Sag Harbor Partnership To Hold Fundraiser for Firehouse Museum Renovation - 27 East

Sag Harbor Express

Sag Harbor Partnership To Hold Fundraiser for Firehouse Museum Renovation

icon 1 Photo
The Sag Harbor Fire Museum, which was once a church and later village hall, was also a working firehouse. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

The Sag Harbor Fire Museum, which was once a church and later village hall, was also a working firehouse. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

authorStephen J. Kotz on Nov 4, 2025
The Sag Harbor Partnership will hold a fundraising kickoff event on Friday, November 14, at 2 p.m. for the restoration of the Sag Harbor Firehouse Museum on Church Street in... more

You May Also Like:

Doing Nothing Is Doing Something When It Comes to Striped Bass Management

The last of the striped bass stock is pushing past us right now. There are ... by MIKE WRIGHT

With Streets and Sidewalks Being Dug Up, Sag Harbor Is Something of a Mess

The pending expansion of the Sag Harbor sewer system is not the only infrastructure project ... by Stephen J. Kotz

New Director Takes Helm of Sag Harbor Whaling and Historical Museum

The new executive director of the Sag Harbor Whaling & Historical Museum, Jaime Karbowiak, has ... by Stephen J. Kotz

Tying Cauliflower

For a common vegetable, the cauliflower is high maintenance. It asks a lot — first, a long growing season that resists direct seeding, so it must be transplanted. Cauliflower does not like it hot; it wants plenty of moisture and nutrition. If the farmer can arrange a splash of boron, so much the better. Each cauliflower wants plenty of room and requires dedicated weed control. Finally, when the crop is a field of deep green hues, anchored so firmly in the rich earth, its broad leaves have been satisfied. Down deep within, the desired “fruit” takes shape: The cauliflower forms. ... by Marilee Foster

Charles Frederic ‘Charlie’ Corwith Jr. of Water Mill Dies October 31

Charles Frederic Corwith Jr. (Charlie) of Water Mill, NY passed peacefully on October 31, 2025. ... by Staff Writer

Karl Grossman To Be Honored at EnviroVideo Fundraiser

EnviroVideo, which produces television programs on environmental topics written and hosted by Karl Grossman, will ... by Stephen A. Kotz

The Truth About Kratom

As the Mayo Clinic describes it: “Kratom is a supplement that is sold as an energy booster, mood lifter, pain reliever and remedy for the symptoms of quitting opioids, called withdrawal. But the truth about kratom is not so simple. And there are safety problems linked to its use.” The article continues: “Kratom is an herbal extract that comes from the trees of an evergreen tree called Mitragyna speciosa. The tree grows in Southeast Asia.” However, “some kratom sellers add more of the active ingredient than kratom naturally has. … Depending on the amount of active ingredient in the product ... by Karl Grossman

In the Soup

When I was in the throes of perimenopause, I couldn’t eat hot soup. Any soup, no matter how delicious, precipitated a hot flash. Sweaty heat would radiate from my neck to my scalp and then head south. It was a sad time for me. One of my favorite food groups is soup. I wrote an essay about those hot flashes back then; lucky for you, it didn’t appear in these pages. I didn’t have this gig yet, so you were spared from reading what happened in and to my body while I was in the throes of perimenopause. I did ... by Tracy Grathwohl

Useless Durak

In a recent post, Ed Surgan paraphrased an article he claims was from Newsday about the “No Kings” rally: “Demonstrators were concerned with cuts to Medicare, government job cuts and free speech. While the first two may be legitimate differences over policy, they pose no threat to democracy.” Here is an actual quote from Newsday: “Thousands of protesters at more than a dozen locations from Port Washington to East Hampton rallied Saturday to denounce what they view as an increasingly authoritarian regime under the Trump administration. … Dozens of protesters interviewed in Mineola, Port Jefferson and Patchogue voiced concern over ... 3 Nov 2025 by Staff Writer

Turned Away

Perhaps to close out the discussion of the Working Families Party candidates, local voters should be aware of what happened during the primary election earlier this year. I work as a poll official in Westhampton Beach, and we had a total of eight voters come in to cast ballots all day. None of them was a registered Working Families Party voter. And so, although they were well meaning, we had to turn them away, thanking them nonetheless for trying to exercise their right to vote. There were at least 10 poll officials seated all day, from 6 a.m. to 9 ... by Staff Writer