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WHERE OUR STORY LIVES

The Bridgehampton Museum was established in 1954 by a group of concerned local citizens focused on trying to preserve the history and culture specific to our special hamlet. Utilizing the William Corwith House and homestead property  as  the main headquarters of the organization the museum and its dedicated staff have served our community.

Presently we find ourselves entering an exciting new chapter of our life with a beautifully renovated and restored Nathaniel Rogers house serving as headquarters of an expanding campus of buildings that comprise our organization. This stunning Greek Revival mansion is on the National register of historic Landmarks and serves as a gleaming beacon to all who pass through our storied hamlet. 

Although there have been changes, one thing continues to be constant and underpins our  mission,  the Bridgehampton Museum is dedicated to the collection, preservation and interpretation of the artistic, cultural and historical legacy of Bridgehampton. preserving the past  and guiding our community into the future.  We aim to be a hub for the history, culture, art and education on the area we are all proud to call home.

Please join us in unlocking the stories of the past and taking the next steps into the future.  Lets create history together.

CURRENTLY ON VIEW

UPCOMING EEXHIBITIONS

UPCOMING EVENTS

At The The Southfork Natural History Museum & Nature Center on August 23, 2025
At The Corwith Homestead on September 6, 2025

Gift SHOP

PRESS

BRIDGEHAMPTON MUSEUM PROPERTIES

The Nathaniel Rogers House

GET INVOLVED

LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The Bridgehampton Museum is on what is traditionally Shinnecock and Montaukett’s ancestral territory. For several thousand years before the first European colonists, the first known inhabitants of this area of Bridgehampton were what is known today as the aboriginal Montaukett & Shinnecock peoples, two of Long Island’s original thirteen tribal communities. Shinnecock land once spanned present-day Riverhead to Sag Harbor, and Montaukett land began in Sag Harbor and spanned to Montauk Point.

This land acknowledgment is a reminder of the land dispossession and continual displacement of Indigenous peoples and our commitment to dismantling the ongoing effects of this colonial legacy.

The Montaukett, spelled a dozen ways in early records, was not a “tribal” name but a place name the colonists conferred upon them as they designated a “tribe.” The meaning of Montaukett in William Wallace Tooker’s Indian Place Names on Long Island is given as either the “high or hilly land” or the “fort country”– both of which appear to fit Montauk topography and the presence of two fortified places. Shinnecock is a word that translates to “People of the Stony Shore” and also refers to a homeland before it refers to a group of people.

The Shinnecock & Montaukett are members of the more prominent Algonkian language family and peoples who inhabited the Atlantic Coastal Plain from Canada to the Carolinas. They spoke a variant of the Mohegan-Pequot language across the Long Island Sound from them.

Shinnecock is a self-governing sovereign nation that received Federal Recognition in 2010 after more than 30 years of petitioning. Today, the Shinnecock retain 800 square acres of their original territory in Southampton, New York.

The Montaukett continue to pursue New York State and Federal recognition along with reclaiming their ancestral territory of Indian Fields in Montauk.

-Jeremy Dennis,

Lead Artist & President of Ma’s House & BIPOC Art Studio

and Bridgehampton Museum Board Member

Hours of Operation
Open March to December
William Corwith House – by appointment – call 631-537-1088
Nathaniel Rogers House – Wednesdays to Saturdays 11am to 3pm

PO Box 977
2368 Montauk Highway
Bridgehampton, NY 11932
(631) 537-1088