Property Surveyor in Suffolk County

Accurate Property Surveys

Need to know exactly where your property lines are? Planning a construction project? Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the property surveying services you need in Silver Beach, NY.

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Surveying Advantages

Why Professional Surveying Matters

  • Avoid boundary disputes with your neighbors by having a clear and accurate property survey.
  • Make informed decisions about your property with detailed topographic and elevation data.
  • Ensure your construction project goes smoothly with precise layout services.
  • Get the information you need for land development, subdivisions, and more.
  • A man in a yellow hard hat and orange safety vest holds blueprints and a tablet while standing at a construction site. An unfinished building and crane are visible in the background. The sky is partly cloudy.

    Local Surveying Experts

    About Islandwide Land Surveyors

    Islandwide Land Surveyors is a locally owned and operated surveying company serving homeowners, builders, and developers in Silver Beach, NY, and throughout Suffolk County. We combine the latest technology with good old-fashioned fieldwork to provide our clients with reliable and accurate results. Our team is committed to helping you with all your surveying needs.

    A surveyor wearing a green jacket and black cap uses a theodolite on a tripod in a scenic countryside. The background features a stone pile, lush green trees, and a bright blue sky with clouds.

    The Surveying Process

    Our Approach to Surveying

  • Consultation: We’ll start by discussing your project and what type of survey will best meet your needs.
  • Fieldwork: Our licensed surveyors will gather data on your property using theodolites, GPS equipment, and other tools.
  • Analysis and Reporting: We’ll carefully analyze the data and provide you with a detailed survey report.
  • Two construction workers in safety vests and helmets examine a tablet and remote control at a building site. A drone flies in the background near concrete pillars under a clear sky.
    A theodolite on a tripod is set up at a construction site. In the blurred background, two workers in high-visibility vests and helmets are standing near rebar and concrete forms.

    Types of Land Surveys

    Do You Need a Property Survey?

    Whether you’re buying or selling property, planning construction, or need to resolve a boundary dispute, a professional survey is essential. Islandwide Land Surveyors provides a wide range of surveying services in Suffolk County, including boundary surveys, topographic surveys, construction layouts, and more. Contact us today at 866-808-5800 to discuss your project in Silver Beach, NY.

    Contact Information

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    About Island-Wide Land Surveyors

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    The peninsula was called Vriedelandt, “Land of Peace”, by the New Netherlanders. The current name comes from John Throckmorton, English immigrant and associate of Roger Williams in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The Dutch allowed Throckmorton to settle in this peripheral area of New Amsterdam in 1642, with thirty-five others. At this time, the peninsula was also known as Maxson’s point as the Maxson family (Richard, Rebecca, John, etc.) lived there. Many of the settlers, including Anne Hutchinson and her family, were murdered in a 1643 uprising of Native Americans. Throckmorton returned to Rhode Island. In 1668, the peninsula appeared on maps as “Frockes Neck”. The peninsula was virtually an island at high tide.

    In 1776, George Washington’s headquarters wrote of a potential British landing at “Frogs Neck”. At the bridge over Westchester Creek, now represented by an unobtrusive steel and concrete span at East Tremont Avenue near Westchester Avenue, General Howe did make an unsuccessful effort to cut off Washington’s troops in October 1776; when the British approached, the Americans ripped up the plank bridge and opened a heavy fire that forced Howe to withdraw and change his plans; six days later he landed troops at Rodman’s Neck to the north, on the far side of Eastchester Bay. A farm in the area owned by the Stephenson family was sold in 1795 to Abijah Hammond, who built a large mansion (later the offices of the Silver Beach Garden Corporation).

    In the 19th century, the area remained the site of large farms, converted into estates. In about 1848, members of the Morris family purchased a large parcel of land there. They built two mansions and many cottages and service buildings. The Morris estates had a private dock in Morris Cove, at the end of what is now Emerson Avenue, where they had nearly a mile of shoreline. After the Civil War, Collis P. Huntington, the railroad builder, owned an extensive parcel, which his heirs held until they were almost the last estate on Throggs Neck. Huntington’s property was previously owned by Frederick C. Havemeyer Jr., a sugar magnate, and the Havemeyer-Huntington mansion is now home to Preston High School, New York.

    Learn more about Silver Beach.