My Neighborhood - Long Island, New York
Albertson
 

Albertson sits just north of the great Hempstead Plains, and like the prairie itself, was first cultivated as farmland by early European settlers in the 1640s. John Seren, a member of the initial group of settlers to come from Connecticut in 1644, settled there first. His name, after a spelling change, is the source of the neighboring community of Searingtown. In the second group of settlers, this time from Virginia, was a man named Townsend Albertson. He ran a farm and a gristmill, leading it to be named Albertson Square. The community remained stubbornly rural for three centuries. Indeed, in 1850, when a road was cut through Isaac Underhill Willets' farm to Old Westbury, he protested that ``Long Island has more roads now than it will ever need.'' The road, I.U. Willets Road, was named in his honor and is still there. When the Long Island Rail Road built a branch to Glen Cove in 1864, it named the local station Albertson, and that designation stuck for the community.

Builder William J. Levitt bought acres of Albertson farmland in 1946 and covered them with mass-produced houses - one of several communities in which he perfected the method that he would use to build Levittown the following year. Other developers quickly bought the remaining farmland and in less than two decades none was left. By the mid-1960s, Albertson was as well developed as any of the older suburbs in Nassau County. Albertson also is home to the National Center for Disability Services, a major school and source of employment for severely handicapped people.

Real estate values in Albertson are on the rise, the average home value here is a modest $650 thousand for a large well furnished home. With many qualified agents in the area including ParkTerrace.com it wont take long to find a great house at a fair price.

 

 
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Park Terrace.com, Long Island
Phone: (718) 369-1700
E-Mail: info@ParkTerrace.com

Owner/Broker: Judy Noonan