Despite the architectural evidence that clearly places the House’s original construction in the mid-1700s, the earliest documented owner was Josiah Foster, who is believed to have acquired it about 1835 from Stephen Russell. Although Stephen Russell is said (Augusta Meeker to Beatrice Rogers) to have purchased the House from a Grant Bowers, it is possible that William Russell, who reportedly acquired lands here in 1663 prior to the Quogue Purchase, may have been the first owner. Josiah Foster was a descendant of the prolific local Foster family, among the first original Southampton settlers to populate the Westhampton/Quogue area. A cobbler by trade, Josiah maintained the House unaltered through the 1800s, leaving it to his daughter Susannah (Foster) Meeker on his death in 1885.
Miss Augusta S. Meeker, Josiah’s granddaughter, inherited the House upon the death of her mother, Susannah, in 1908 and maintained the House unchanged until her own death in 1957. Miss Meeker served as the librarian and in other functions at the Westhampton Free Library from 1902, when it was first chartered by New York State, until she resigned in 1937. Miss Meeker was well known in the Village and the Historical Museum is fortunate to have a number of artifacts from her home. After Augusta’s death, alterations and additions were undertaken by a new owner who made a conscious effort to maintain the original look and feel of the House and preserve the original form and structural frame.
When it was threatened with demolition in 2008, the Foster-Meeker House was documented, funding was secured, and the House was moved to a new permanent location. The Historical Society (now the Greater Westhampton Historical Museum) listed the House on the New York State and National Registers of Historic Places and developed a restoration/reconstruction plan with the intent to use the House for educational programs. To recognize both the history of the House and its new purpose, it was re-named the Foster-Meeker Heritage Center.