Lucida Grande0000,0000,0000
Suggest you see the Newsday article "United States vs. Maine Rhode
Island and New York Boundary Case" Argued Nov. 26, 1984 | Decided
Feb. 19, 1985 at
http://www.newsday.com/extras/lihistory/vault/hs107cv1.htm
This explains court ruling in murky detail that I will not dare to
explain.
Shoreline Mapping Web Site Bibliography may also be helpful at
http://www.csc.noaa.gov/shoreline/biblio.html
SHORE AND SEA BOUNDARIES Volume Three at
http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache:OTZ7UJPBugwC:chartmaker.ncd.noaa.gov/shalowitz/preface.pdf+new+york+rhode+island+Maritime+Boundaries&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
Clifton Patrick
Town of Chester Historian
119 Brookside Ave.
Chester, NY 10918
direct phone/fax 845-469-7645
On Thursday, May 1, 2003, at 16:32 America/New_York, Scott Monje wrote:
Hello,
Here is a question for enthusiasts of legal nuance. Can anyone help me
find the state boundaries in Long Island Sound? I understand that the
islands of the sound belong to New York (having been granted to the
duke of York in 1664). Does that mean that the water and submerged
land of the sound also belong to New York, or are there distinctions
as there are in the New York-New Jersey boundaries in New York Bay? A
1985 Supreme Court decision that I came across declared the Long
Island Sound "internal waters" and thus within the jurisdiction of the
adjacent states, but it didn't go into any details regarding the New
York-Connecticut boundary as it was concerned with establishing the
U.S. boundary at the east end of the sound. It set the U.S. border
from the North Fork of Long Island to Watch Hill Point, Rhode Island
(or, more precisely, three miles seaward from that line). Can we
assume that the New York-Rhode Island state boundary is at the
midpoint of that line?
Many thanks for any guidance you can give,
Scott Monje