The Bald Hill Memorial located in Farmingville pays tribute to our
Veterans with this monument constructed in 1991 to honor the men and
women that served our country during the Vietnam War.
Bald Hill, located in the hamlet of Farmingville, New York, part of the Town of Brookhaven, is one of the highest areas of elevation on Long Island.
The highest elevation in the Bald Hill area is 331 feet (101 m). Though
local residents often claim it to be the highest point on Long Island, that honor actually belongs to Jayne's Hill in the Town of Huntington at 401 feet (122 m). Also, nearby Telescope Hill,
about 0.8 miles (1.3 km) WSW, is slightly higher at 334 feet (102 m).
Bald Hill in Brookhaven should also not be confused with Bald Hill in Riverhead.
The Bald Hill area is part of the Ronkonkoma Moraine, which runs
east to west along the center of the Town of Brookhaven, and marks
where the glacier which formed Long Island stopped its advance. hen first settled in the late 18th century, the area was called "Bald Hills." While the elevation and views are impressive for Long Island, George Washington found the hills to be merely "trifling" when he passed through in April 1790.
In 1897, the cross-Island Bicycle Path was opened and passed through the Bald Hill area.
In 1970-71, Patchogue-Mt. Sinai Road (County Route 83)
was built through the Bald Hill area. Two overlooks were constructed in
a widened median area with automobile access, and stone markers were
placed for "Danger Hill" and "Breakneck Hill", the names given to the
two hills by early settlers. A Vietnam Veterans memorial was opened on
the southern lookout side in 1991 (elevation 321 feet).
The Brookhaven Town Hall and Sachem East High School are on the east
side of the hill. The Glacier Ridge Preserve to the north of the
structures has a network of 11 miles (18 km) of cross country bicycle
trails.
From 1965-1980, Bald Hill was the site of a Town-owned skiing area known as the Bald Hill Ski Bowl.
The seeds for this project were planted in 1964, when Suffolk County
builder Henry Taca approached the Town with plans to build houses on
his 229 acres (0.93 km2) in the area, including the hilly Bald Hill tract. He turned over 64 acres (260,000 m2) of the Bald Hill property to the Town free of charge in 1965, and in return, he received Town approval for a "cluster housing"
project known as Hawthorne Estates. Under the approval, he was allowed
to build more houses on his remaining acreage than would otherwise be
permitted.
The Bald Hill Ski Bowl officially opened on January 21, 1965, with a
710-foot (220 m) tow rope in operation on a wide main slope, which
featured a 800-foot (240 m) run and 123-foot (37 m) vertical drop. At
its opening, it was hoped that with the use of snow machines, the
slopes and trails would be usable for an average of 70 days each
winter. Initial prices were $3 for an all-day ticket, $2 for a half-day
ticket after 1 P.M., and 25 cents for a single ski-tow trip.
By January 1967, an 800-foot (240 m) T-bar lift had been installed to
supplement three tow ropes ranging from 150 to 800 feet (240 m) in
length, and there were now five ski trails on three slopes. A Swiss-chalet style lodge with a fireplace was also added.
In 1975, The New York Times reported that the ski area was now drawing 5,000 visitors each week. The facility was described as covering 106 acres (0.43 km2)
and featuring a 1,400-foot (430 m) run for advanced skiers, a slope for
"novices", and a "bunny run" for beginners. The cost for an all-day
ticket was $2.25. All was not rosy, however. New "quiet" snow machines
were in the process of being installed to quell complaints about noise
from neighboring residents, and some members of the Town Board were
complaining that the facility was costing too much and should perhaps
be closed. Operating costs were reported to be $500,000 annually, with
revenue of between $100,000 to $200,000, depending on the amount of
snowfall.
Fortunes turned briefly for the better in the winter of 1976-1977,
when generous snowfall (over 62 inches (1,600 mm) in Suffolk County)
gave the Ski Bowl its first profitable year.
But the warmer winter of 1979-80 proved to be a death blow. As of late
January 1980, the ski bowl had only been open eight days for the season. Only 6,500 skiers showed up that winter, only 11 inches (280 mm) of snow fell, and revenues fell to $18,000.
As the next winter approached, the Town searched for a private operator
willing to take over the facility, an unlikely prospect in light of
Long Island's weather and the site's historical unprofitability. With
the facility's budget slashed by over 70%, and a vague plan to open
only if natural snowfall was sufficient, Bald Hill's days as Long
Island's largest public skiing facility were at an end.
The ski bowl site is now home of the Brookhaven Amphitheater. The ski lodge building remains as an art gallery, and sits to the right of the audience as they face the stage.
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