HYLAND
reflector oven, a cabbage chopper, an ivory-handled
rolling pin and a butter churn. A pie-safe and huge tin
bathtub complete the scene.
If the Custom-Master House is unusually stocked
with its original impedimenta and furniture, it owes
its ongoing existence and vitality as a microcosm of
America, c. 1790 to 1820 to a preservation entity, the
Olde Sagg Harbour Committee, which in the 1940s
saved the house from being razed and had it moved
from its original location, at Union and Church Streets,
to its present site. A noteworthy contributor to the