|
|
|
|
Welcome to Huntington Luxury Homes
This web site is designed to be your complete Huntington Real Estate resource with recent sales data, neighborhood profiles and much more.. Eliot and his team are always available to offer you personal, one-on-one guidance with what some say is the biggest decision you will make in your life. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to call or e-mail us! You can call us from 8am to 11pm at 631-777-4663.
Buyers: We are committed to helping you find your dream home using the latest in technology and our knowledge of the neighborhoods, available inventory and the real estate process. We have a team of agents to work with you online, over the phone, via text message or in person every day.
Let us help you search online with aerial maps and our guidance to help you find your dream home without driving all over town. We will provide you with a full real estate concierge to make the process go smoothly from start to finish. We can get you pre-qualified for a loan, as well as recommend home inspectors, lawyers and any of the other services you may need. For additional information on buying a home visit; www.LiBuyersGuide.com. We will provide you with Luxury Service in any price range.
Sellers: We bring real estate marketing to a new level with the technology buyers want and the exposure very few agents can offer. Our marketing plan for your home is customized, professional and comprehensive with proven results. We are the only agents that can feature your home on the Long Island Luxury Homes network which includes; www.LongIslandLuxuryHomes.com, www.HuntingtonLuxuryHomes.com, www.HuntingtonBayLuxuryHomes.com, www.SouthHuntingtonLuxuryHomes.com, www.HuntingtonStationLuxuryhomes.com.
These local sites combined with the national and international exposure we will get for your house on realtor.com, will get your house sold. For additional information on selling a home visit; www.LiSellersGuide.com. Every home owner we represent gets the Luxury service they deserve.
Huntington, New York
Huntington is a town located off the North Shore of Long Island, just east of the county line. The Town was settled in 1653 and is located in northwestern Suffolk County, New York. Huntington is part of the New York metropolitan area. As of the United States 2000 Census, the town population was 195,289.
History
On April 2nd, 1653, when Richard Holbrook, Robert Williams and Daniel Whitehead, all of Oyster Bay, bought from Raseokan, Sachem of the Matinecock tribe, a parcel of land that is now known as "the First Purchase." The Oyster Bay men immediately turned the land over to a group of white men who had already settled within its boundaries. This first purchase was bordered on the west by Cold Spring Harbor, on the east by Northport Harbor, on the south by what is now known as Old Country Road and on the north by Long Island Sound. As time went on, other land was purchased from the Indians, gradually extending the limits of the town from Long Island Sound on the north to Great South Bay on the south, and from Oyster Bay on the west to Smithtown and Islip on the east. In 1872, part of the town was removed to form the Town of Babylon.
Most of the early settlers were English people who came to Huntington by way of Massachusetts and Connecticut. As a result, they felt more of a kinship with New England than with their Dutch neighbors to the west in New Amsterdam. The town in fact voted in 1660 to place itself under the jurisdiction of Connecticut to gain some protection from the Dutch. Following the custom of New England, the earliest form of government in Huntington was the Town Meeting. Called as the need arose, free men of the town gathered to distribute town-held land, resolve disputes, regulate the pasturing of cattle on town land, engage schoolmasters, appoint someone to keep the ordinary (public house) and maintain the roads, as well as resolve any other matters that concerned the town as a whole. For example, the people of Huntington showed their interest in education very soon after the founding of the town. The Town Meeting voted on February 11, 1657 to hire Jonas Houldsworth as the first schoolmaster. In 1660 the town voted to build a schoolhouse.
When in 1664 the Duke of York became proprietor of the area formerly known as New Netherland, he (in the person of Governor Richard Nicholls) informed Connecticut that by virtue of his royal patent they no longer had any claim to any territory on Long Island. Governor Nicholls summoned representatives of each town on Long Island to meet in Hempstead early in 1665. The representatives were required to bring with them evidence of title to their land and to receive new grants affirming that title. The Hempstead Convention also adopted the "Duke's Laws," which regulated virtually every area of life. At this time, too, Long Island, Staten Island and Westchester were formed into an entity called "Yorkshire," which was divided into three parts, or "ridings," as land was divided in England. Suffolk County, including Huntington, became part of the East Riding. With some modifications, including the abolition of "Yorkshire" and "ridings." this was the form that the government of New York retained until the Revolution.
Governor Thomas Dongan issued a patent in 1688 that confirmed the earlier Nicholls Patent. In addition, it mandated the creation of "Trustees" to manage and distribute town-owned land. The Trustees, like other town officials, were chosen at a Town Meeting. The Dongan Patent also authorized the creation and use of a seal, which is still in use today.
In the years between the first settlement of the town and the start of the American Revolution, Huntington became an established community. The earliest settlers clustered near what became known as the "town spot", the site of the present Village Green. As the town prospered and grew, people moved to fill the outlying areas. In addition to the many farms that were established in remote as well as central portions of the town, the town included a school, a church, flour mills, saw mills, brickyards, tanneries, a town dock and a fort.
Huntington's fine harbor meant that shipping became an important part of the economy. The harbor was a busy place, with vessels traveling not only to and from other ports along the Sound but also as far as the West Indies. Ship making and related nautical businesses prospered, since water was for many years by far the most efficient way to transport both goods and people. In the first half of the nineteenth century, Cold Spring Harbor was a busy whaling port, second on Long Island only to Sag Harbor.
In June 1774 Huntington adopted a "Declaration of Rights" affirming "that every freemans property is absolutely his own" and that taxation without representation is a violation of the rights of British subjects. The Declaration of Rights also called for the colonies to unite in a refusal to do business with Great Britain. Two years later, news of the Declaration of Independence was received with great enthusiasm in Huntington, but the euphoria was short-lived. Following the defeat of the rebel forces at the Battle of Long Island on August 27, 1776 Long Island was occupied by the British Army. Residents were required to take oaths of allegiance to the Crown. If a man refused to take the oath, he and his family could be turned off their property, losing everything. In 1782 the occupying army established an encampment in Huntington's Old Burying Ground, razing tombstones to clear the site. Not surprisingly, many townspeople resisted, waging guerilla warfare until the war was over and the British left in 1783.
Nathan Hale landed at Huntington in 1776, coming by boat from Norwalk, Connecticut on a spying mission for George Washington. Sent to gather information about the British forces on Long Island and in New York City, he was captured and executed in New York City in September 1776. A memorial stands at the approximate site of his coming ashore in Huntington, an area now known as Halesite.
Slavery existed in Huntington until the beginning of the nineteenth century. Farmers relied on slave labor for help in the fields and it was a mark of status to have black slaves as domestic servants, but rarely did a person own more than a few slaves. For example, according to a 1755 census, there were 81 slaves belonging to 35 families in Huntington. Unlike the South, the economy was not heavily dependent on slave labor. The New York State Legislature passed an act in 1799 allowing for the gradual abolition of slavery.
The War of 1812 did not touch Huntington as had the Revolution, but the town was prepared. "On one occasion a corps of 200 militiamen marched from Huntington to Lloyd's Neck on the circulation of a report [untrue] that the British were there effecting a landing in force." In November 1814 the Town Meeting voted that $207.86 be paid by the town for costs incurred in preparing its defense.
Huntington's best-known resident, Walt Whitman, was born in West Hills in 1819. His family moved to Brooklyn when he was a child but he returned to Long Island as a young man. At the age of 19 he founded The Long-Islander, a Huntington newspaper still in existence.
The railroad was extended from Syosset to Northport in 1867. The arrival of the railroad in Huntington presaged the decline of the maritime economy, although shipping was important until approximately the turn of the twentieth century. Since shipping had long been an important part of the life and economy of Huntington, the town had not been unconnected to the rest of the world. With the increased accessibility of Long Island due to steamboats, trains and later automobiles, Huntington became physically less isolated. Residents of New York City were able to easily visit Huntington, as had not been possible in earlier days. Cold Spring Harbor became a popular summer resort.
When World War II ended in 1945 the population of Huntington, like that of Long Island as a whole, exploded. After almost 200 years of gradual growth, the population of the town mushroomed. Huntington had approximately 32,000 residents in 1940. By 1960 there were 126,00 inhabitants. By the 1980's the population had gone over the 200,00 mark. With the enormous growth of the town its rural landscape changed. Farms and vacant land disappeared, replaced by housing, schools, highways, recreational facilities and new and expanding business and industry.
Huntington was named an All-America City in 2002 by the National Civic League. It was also a finalist in 2001.
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 355.1 km² (137.1 mi²). 243.4 km² (94.0 mi²) of it is land and 111.8 km² (43.2 mi²) of it (31.47%) is water.
The west town line is the border of Nassau County, and the north town line, delineated by the Long Island Sound, is the border of Connecticut. Also, the two other town lines include the east town line which is the border of Smithtown and the south town line which is the border of Babylon.
Demographics
As of the census² of 2000, there were 195,289 people, 65,917 households, and 52,338 families residing in the town. The population density was 802.5/km² (2,078.4/mi²). There were 67,708 housing units at an average density of 278.2/km² (720.6/mi²). The racial makeup of the town was 88.31% White, 4.22% Black or African American, 0.13% Native American, 3.50% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 2.27% from other races, and 1.55% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 6.58% of the population.
There were 65,917 households out of which 37.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 67.4% were married couples living together, 8.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 20.6% were non-families. 16.2% of all households were made up of individuals and 6.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.91 and the average family size was 3.26.
In the town the population was spread out with 25.5% under the age of 18, 5.8% from 18 to 24, 30.2% from 25 to 44, 25.5% from 45 to 64, and 13.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females there were 96.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 93.4 males.
The median income for a household in the town was $82,528, and the median income for a family was $90,606. Males had a median income of $61,748 versus $40,825 for females. The per capita income for the town was $36,390. About 2.9% of families and 4.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 5.1% of those under age 18 and 4.6% of those age 65 or over.
Climate
| Monthly Normal and Record High and Low Temperatures |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
| Rec High °F |
69 |
67 |
82 |
94 |
98 |
96 |
102 |
100 |
92 |
86 |
78 |
77 |
| Norm High °F |
39.1 |
40.5 |
48.5 |
58.1 |
68.9 |
77.4 |
83.2 |
81.7 |
74.9 |
64 |
53.7 |
43.9 |
| Norm Low °F |
22.6 |
24.3 |
31.1 |
40 |
49.4 |
59.6 |
65.9 |
64.5 |
56.6 |
44.6 |
36.1 |
27.5 |
| Rec Low °F |
-7 |
1 |
8 |
24 |
34 |
43 |
50 |
45 |
38 |
28 |
11 |
5 |
| Precip (in) |
4.27 |
3.33 |
4.76 |
4.13 |
3.9 |
3.71 |
2.93 |
4.48 |
3.39 |
3.63 |
3.86 |
4.13 |
Education
There are a number of different school districts in Huntington, providing very fair education for youth residents of the town. Here are some listed below (some might extend further out of the town).
Cold Spring Harbor Central School District
Commack School District
- Commack Middle School
- Commack High School
- Burr Intermediate School
- Indian Hollow School
- North Ridge School
- Rolling Hills School
- Sawmill Intermediate School
- Wood Park School
Half Hollow Hills Central School District
- Candlewood Middle School
- Half Hollow Hills High School East
- Half Hollow Hills High School West
- West Hollow Middle School
- Otsego Elementary School
- Chestnut Hill Elementary School
- Forest Park Elementary School
- Paumanok Elementary School
- Signal Hill Elementary School
- Sunquam Elementary School
- Vanderbilt Elementary School
Harborfields Central School District
- Oldfield Middle School
- Thomas J. Lahey Elementary School
- Harborfields High School
- Washington Drive Primary School
Huntington Union Free School District
- Huntington High School
- Finley Junior High School
- Woodhull Intermediate School
- Huntington Intermediate School
- Flower Hill School
- Jefferson School
- Southdown School
- Washington School
- Northport Senior High School
- East Northport Middle School
- Northport Middle School
- Bellerose Elementary School
- Dickinson Avenue Elementary School
- Fifth Avenue Elementary School
- Norwood Avenue School
- Ocean Avenue School
- Pulaski Road School
South Huntington Union Free School District
- Birchwood Intermediate School
- Countrywood Primary Center
- Silas Wood 6th Grade Center
- Henry L. Stimson Middle School
- Maplewood Intermediate School
- Oakwood Primary Center
- Walt Whitman High School.
Communities and locations
Hamlets (unincorporated)
Notable residents
- Billy Joel, Singer
- John Coltrane, Musician
- Jack Kerouac, Author
- Mariah Carey, Singer
- Alicia Coppola, Actress
- Buzzy Feiten, Guitarist
- Ralph Macchio, Actor
- Steve Park, Nascar Driver
- Herb Scannell, Media Executive
- Fred Seibert, Cartoon Producer, Media Executive
- Walt Whitman, Poet
- Latterman, Band
- The Scofflaws, Band
- Gerry Cooney, Boxer
- Carey Lowell, Actress
- Treydmark, Rapper [1]
- Sean Hannity, radio talk-show host
Former
- Anthony G. Brown, Maryland Lieutenant Governor
- Anders Kallur, Ice Hockey player
- Ashanti, Singer
- Susanna Kallur, Hurdler runner
- Jenny Kallur, Hurdler runner
- David Owen, Sprinter
- Chad Pennington, QB, The NY Jets
- Brent Sutter, Ice Hockey player
- Lindsay Lohan, Actress, Singer
- Jason Bergh, American Film Director & Producer
See also
External links
How Long Island Luxury Homes Works. Finding your dream home in Huntington, New York is easy with the services offered by Long Island Luxury Homes. The agents we work with are the top listing and selling agents in the Huntington real estate market. Our internet Real Estate specialist can find you every home for sale on the MLS, as well as exclusives from Huntington’s top Real Estate agents.
Long Island Luxury Homes makes finding a new home in Huntington simple and convenient with our online buyer tools and online real estate experts. We can help you locate new and resale homes in all the communities of Huntington and the surrounding areas.
Huntington New York real estate listings can be found with one click with no need to fill out any forms. Our Huntington real estate agents are ready to help you locate the Huntington real estate that best fits your needs. By combining the power of the Internet and our own network of real estate professionals, Long Island Luxury Homes is ready to assist you in every possible way. Whether you are looking for townhouses, condos, luxury homes, or investment properties, let Long Island Luxury Homes find you a new home in Huntington, New York.
Long Island New York is the largest island in the continental US. It is also by far the most populated with about 7.5 million residents in 2005. As of the United States 2000 Census, the total population of all four counties of Long Island was 7,448,618. New York City's portion of the census was 4,694,705, with Brooklyn's population at 2,465,326 and Queens having 2,229,379 residents. The combined population of Nassau and Suffolk counties was 2,753,913 people. It was the first census in which the population of the larger, less densely populated Suffolk County (1,419,369) surpassed that of Nassau County (1,334,544). With all these people there are still many rural parts in eastern Long Island. In many areas there is 1 acre zoning with beautiful tree lined streets. After World War II, there was a huge growth on Long Island with many GI’s wanting to live in the suburbs. Towns like Levittown sprang up over-night with affordable ranches and capes.
To find out more visit www.longislandluxuryhomes.com/ResearchTowns , and search the local community profiles.
Long Island earns is name from being disproportionably long at 118 miles, and only between 12 and 20 miles wide. Long Island is home to many beautiful beaches, with the Long Island Sound to the North, and the Atlantic Ocean to the South. To the western most portion of Long Island are Queens, and Kings County also know as Brooklyn. Most people consider Long Island to only include Nassau and Suffolk Counties.
Nassau and Suffolk counties are very desirable places to live with high per capita incomes, good schools and the according to the FBI the second lowest crime rate in the country. Another great benefit for Long Island residents is its’ close proximity to Manhattan, you can be on Broadway, The Met, MOMA or Yankee stadium with relative ease. There is always something to do. Long Island is home to many golf courses for the avid golfer or the weekend duffer. To Find a home on a golf course visit www.LongIslandGolfProperties.com.
For the gourmet in you there are unlimited choices to find some of the best cuisine in the world. You can find the foods of every nationality, every style and price range. In any mall you can get great pizza or Chinese food. There are so many small family owned restaurants making mouth watering dishes on the island and everybody has a favorite.
The growing demand for new homes on Long Island has lead to many new developments being built. They range in size from 1 or two home subdivisions to large scale communities of 200 homes or more. To find new construction on Long Island visit; www.LongIslandNewConstruction.com. There are several 55 and over communities being built for the Island’s growing senior population. These communities offer many amenities including pools, gyms, spas, tennis courts and more to accommodate the active lifestyle of today’s seniors.
If you want to leave the Island you have three airports to chose close by. These are the John F. Kennedy International Airport and LaGuardia Airport, both in Queens, and the MacArthur Airport. To travel by car there are a few ferries that can take you from Long Island to Connecticut with out facing the traffic on some of the local bridges or tunnels. To get ferry information visit; www.longislandferry.com or www.bpjferry.com/ or www.vikingfleet.com. The main roadway on Long Island going from West to East is the Long Island Expressway. It enters the island from Manhattan via the Mid Town Tunnel and goes all the way out to Riverhead. From Riverhead out to Montauk you continue on Route 25. This road out east was home to many farms and farm stands, there are still several left, but now they have Home Depots and Strip Malls as neighbors. If you are out East on the Island and like wine, there are many excellent vineyards to vist with tasting at most of them. By train you have the Long Island Railroad to take you almost anywhere on the Island. Thousands of commuters take the train each day from Long Island to Manhattan. To see local train schedules visit; www.mta.info/lirr/.
The economy on Long Island is tied to Manhattan. This was never more apparent then after the September 11th attacks on the world trade center. Many professionals who work in Manhattan chose to live on Long Island. The Gold Coast of Long Island’s North Shore is a favorite to many of the most successful of them. Long Island also has a high tech business community with companies like Computer Associates calling Long Island Home. To learn more visit www.longislandassociation.org or www.lieconomy.com. To find employment opportunities visit www.LiJobs.com or www.LiWork.com.
If you want to continue your education there are many options for you with several local, community, state and private colleges and universities to chose from. To see a list visit; www.LongIslandColleges.com.
Long Island has a climate that is very similar to other coastal areas of the Northeastern United States; it has warm, humid summers and cold winters, but the Atlantic Ocean helps bring afternoon sea breezes that temper the heat in the warmer months and limit the frequency and severity of thunderstorms. In the wintertime, temperatures are warmer than areas further inland (especially in the night and early morning hours), sometimes causing a snowstorm further inland to fall as rain on the island. However, measurable snow falls every winter, and in many winters one or more intense storms called Nor'easters produce blizzard conditions with snowfalls of 1-2 feet (30-60 cm) and near-hurricane force winds. Long Island temperatures also vary from west to east, with the western part of the island warmer on most occasions than the east. This is due to two factors; one because the western part is closer to the mainland and the other is the western part is more developed causing what is known as the "urban heat island" effect. The eastern part is cooler on most occasions due to the ocean and sound and it being less developed.
To find out more visit www.longislandluxuryhomes.com/ResearchTowns , and search the local community profiles.
Real Estate services include:
New Homes for Sale in Huntington
Huntington Real Estate
Condos and or Co ops in Huntington, New York area
Condos or co-ops in Huntington, Long Island
Huntington community profiles
Real Estate in Huntington
Huntington Recent sales and recent home sales data
Huntington Real Estate news
New Construction in Huntington, New York, Long Island
Relocation Services in Huntington, New York, Long Island
New Town Homes in Huntington
Luxury Homes in Huntington, Long Island
Estates in Huntington, Long Island
Huntington homes on a Golf Course
New Waterfront real estate in Huntington, New York area
Real Estate Agents in Huntington, New York
Vacant Land in Huntington
New Construction Homes in Huntington
New Homes For Sale in Huntington
Long Island Information
Huntington Adult Communities Long Island Adult Communities
Huntington Senior Homes Huntington Seniors homes Huntington Seniors Real Estate
Huntington Active Adult Communities
Long Island waterfront real estate
Real estate in Huntington with handicapped access
Land for sale in Huntington
Land for sale on Long Island
The Perfect Neighborhood
|
 |
 |
 |

Today's Rates:
| 30-yr Fixed | 5.42% | 5.6% | | 15-yr Fixed | 4.87% | 5.13% | | 1-yr Adj | 4.93% | 6.12% |
|
|
 |
|
Huntington Luxury Homes provides you with the best Huntington real estate, Huntington real estate agents & Huntington real estate listings. Huntington Luxury Homes provides home sellers with the best Huntington real estate agents to sell your home with. Huntington Luxury Homes provides home buyers with the best Huntington real estate agents & the best Huntington home listings. Huntington Luxury Homes provides information about Huntington recent home sales, Huntington schools, Huntington neighborhoods, and general information about Huntington, NY. The Huntington Luxury Homes Realtor is a specialist you can trust.
|