated in ...
NY 25 (Middle Country Road) – Port Jefferson, Riverhead: 8.43: 13.57: CR 83 (Patchogue–Mount Sinai Road) – Mount Sinai, Selden: Terryville–Port Jefferson Station line: 11.94: 19.22: NY 347 (Nesconset Highway) – Smithtown, Rocky Point: Former roundabout: Port Jefferson Station: 12.50: 20.12: NY 25A (Hallock Avenue / Main Street ...
Fire Island National Seashore Map. Fire Island is not a separate town, but its villages are listed here due to its geographical isolation. Villages in the Town of Islip: Ocean Beach, Saltaire; Hamlets in the Town of Brookhaven: Cherry Grove (a.k.a. Fire Island), Fire Island Pines.
Further northwest, CR 111 intersects with exit 70 of Interstate 495 (Long Island Expressway), a diamond interchange with traffic signals. CR 111 concludes at the northern signal with I-495 west. However, Eastport Manor Road extends for a short distance as a two-lane, 30-mile-per-hour (48 km/h) road.
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Northeast of NY 25, it was named the Nesconset–Port Jefferson Highway and designated as CR 80. [5] Although the road acts as an eastward extension of the Northern State Parkway (with a 2-mile or 3.2-kilometre section of Veterans Memorial Highway, now NY 454 , connecting the two), Robert Moses planned an altogether different right-of-way for ...