Patchogue River

Patchogue River
Location Suffolk County, New York
Primary inflows Patchogue Bay
Primary outflows Great South Bay
Basin countries United States
Max. depth 12 ft (3.7 m)
Surface elevation 10 ft (3.0 m)

The Patchogue River is a mile-long waterway In Patchogue, New York that is lined with a variety restaurants, marinas, fueling docks, apartment condominiums, and ferry terminals.

Contents

Description

The Patchogue River Inlet joins itself into the cove of Patchogue bay which is part of The Great South Bay. The River flows south and is greeted by Sandpit park on southeast corner of the River.

The Davis Park ferry terminal is adjacent to the Sandpit and offers seating and parking on the river front.[1]

Companies and wholesale clam dealers created a viable mixture of uses for the Patchogue river that at one time was a largely utilized commercial port in the 19th and 20th Centuries.

The Patchogue Riverfront Committee is host of the Sea Fair River Festival, a riverfront celebration intended to welcome Long Islanders to enjoy and appreciate the beautiful Patchogue River and its maritime sea life.

The Patchogue River serves as a central mariner and recreational water front to many Long Island tourists and Residents alike.

The Fire Island Wilderness area, located on the eastern end of Fire Island, is the only federally designated U.S. Wilderness Area in New York State.

Patchogue River Parade

Every year on the Sunday before Thanksgiving, the Patchogue River Parade is held, with boaters decorating and illuminating their boats in that year's theme. The spectacle is viewable from Sandspit Park, Watch Hill Ferry Terminal, or anywhere on the river.

In 2008, the Parade removed the word "Christmas" from its name and became a public controversy, losing about 500 spectators. Brookhaven-based fireworks company "Fireworks by Grucci" dropped its sponsorship after the Greater Patchogue Foundation removed "Christmas" from the parade's name because some residents complained the name wasn't inclusive enough. Grucci vice president Philip Butler opposes the secularization of Christmas. His supporters encouraged area residents to stay away from the parade on Patchogue River.[2]

The Patchogue River Maritime Center Plan recently unveiled to the public a plan to utilize more of the river's benefits, ranging from dredging the river to building a Fire Island National Seashore visitors center and a possible marine museum.[3]

List of crossings of the Patchogue River

References

Attendance was low for the Boat Parade in 2008 not because Butler's relatively few, but vocal, supporters' boycott was successful, but as a result of freezing weather that day coupled with the fact that the well-publicized murder of Marcello Lucero had occurred just two weeks before.

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