NORTH SHORE (LONG ISLAND)

The 'North Shore' of Long Island is the area along Long Island's northern coast, bordering Long Island Sound. Traditionally, the region has been the most affluent on Long Island and among the most affluent in the New York metropolitan area, which has earned it the nickname "the Gold Coast." Though some consider the North Shore to include parts of Queens, particularly the quasi-suburban northeastern neighborhoods such as Douglaston, the term is generally used to refer to the Long Island coastline in Nassau County and Suffolk County. It is often used as a generic name for the entire northern half of Long Island, including much of the Hempstead Plains rather than just the hilly areas immediately next to the coastline.
Being a terminal moraine of the Wisconsin glaciation, the North Shore is hilly, and its beaches are more rocky than those on the on the flat, sandy outwash plain of the south shore.

Contents
Gold Coast
Cities, villages and hamlets
External links

Gold Coast


Thanks to the late 19th century spread of the private estates of Vanderbilts, Roosevelts, Whitneys and other social climbers in areas where rocky terrain is more productive of pretty views than crops, the North Shore has a long-held reputation of elegance and gentility. Many stately old homes can be found there, and an "old money" atmosphere pervades. Some of the largest or most prominent ones, such as Castle Gould (known as Hempstead House under the ownership of Daniel Guggenheim) in Sands Point, Sagamore Hill, Vanderbilt Museum and Oheka Castle still exist but are no longer private homes.
In popular culture, the North Shore is perhaps best known as the setting of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel ''The Great Gatsby,'' which centered on the area's wealth and the aspiration of the title character to be accepted as a part of its society. The novel's "West Egg" and "East Egg" were fictionalized versions of the real North Shore villages of Kings Point and Sands Point. The distinctive upper class speech pattern known as Locust Valley Lockjaw takes its name from the North Shore's Locust Valley area. The aristocratic cachet persists despite suburban infill converting much of the North Shore into commuter towns.
Though the western stretch of the North Shore is considered by most locals to be the more fashionable of Long Island's coasts, once the island splits into two forks at its east end, the North Shore becomes largely rural. This area is known as the North Fork, and it contrasts starkly with the South Fork's Hamptons, though it resembles the more easterly Outer Lands. In the past 25 years, the North Fork has reinvented itself as a major center for the production of wine.

Cities, villages and hamlets




Asharoken

Brookville

Bayside

Bayville

Cold Spring Harbor

Centerport

Centre Island

Douglaston

East Hills

East Northport

East Norwich

East Setauket

Fort Salonga

Glen Cove

Glen Head

Great Neck

Greenvale

Halesite

Head of the Harbor

Herricks

Huntington

Huntington Bay

Jericho

Kings Point

Kings Park

Lattingtown

Little Neck

Locust Valley

Lloyd Harbor

Manhasset

Manorhaven

Matinecock

Mill Neck

Miller Place

Mount Sinai

Muttontown

Nesconset

Nissequogue

Northport

Oyster Bay

Old Brookville

Old Field

Old Westbury

Plandome

Plandome Heights

Plandome Manor

Port Jefferson

Port Washington

Riverhead

Rocky Point

Roslyn

Sands Point

Saint James

Sea Cliff

Setauket

Shoreham

Smithtown

Stony Brook

Syosset

Upper Brookville

Wading River

Woodbury

Whitestone

External links



Television documentary "Gold Coast Mansions"

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