OUR COMMUNITY
Beginnings
The
first settlers were Dutch from New Amsterdam and Quakers from
New England. The community began to take shape
in 1676 with the transfer of more than 100 acres by John
Smith,
an original Hempstead settler, to his son, Jeremiah. The resulting
farming community was called Little Neck until 1818 when a bridge
was built to allow Merrick Road to span a creek. At that point
the community along Merrick Road, which was where the early residential
growth took place, was named New Bridge. When the railroad arrived
in 1867, it named the station Bellmore although the surrounding
community retained the name New Bridge. Between 1870 and 1880,
as businesses began to sprout around the station, more and more
people began to call the community Bellmore. That name became
official when the first post office was established with the
name Bellmore in the general store near the station in 1883.
What is now North Bellmore was initially called Smithville
about 1850 because so many Smiths lived there. In 1867, when
residents petitioned for a post office in that area, the government
said no because there was a Smithville upstate. But it approved
the name Smithville South. That name lasted until 1920, when
the post office was renamed North Bellmore.
Turning
Points
The Bellmore area experienced several spurts
of growth. The first came with the arrival of the railroad.
At the turn of the century, large farms in the Smithville South
area were subdivided for housing. The construction of Sunrise
Highway in the 1920s brought more residents, and a housing
boom after World War II brought the biggest population boom
of all.
Claims
to Fame
Comic Lenny
Bruce and former CIA director
William
Casey grew up in Bellmore. Actor George
Kennedy is
also a native and acted as honorary chairman of the community's
tricentennial in 1976. Metropolitan Opera star Helen
Jepson had a cottage in Bellmore during the
1920s. |