Next to the 1926 flagpole on the village green is a large rock with a plaque installed on it, marking the historic district.
The Green slopes up to the South End Cemetery, which was the site of the historic Town Church.
It was expanded to include, on the other side of James Lane, Tuthill House, Mulford Farmhouse, Home Sweet Home (associated with writer John Howard Payne), St. Luke's Episcopal Church and Rectory, the replica of the John Lyon Gardiner Mill Cottage, Gardiner Mill, The Rev.
The trees on side of the street by Mulford homestead are all separately marked with a stone with a name/date shield.
[4][5][6][7][8] Media related to East Hampton Village District at Wikimedia Commons