The area’s name likely stems from the existence of at least one illegal still in what were then vast woodlands behind the Bridgehampton farm soils. A 1923 East Hampton Star brief refers to a big land sale in the area that was called off after discovery of such a whiskey apparatus. As Hamptons real estate took off in the mid-1980s, a developer targeted the spread, but a noted local conservationist, Andrew Sabin, included its kettlehole pond in his brief for the tiger salamander.









