History & Culture · Long Island
Ross Memorial Park gives Brentwood a small front porch by the commute
Brentwood's Ross Memorial Park is a small Town of Islip park with a family memorial story and an everyday place beside bus and train trips.
Published July 14, 2026 · Last verified July 14, 2026
Brentwood is often seen in motion: Brentwood Road, buses, the railroad, and people fitting one more errand around the trip home. Ross Memorial Park puts a little stillness into that picture.
The park covers roughly two acres, with brick sidewalks under pine and oak trees. Brentwood resident William H. Ross established it in 1945 in memory of his wife, Frances E. Ross. It was dedicated on Memorial Day that year and later deeded to the Town of Islip.
The location is part of the story. People use the park while waiting for a bus or train, as well as for the scenery. It is not a grand destination that asks for a whole afternoon. It is a small public pause built into an ordinary route.
That makes Ross Memorial Park feel like a neighborhood front porch. A family memorial became town land, mature trees shade the walks, and a commuter can sit for a few minutes without leaving the center of Brentwood life.
Brentwood is a Census place inside the Town of Islip, and the park’s deed put this particular property in town hands. That local-government detail is easier to remember once it is attached to a real patch of brick, trees, and daily waiting.