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Town of Islip

655 Main St, Islip, United States
Government organization

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Welcome to the Town of Islip's Official Facebook Page! Please note that this page is generally updated and viewed Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. As Islip approaches maturity, it remains a varied, beautiful and interesting place to live. Few suburbs encompass ocean beaches, sparkling bays, a beautiful lake, vistas of forest fields, canals and ponds, historic villages and innumerable architectural treasures.

For centuries, the Algonquin Indians inhabited Long Island. A sub-division of the Algonquins known as the Secatogues occupied all of the area in the Town of Islip. Their principal villages were at West Islip (Secatogue), Bay Shore (Penataquit) and Oakdale (Connetquot).

On November 29, 1683, William Nicoll became the first patentee of Islip when he purchased land from Sachem (Chief) Winnequaheagh of Connetquot. He named his 50,000- acre plantation Islip Grange, in honor of the town from which he emigrated: Islip, England. The original settlement encompassed Bayport, Bohemia, Brentwood, Central Islip, East Islip, Great River, Hauppauge, Holbrook, Holtsville, Islip Terrace, Oakdale, Sayville, West Sayville, and part of Ronkonkoma. Part of Nicoll’s original domain is now the site of Heckscher State Park. Other early land patentees were Andrew Gibb (Islip), John Mowbray (Bay Shore), Stephanis Van Cortlandt (Sagtikos Manor) and Richard and Thomas Willets (West Islip).

In 1710, the precinct (or district) of Islip was established and in 1720, the first elections were held for the posts of supervisor, constable, collector and two assessors. The Town Clerk’s records of the annual meetings typically began, “At the Annual Meeting of the freeholders of the precinct of Islip ...”. The entry for the first Tuesday of April 1790, marked the first in which Islip was referred to as a “Town.”


Some early setters made their living raising grain and beef, but Islip’s proximity to the water made fishing and shipping the principal way of life. Jacob Ockers, whose Oakdale home on Montauk Highway is the only town-owned structure listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was known as the “Oyster King” at the turn of the century. A Dutch immigrant, Ockers parlayed his limited fishing experience into a world-renowned industry. By 1900, his Blue Point Oyster Company shipped as many as 100,000 barrels of oysters a year all over the world. In 1908, New York State passed a law forbidding any oysters to be called “Bluepoints” unless they came from the Great South Bay. The clam and oyster industry employed 500 boats and 1,100 men locally, and oyster shells were used to pave town streets until around 1915.

The Great South Bay also attracted wealthy tourists from New York City who built mansions, lodges and country clubs for their vacationing pleasure, several of which still stand today. Islip’s oldest deeded home, and site of an overnight stay by George Washington, is Sagtikos Manor in West Bay Shore. William Nicoll had St. John’s Episcopal Church in Oakdale built in 1765, so that early settlers and Native Americans who had become Christians had a place to worship. It is the oldest church still in active use on the South Shore.

William K. Vanderbilt’s estate is now the site of Dowling College in Oakdale. He commissioned the construction of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Islip (Montauk Highway) when his daughter announced her engagement. The estate of Admiral Bourne, founder of the Singer Sewing Machine Company, in Oakdale, is now the site of St. John’s University. The original South Side Sportsmen’s Lodge still stands amid the beautiful grounds of Connetquot River State Park. This stately and important architectural structure is said to be what first attracted many of the noted personalities to the area.

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