Kristen & Robert DeLaMater
“Wayside” Dr. George C. Munroe House, 1888
“Wayside” the Dr. George C. Munroe House, 1888, designed by Isaac Henry Green, Jr., located at 24 Ocean Avenue is an example of the quintessential shingle style residence. Isaac Henry Green, Jr., an important architect, who designed many structures in the Village, is crediting with popularizing the gambrel rood and introducing the shingle style to this area. The painstaking refurbishment of both interior and exterior features, including individual window restoration, restoring the ‘eared’ columns on the porch and moving an outbuilding back to its original location by lifting and carrying it manually were among the many details that made this restoration and renovation so notable. Owned by dedicated historic homeowners, Kristen and Robert DeLaMater, this is the third century old building they have occupied and restored with their family.
The Town of East Hampton
George and Sarah Fowler House, 1880s
Dating from the 1880s the George and Sarah Fowler House at 95 Springs Fireplace Rd, was restored by Ben Krupinski Builders in 2018. While a modest saltbox structure, the Fowler House is particularly significant as it is the only surviving structure in which members of the Montaukett Indian Nation lived. Located in the Freetown area of East Hampton, a section of Town in which freed slaves and indigenous people lived, George Fowler worked as a gardener for Thomas Moran, the Home Sweet Home inhabitants and others.