Need to know exactly where your property lines are? Planning a new building, or maybe adding a fence? Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the surveying services you need in Hempstead.
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Islandwide Land Surveyors is a locally owned and operated surveying company serving homeowners, builders, and developers in Hempstead, NY, and throughout Nassau County. We combine the latest technology with good old-fashioned fieldwork to provide our clients with reliable and accurate results. Our team is here to help you with all your surveying needs.
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Property surveys are essential for a variety of reasons. They help establish clear property boundaries, which can prevent legal disputes and ensure smooth real estate transactions. Surveys are also crucial for planning construction projects, ensuring that buildings and other structures are placed correctly. In Hempstead, NY, and across Nassau County, Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the surveying expertise you can rely on. Give us a call today at 866-808-5800.
The town was first settled around 1644 following the establishment of a treaty between English colonists, John Carman and Robert Fordham, and the Lenape Indians in 1643. Although the settlers were from the new English colony of New Haven (1638), later incorporated into, Connecticut in 1662, a patent was issued by the government of New Netherland after the settlers had purchased land from the local natives. This transaction is depicted in a mural in the Hempstead Village Hall, reproduced from a poster commemorating the 300th anniversary of Hempstead Village.
In local Dutch-language documents of the 1640s and later, the town was invariably called Heemstede, and several of Hempstead’s original 50 patentees were Dutch, suggesting that Hempstead was named after the Dutch town and/or castle of the same name, both of which are located near the cities of Haarlem and Amsterdam. However, the authorities possibly had Dutchified a name given by co-founder John Carman, who was born in 1606 in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, England, on land owned by his ancestors since the 13th century.
In 1664, the settlement under the new Province of New York adopted the Duke’s Laws, austere statutes that became the basis upon which the laws of many colonies were to be founded. For a time, Hempstead became known as “Old Blue”, as a result of the “Blue Laws”.
Learn more about Hempstead.