Smithtown is a town of 117,000 people (2016) in Suffolk County, New York.
Smithtown was first settled by Europeans around 1665. Local legend has it that, after rescuing a Native American chief's abducted daughter, Richard Smith was told that the chief would grant title to all of the land Smith could encircle in one day "on a bull". Smith chose to ride the bull on the longest day of the year (summer solstice), to enable him to ride longer "in one day". The land he acquired in this way is said to approximate the current town's location. There is a large anatomically correct statue of Smith's bull, known as Whisper, at the fork of Jericho Turnpike (New York State Route 25) and St. Johnland Road (New York State Route 25A).
Smithtown is served by Suffolk County Transit bus routes.
Interstate 495, the Long Island Expressway, passes through the southwest corner of the town between Exit 52 in Commack and east of Exit 53 in Brentwood.
Northern State Parkway is an east-west route that has interchanges from Exit 43 in Commack on the Huntington-Smithtown Town Line to Veterans Memorial Highway in Hauppauge.
Sagtikos State Parkway is the south-north parkway that enters Smithtown from Brentwood at the interchange with the Long Island Expressway, and terminates at the Northern State Parkway (Exit SM1) in Commack, where it becomes the Sunken Meadow State Parkway.
Sunken Meadow State Parkway is the main south-north parkway within the western part of Smithtown. It begins at Northern State Parkway as a continuation of Sagtikos State Parkway in Commack, winding northeast, until it reaches Sunken Meadow State Park immediately after the interchange with NY 25A.
New York State Route 25A enters the town from Bread and Cheese Hollow Road in Fort Salonga.
New York State Route 25 runs west to east along Jericho Turnpike from Suffolk CR 4.
Smithtown is served by LIRR via the Port Jefferson Branch, trains runs about once every hour in each direction. A few trains run all the way to Penn Station in Manhattan, but most terminaste at Jamaica in Queens.
Smithtown is a very safe community. The average tourist needs not worry about anything dangerous happening to them, and the average resident cares a great deal about ensuring that their community remains safe at all times; the average resident in Smithtown takes a lot of pride in a safe community.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division