Company Profile

Peconic Dunes 4-H Camp

Company Overview

Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE) is a non-profit community education agency established in 1917. We are affiliated with Cornell University as part of the national land grant university system started in 1862. We are educators, researchers, specialists and support personnel who are dedicated to making Suffolk County a desirable place to live and work. CCE's professional team helps preserve our county's vast heritage, protect our eco-systems, support families and provide our youth opportunities for community service and research-based education in science, technology, engineering and math. (STEM)

Our experts offer local and affordable skill training for educators, youth leaders, human service personnel, and parents. Our Family Health and Wellness educators help strengthen families and address critical issues facing them today. These programs have a cost/savings benefit for organizations throughout the county. We work directly with farmers and fishermen who rely on our research, guidance and assistance to protect the environment and to promote the economic health of these vital heritage industries. Our 4-H Youth Development programs and camps get thousands of Suffolk youth "unplugged" and out into their communities while participating in fun, hands-on learning activities taught by professionals.

To accomplish our mission, we partner with all levels of government, Cornell University, non-profits, and community groups.

Company History

Peconic Dunes 4-H Camp has a long and fascinating history….

During World War I, Long Island was home to Camp Upton, a temporary military base where Brookhaven National Lab now exists. After the war ended, the government decommissioned the base and gave away the buildings and equipment. In 1923 a young visionary, Luvia Margaret Willard, MD (1882-1977), acquired some of the lumber from these buildings and used it to build a camp for girls. She called it “Camp Dunes.”

Dr. Willard was a unique woman for any time, but especially for the 1920s. She graduated from Stanstead Wesleyan College in 1902 and Cornell University Medical College in 1909. She also wrote poetry and published many volumes, including one book called “Bric a Brac”, which explores her feelings about life on the North Fork of Long Island. Dr. Willard founded the American Women’s Hospital Reserve during WWII, which was a group of women who drove ambulances and gave first aid in Queens, NY.

Camp Dunes opened its cabin doors on June 30, 1924. Camp Dunes was located on over 26 acres on the Long Island Sound and included access to Great Pond Lake. The rate was $150 for 8 weeks of summer camp, according to an ad in the Long Island Daily Press (June 17, 1924). Food for the camp was purchased from neighboring farms and village markets, and the female campgoers engaged in various activities: swimming, boating, play-acting, and the like. “The maritime climate together with the unusual amount of sunshine peculiar to this locality make for an unusually healthful environment. The Geodetic Survey shows that the region around Peconic, Long Island, averages to the year one hundred days more sunshine than New York City,” notes a Camp Dunes brochure.

On December 11, 1931 Dr. Willard sold her camp to Thomas and Lois Ward –founders of what would become Pinecrest Dunes Camp for Boys. Mr. Ward and Mrs. Ward built the camp up over the next 40 years, expanding its audience to include girls and a week for children with special needs. You can read much more about Mr. Ward and Pinecrest Dunes at the Southold Historical Society. Photos of PInecrest Dunes, 1949-1956, have been shared by Pinecrest alum P. Barton Erickson and uploaded here.

In 1971 the Suffolk County Department of Parks, Recreation, and Conservation took over operations and re-opened under the name “Peconic Dunes Camp,” paying homage to both the dunes on which the camp was built and the nearby town of Peconic, NY. The county continues to own the property today, and in 2003 contracted with Cornell Cooperative Extension of Suffolk County to operate it.

As part of the Extension system, Peconic Dunes became affiliated with 4-H (the youth development arm of Extension) and adopted their mission of "engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development.” The goal of 4-H is to develop citizenship, leadership, responsibility and life skills of youth through experiential learning programs and a positive youth development approach. Though typically thought of as an agriculturally focused organization as a result of its history, 4-H today focuses on citizenship, healthy living, science, engineering, and technology programs.

Much has changed since 1924, but this poem by Dr. Willard still holds true:
Far from the city’s maddening din,
Out where the Sunrise Trails begin,
Where the toes of the dunes are kissed by the sea,
Is a camp that seems just made for me.
Where the birches dress in their silvery white,
And gnarled oaks squirm in sheer delight,
Where tall pines frame a sapphire sea,
Is a camp that seems just made for me.
There are hill camps, and lake camps, and camps by the sea,
But there’s only one camp by the lake and the sea

Thank you to Geoffrey Fleming and the Southold Historical Society for their help in researching and writing some of our camp’s history.

Notable Accomplishments / Recognition

Dan's Papers, Reader's Choice Best of the Best Summer Camps, 2008 - 2014

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