Get precise land surveying in Long Beach, NY with Islandwide Land Surveyors. Call 866-808-5800 for accuracy in surveys.
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About Islandwide Land Surveyors
When it comes to understanding your property lines in Long Beach, NY, you need the expertise of Islandwide Land Surveyors. We specialize in land surveying, delivering the correct results for every project. Our surveyors are trained in survey types such as boundary surveys and architectural surveys. No matter your property needs in Nassau County, we’re here to help.
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Surveying is essential for property transactions, construction, and legal documentation. Islandwide Land Surveyors offers a medley of effective services, including property line stake-out and title surveys, to make your project in Long Beach, NY run smoothly. Our expertise in Nassau County guarantees you get idealized surveys every time. Contact us at 866-808-5800 today. .
The city of Long Beach’s first inhabitants were the Algonquian-speaking Lenape, who sold the area to English colonists in 1643. From that time, while the barrier island was used by baymen and farmers for fishing and harvesting salt hay, no one lived there year-round for more than two centuries. The bark Mexico, carrying Irish immigrants to New York, ran ashore on New Year’s Day.
Austin Corbin, a builder from Brooklyn, was the first to attempt to develop the island as a resort. He formed a partnership with the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) to finance the New York and Long Beach Railroad Co., which laid track from Lynbrook to Long Beach in 1880. That same year, Corbin opened Long Beach Hotel, a row of 27 cottages along a 1,100-foot (340 m) strip of beach, which he claimed was the world’s largest hotel. In its first season, the railroad brought 300,000 visitors to Long Island. By the next spring, tracks had been laid the length of the island, but they were removed in 1894 after repeated washouts from winter storms.
In 1906, William H. Reynolds, a 39-year-old real estate developer and former state senator, became involved in the area. Reynolds had already developed four Brooklyn neighborhoods (Bedford-Stuyvesant, Borough Park, Bensonhurst, and South Brownsville), as well as Coney Island’s Dreamland, the world’s largest amusement park at the time. Reynolds also owned a theatre and produced plays.
Learn more about Long Beach.