Islandwide Land Surveyors provides surveying services for property owners, builders, and developers in Brentwood. Get the data you need for your next project.
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About Our Company in NY
Islandwide Land Surveyors is a land surveying company known for our higher capabilities. Serving Brentwood and the residents of Suffolk County, we use the industry approved technology and methods to deliver quality results for every client.
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Understanding Land Surveys
Land surveying is more than just placing markers. It’s about providing critical information that informs decisions and prevents costly mistakes. At Islandwide Land Surveyors in NY, we guide you through every step of the process, from initial consultation to a report you can understand. We offer a full range of surveying services, including boundary surveys to establish property lines, topographic surveys to map terrain features, construction surveys to guide building projects, as-built surveys to document completed construction, and ALTA/NSPS Land Title Surveys for real estate transactions. Contact Islandwide Land Surveyors at 866-808-5800 to schedule your land survey today.
In 1844, the area was established as Thompson Station and Suffolk Station, two new stations on the expansion of the Main Line of the Long Island Rail Road.
On March 21, 1851, it became the utopian community named Modern Times. The colony was established on 750 acres (3.0 km2) of land by Josiah Warren and Stephen Pearl Andrews. In 1864, it was renamed Brentwood after the town of Brentwood, Essex, in England.
By contract, all the land in the colony was bought and sold at cost, with 3 acres (12,000 m2) being the maximum allowable lot size. The community was said to be based on the idea of individual sovereignty and individual responsibility. Individuals were encouraged to pursue their self-interest as they saw fit. All products of labor were considered private property. The community had a local private currency based upon labor exchange in order to trade goods and services (see Mutualism (economic theory)). All land was private property, with the exception of alleys which were initially considered common property but later converted to private property. Initially, no system of authority existed in the colony; there were no courts, jails or police. This appears to have given some credence to Warren’s theories that the most significant cause of violence in society was most attributable to policies and law which did not allow complete individuality in person and property. However, the modest population of the colony might be considered a factor in this characteristic. The Civil War, as well as new residents that did not share the colony’s philosophy, are said to have contributed to its eventual dissolution. Almost all of the original buildings that existed in Modern Times have been destroyed, aside from two Octagon houses, the original schoolhouse and a residence.
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