LLMpediaThe first transparent, open encyclopedia generated by LLMs

Coram, New York

Generated by GPT-5-mini
Note: This article was automatically generated by a large language model (LLM) from purely parametric knowledge (no retrieval). It may contain inaccuracies or hallucinations. This encyclopedia is part of a research project currently under review.
Article Genealogy
Expansion Funnel Raw 101 → Dedup 0 → NER 0 → Enqueued 0
1. Extracted101
2. After dedup0 (None)
3. After NER0 ()
4. Enqueued0 ()
Coram, New York
NameCoram
Settlement typeHamlet and census-designated place
Coordinates40.8576°N 72.9635°W
Subdivision typeCountry
Subdivision nameUnited States
Subdivision type1State
Subdivision name1New York
Subdivision type2County
Subdivision name2Suffolk
Subdivision type3Town
Subdivision name3Brookhaven
Area total sq mi10.5
Population total39,000
TimezoneEastern (EST)

Coram, New York Coram is a hamlet and census-designated place in the Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, on Long Island, New York. Located within the metropolitan orbit of New York City, Coram lies near transportation corridors and suburban centers, historically shaped by colonial settlement, the Revolutionary era, and 19th-century infrastructure projects. The community interacts with regional institutions, cultural sites, and environmental resources across Long Island and the broader Northeast Corridor.

History

Early settlement in Coram involved families associated with colonial Long Island communities such as Setauket, Patchogue, Smithtown, Islip and interactions with Indigenous nations including the Montaukett and Shinnecock. During the 18th century, landholders connected to William Penn-era land grants and Long Island proprietorships influenced development, with estates comparable to those in Huntington and Riverhead. The Revolutionary War period saw troop movements and quartering patterns similar to actions around Stony Brook, Brookhaven, Southold, and Greenport, with militia and Loyalist tensions paralleling events at Fort Neck and skirmishes near Sag Harbor. The 19th century brought infrastructural changes tied to the expansion of the Long Island Rail Road, the growth of New York City markets, and agricultural shifts similar to those in East Hampton, North Hempstead, and Babylon. Industrial and civic institutions echo transformations experienced in Jericho, Melville, and Mineola, while nearby veterans’ memorial developments resemble commemorations at sites like Heckscher State Park and Jones Beach State Park.

Geography and climate

Coram sits within central Suffolk County on Long Island, east of Smithtown and west of Port Jefferson Station, with proximity to Route 25, Interstate 495, and Sunken Meadow State Parkway corridors that connect to Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn. The hamlet's landscape includes glacial outwash plains and groundwater aquifers characteristic of the Laurentide Ice Sheet legacy found across Nassau County and Suffolk County, and shares coastal plain features with Montauk, Fire Island, and Rockaway Peninsula. The climate is humid subtropical bordering humid continental, with weather patterns influenced by the Atlantic Ocean, Long Island Sound, and Nor'easters that also impact New England and New Jersey. Storm responses and coastal planning in Coram parallel efforts undertaken after Hurricane Sandy, with mitigation initiatives comparable to those in Nassau County and Rockaway Beach.

Demographics

Census trends in Coram mirror population dynamics seen across suburban Long Island communities such as Commack, Centereach, Selden, and Brentwood, including postwar suburbanization connected to the GI Bill era and automobile expansion influenced by Robert Moses-era projects. Population composition reflects migration patterns involving residents from New York City, Brooklyn, Queens, and immigrant communities linked to Hispanic American and Asian American diasporas visible across Suffolk County. Household structures and age distributions are comparable to those of Hauppauge, Ronkonkoma, and Holbrook, with socioeconomic indicators measured against countywide data from Suffolk County agencies and metropolitan reports tied to New York–Newark–Jersey City metropolitan area analyses.

Economy and infrastructure

Coram's local economy includes small business sectors, retail concentrated along corridors similar to Smithtown and Patchogue, light commercial activities akin to Melville and Hauppauge business parks, and service industries serving commuters to Manhattan and Stony Brook University. Infrastructure networks include arterial roads connected to New York State Route 25, rail links via Long Island Rail Road branches, and nearby airports such as Long Island MacArthur Airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport for international travel. Utilities and planning mirror regional systems administered at the county and state level alongside agencies like Metropolitan Transportation Authority, New York State Department of Transportation, Suffolk County Water Authority, and environmental oversight comparable to New York State Department of Environmental Conservation projects. Commercial development patterns reflect retail centers similar to Brentwood Commons and industrial changes seen in Islip and Ronkonkoma redevelopment initiatives.

Education

Public education in Coram is served by school districts resembling those in Comsewogue, Middle Country Central School District, Patchogue-Medford, and Longwood Central School District, with schools participating in athletics and academic competitions governed by New York State Education Department standards and regional conferences akin to those involving Nassau County and Suffolk County schools. Higher education access is provided regionally by institutions such as Stony Brook University, Suffolk County Community College, Farmingdale State College, and private colleges including St. Joseph's College and Adelphi University, while professional and vocational training aligns with programs at BOCES and regional workforce initiatives.

Parks and recreation

Recreational amenities near Coram include parks, trails, and preserves comparable to Vanderbilt Museum grounds, Mastic Beach coastal areas, and inland preserves like Cranberry Bog and Connetquot River State Park Preserve. Outdoor activities draw on regional networks such as the Greenway Trail systems, equestrian facilities similar to those in Old Field and Cold Spring Harbor, and public spaces managed like Robert Moses State Park and Sunken Meadow State Park. Conservation efforts echo projects at Seatuck National Wildlife Refuge and collaborative habitat programs seen along Peconic Bay and Great South Bay.

Notable people

Residents and natives associated with Coram reflect Long Island's connections to wider cultural and public figures comparable to those from Rockville Centre, Bellmore, and Garden City. Notable persons linked to the area align with professions represented by alumni and residents of institutions like Stony Brook University, performers who have appeared on Saturday Night Live and The Late Show, athletes from Major League Baseball and National Football League teams with roots on Long Island, and authors published by houses such as Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster. Political figures from Suffolk County have ties similar to those who served in the New York State Assembly and United States House of Representatives, while entrepreneurs and scientists maintain affiliations with research centers including Brookhaven National Laboratory and corporations headquartered in Melville and Hauppauge.

Category:Hamlets in Suffolk County, New York