Want a deck that feels like a natural part of your home? At Gualan Brothers Home Remodeling Corp, we create outdoor spaces for relaxation and entertainment. We’re deck builders in Red Hook, who combine design and skill to craft a deck that fits your needs. Get deck installation services in Red Hook.
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Gualan Brothers Home Remodeling Corp is a company focused on good work and happy customers. We think a deck should fit your life and style. Our team uses materials like composite and cedar to build decks that look good and last. We focus on details, making sure each deck is strong and looks great. We build decks that fit Red Hook homes.
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If you want a new outdoor space, reach out to Gualan Brothers Home Remodeling Corp. We can help design and build a deck that fits your home. We provide good service and build decks to meet your needs. We build decks suited for NY weather. Gualan Brothers Home Remodeling Corp is ready to give you deck installation services in Red Hook.
The original inhabitants of this land were the Mohican, Munsee and Lenape people. During European settlement, Native American tribes played a fundamental role in the area’s economy as they traded beaver skin with European settlers. European settlers imported several foreign goods, such as cattle, horses, and sheep. Enslaved African American individuals were also brought. Through importing non-native species, the landscape and ecology of this region has been dramatically changed.
European settler-colonial understandings of land-ownership are different from the perspectives of Mohican, Munsee and Lenape land use, a difference not often reflected in the land deeds that establish European presence on this land. The Lenape believed that Kishelëmukòng had created the earth for all people and creatures, meaning that land could not be appropriated by any individual or despoiled for personal profit. In this way, this group of people did not understand the process of selling land but believed they would receive continued access to it to hunt, fish, forage, or even plant crops. Through Schuyler’s Patent, English settler Peter Schuyler acquired two tracts of land from unidentified native peoples, “one near Red Hook and one south of Poughkeepsie” in 1688. One of the three place-names identified in Schuyler’s Patent is given in the Munsee language.
Prior to 1812, Red Hook was part of the town of Rhinebeck. Because Rhinebeck, as well other towns, had populations over 5,000 residents, the state legislature authorized the separation of these two precincts on June 12 to accommodate and encourage public attendance at town meetings via horseback or carriage. The first documented Town of Red Hook meeting was on April 6, 1813, in a local inn and held yearly afterwards as required by law. Wealthy landowning farmers oversaw the maintenance of their assigned roads with the help of their farm workers and neighbors. The Red Hook Society for the Apprehension and Detention of Horse Thieves is thought to be one of the oldest formal organizations in the state and still holds an annual meeting.
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