Welcome to Valley Stream, NY

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Valley Stream is a village in Nassau County, New York, United States. The population in the Village of Valley Stream was 37,511 at the 2010 census. The incorporated Village of Valley Stream is within the Town of Hempstead, New York, along the border with Queens. The village is served by the Long Island Rail Road at the Valley Stream, Gibson, and Westwood stations. Money Magazine ranked Valley Stream as “the best place to live in New York” for 2017.

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Valley Stream

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Valley Stream

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Living in Valley Stream

In the year 1640, 14 years after the arrival of Dutch colonists in Manhattan (New Amsterdam), the area that is now Valley Stream was purchased by the Dutch West India Company from Rockaway Native Americans (they were a Lenape, or Delaware, band, known by the place where they lived).

With populations concentrated to the west, this woodland area was not developed for the next two centuries. The census of 1840 list about 20 families, most of whom owned large farms. At that time, the northwest section was called “Fosters Meadow”. What is now the business section on Rockaway Avenue was called “Rum Junction”, because of its taverns. The racy northern section was known as “Cookie Hill”, and the section of the northeast that housed the local fertilizer plant was called “Skunks Misery”. Hungry Harbor, a section that has retained its name, was home to a squatters’ community.

Robert Pagan was born in Scotland on December 3, 1796. In or about the late 1830s, Robert, his wife Ellen, and their children emigrated from Scotland. On the journey to the United States, one of their children died and was buried at sea. The 1840 U.S. Census for Queens County lists Pagan’s occupation as a farmer. Two children were born to Robert and Ellen Pagan after they settled in the Town of Hempstead.

At this time, the community did not have a post office, so residents had to pick up their mail in the village of Hempstead. After Pagan petitioned authorities for a post office, he was appointed postmaster and it was based in his farmhouse, now known as the Pagan-Fletcher House. He was advised that the community needed a name. Pagan chose “Valley Stream” based on the topographical appearance of the area. In 1843, the U.S. Post Office formally accepted the name of Valley Stream. As a consequence, Pagan is credited with naming the community. Pagan died on March 25, 1870.

His wife Ellen Pagan also played a significant role in early village history. Tired of traveling to Lynbrook for religious services, she began holding services in her home. A Methodist minister was hired for periodic stops at the Pagan home, and the first congregation in Valley Stream was founded.

In 1853, Hempstead Turnpike was the only road that connected Valley Stream to Jamaica and New York City. The main streets in Valley Stream that connected the small village to the turnpike were Mill Road (which is Corona Avenue today) in the west, Sand Street (Central Avenue) in the south, and Dutch Broadway in the north. That year Merrick Road, a planked, one-lane road, was constructed through Valley Stream, connecting the village to Merrick in the east and Jamaica to the west. With the new thoroughfare in the area, Valley Stream residents and industry began to move southward.

In 1869, the South Side Railroad began stopping in Valley Stream and a branch of the railroad was constructed to connect the main line with the Rockaways. The new branch is now called the Far Rockaway Branch of the Long Island Railroad.

The new railroad, combined with the emergence of Merrick Road as a major artery, stimulated growth in Valley Stream, and it became a substantial community. Around the start of the 20th century, Hendrickson Park was a prime vacationing destination for people from Brooklyn and Queens. The Valley Stream Hotel opened at the beginning of the 20th century, overlooking the golf course. Many tourists who came to visit wound up moving to Valley Stream. The Village of Valley Stream was incorporated in 1925 as a result of its growth.

In 1922, developer William R. Gibson came to Valley Stream after building more than 2,500 houses in Queens. He bought 500 acres (2.0 km2) of land on Roosevelt Avenue and built homes on Avondale, Berkeley, Cambridge, Derby, and Elmwood streets. Many descendants of immigrants moved into the area. Five years later he expanded his development to Cochran Place and Dartmouth Street. Realizing that his development was perfectly designed for white-collar commuters, he petitioned the Long Island Railroad for a stop. The LIRR agreed to stop in the area if Gibson built the station himself. On May 29, 1929, the Gibson station was opened. Gibson station, as it became known, retains the name of its founder. In 1984 President Ronald Reagan addressed Temple Hillel in Valley Stream at the invitation of Rabbi Morris Friedman father of Ambassador David Friedman which was the first time since President George Washington a sitting American President addressed a Jewish congregation at their House of Worship.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 3.5 square miles (9.1 km2), of which 3.4 square miles (8.8 km2) is land and 0.04 square miles (0.10 km2), or 0.86%, is water.

Communities bordering Valley Stream are Elmont (home of Belmont Park racetrack), Lynbrook, Malverne, Franklin Square, Hewlett, Woodmere, and Rosedale (a neighborhood in Queens in New York City).

There are many different sections of Valley Stream:

  • Valley Stream (Village)
  • North Valley Stream
  • North Woodmere
  • South Valley Stream
  • Gibson
  • Mill Brook (formerly Green Acres)
  • Winslow Estates
  • Westwood

Roads

  • NY 27
  • Peninsula Boulevard (CR 2)
  • Mill Road/Central Avenue
  • Merrick Road
  • Southern State Parkway

Buses

  • n1: Elmont & East Rockaway
  • n4: Jamaica & Freeport
  • n2 & n8: New Hyde Park & Green Acres Mall
  • n25: Great Neck Plaza & Lynbrook
  • Q5: Jamaica & Green Acres Mall
  • Q85: Locust Manor & Green Acres Mall
  • Q111: Jamaica & South Valley Stream

Trains

  • LIRR Far Rockaway Branch: Valley Stream, Gibson.
  • LIRR Long Beach Branch: Valley Stream
  • LIRR West Hempstead Branch: Valley Stream, Westwood.

Valley Stream has many separate elementary school districts that share the same central high school district. In addition, children living in the northern section of the Village, a CDP known as North Valley Stream, attend Alden Terrace Elementary School (Elmont UFSD), followed by Elmont Memorial High School (grades 7–12; Sewanhaka CHSD).

Hewlett-Woodmere Union Free School District

  • Ogden Elementary School
  • Hewlett Elementary School
  • Woodmere Middle School
  • George W. Hewlett High School

Valley Stream School Union Free School District #13

  • Howell Road Elementary School
  • James A. Dever Elementary School (Originally Corona Ave Elementary School)
  • Wheeler Avenue Elementary School
  • Willow Road Elementary School

Valley Stream Union Free School District #24

  • Brooklyn Avenue Elementary School
  • Robert W. Carbonaro Elementary School
  • William L. Buck Elementary School

Valley Stream Union Free School District #30

  • Clear Stream Avenue Elementary School
  • Forest Road Elementary School
  • Shaw Avenue Elementary School

Valley Stream Central High School District

  • Valley Stream Central High School
  • Valley Stream Memorial Junior High School
  • Valley Stream North High School
  • Valley Stream South High School
  • Green Acres Mall is located in Valley Stream.
  • National Amusements Movie Theater chain started in Valley Stream.
  • Ninety-Nines were started in Valley Stream.
  • Snapple Beverage Co., and the drink itself, started in Valley Stream.

Find Your Way Around Valley Stream

LOCAL SCHOOLS