Kenny Robinson Of Southampton Dies August 1 - 27 East

Kenny Robinson Of Southampton Dies August 1

icon 1 Photo

author on Aug 22, 2016

Kenneth Robinson of Southampton and San Pablo, California, died at his California home on August 1. He was 58.

Known as Kenny, he was born September 3, 1957, and was a 1976 graduate of Southampton High School. Survivors said he had an infectious laugh and a smile that made him a local favorite. A music maven and longtime employee of Long Island Sound, he was instrumental in making the annual All for the Sea benefit concert a success. His passion for cooking eventually led him to the California Culinary Academy in San Francisco and then a position with Major League Baseball’s San Francisco Giants. Health issues eventually ended his dream of becoming a restaurant chef. A lifelong New York Giants fan, he was also a baseball and hockey enthusiast. He was a member of the Abundant Life Christian Center in California.

A memorial service will be held in California on August 27.

A memorial service in Southampton is being planned.

You May Also Like:

Q&A: Bonnie Michelle Cannon on a Day for Women That's About Self-Care, Not Just Cancer Awareness

Saturday at the Bridgehampton Child Care & Recreational Center, the event is officially the fourth ... 17 Oct 2025 by Joseph P. Shaw

VIDEO: Express News Group Hosts Virtual Southampton Town Debate

The Express News Group hosted a virtual debate for the three candidates for Southampton Town ... 16 Oct 2025 by Staff Writer

Local Matters: Southampton Village | The Sessions Report

The first in a new series titled “Local Matters” focused on Southampton Village with an ... by Staff Writer

Southampton Police Officers Hospitalized After Saving Man From Burning House in Shinnecock Hills Wednesday Night

Two Southampton Town Police officers were hospitalized for smoke inhalation and a man trapped on ... by Staff Writer

Testing Traffic Fixes on CR 39 — What’s Changing and What Comes Next | 27speaks

In a few weeks, the Suffolk County Department of Public Works will institute changes in ... by Staff Writer

Affordable Housing, Traffic and Sewer Fixes Go Hand in Hand, Southampton Panel Says at Express Sessions Event

On the surface, creating a sewer district, providing more affordable and workforce housing, and easing ... by Cailin Riley

Hampton Bays Girls Soccer Honors Eight Outgoing Seniors With a Win; Farrell Scores Hat Trick

Senior Night is always better with a win, so that’s exactly what the Hampton Bays ... 15 Oct 2025 by Drew Budd

Southhampton Police Reports for the Week of October 16

NOYAC — A Denise Street resident told Southampton Town Police that someone had withdrawn $2,250 from her Dime Bank checking account without her permission. She told police she had an interaction with someone online that she thought was a Dime employee, which could have been a fraudster. WESTHAMPTON — An Amazon delivery driver was taken to the hospital after being bitten several times by a dog at an Ent Avenue home in Westhampton on October 6. The owner of the property told police the dog did not belong to him and that he had tied it to a post while ... by Staff Writer

Time To Grow

The community and Southampton Town officials have been optimistic about the Riverside redevelopment plan for years. But residents of Flanders and Riverside are right to be concerned that its potential to transform the area into a vibrant business center has the potential to backfire and create monstrous residential density in a hamlet that needs growth but not necessarily growth in population. A presentation last week in front of the Town Board should go a long way to ease some of those concerns. The consultants formulating the plan for the hamlet center’s growth promised stakeholders that the amount of residential density ... by Editorial Board

Commodity, Not Community

Last week’s Express Sessions event in Southampton Village, part of a five-part series called “Local Matters” — upcoming events will turn to Sag Harbor, East Hampton, Hampton Bays and Westhampton Beach — was largely dominated by a trio of interconnected issues: traffic, most significantly, but also affordable housing and the need for septic solutions. As it turns out, the three are so intertwined that you simply can’t discuss them individually, and no “solution” will slay this three-headed dragon alone. Still, there was a great deal to take away from this first conversation, and it impacts the entire South Fork, because ... by Editorial Board