Transform your landscape with professional tree pruning. Green Light Tree Services offers top-notch tree care services in Manhasset.
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At Green Light Tree Services, we pride ourselves on delivering exceptional tree care services in Manhasset, NY. Our team of certified arborists provides expert guidance and solutions tailored to your needs. With years of experience in Nassau County, we ensure your trees are healthy and thriving. Whether it’s residential tree care or commercial tree services, our commitment to quality and customer satisfaction sets us apart.
At Green Light Tree Services, we offer a full range of tree services to meet all your needs in Manhasset, NY. Our offerings include tree trimming, stump grinding, and emergency tree services. We also provide fertilization and soil care to promote healthy growth. Our team of experts is dedicated to maintaining the beauty and safety of your landscape in Nassau County. Call 631-923-3033 to schedule your service today!
The Matinecock had a village on Manhasset Bay. These Native Americans called the area Sint Sink, meaning “place of small stones”. They made wampum from oyster shells. In 1623, the area was claimed by the Dutch West India Company and they began forcing English settlers to leave in 1640. A 1643 land purchase made it possible for English settlers to return to Cow Neck (the peninsula where present-day Port Washington, Manhasset, and surrounding villages are located.).
Manhasset Bay was previously known as Schout’s Bay (a schout being roughly the Dutch equivalent of a sheriff), Martin Garretson’s Bay (Martin Garretson was the Schout at one point), and later Cow Bay or Cow Harbor. Cow Neck was so called because it offered good grazing land. By 1659, there were over 300 cows and 5 mi (8 km) fence separating Cow Neck from the areas to the south. The settlers came to an agreement that each of them could have one cow on the neck for each section of fence the individual had constructed. The area was more formally divided among the settlers when the fence was removed in 1677. Manhasset took on the name Little Cow Neck, Port Washington was known as Upper Cow Neck.
During the American Revolution, Little Cow Neck suffered at the hands of the British. Many structures and properties, such as the 1719 Quaker Meeting House were burned, seized or damaged. The Town of North Hempstead separated from the Town of Hempstead in 1784 because the South, inhabited mainly by Church of England people, was loyal to the king. The Northern communities and villages, dominated by Yankee Congregationalists supported independence.
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