History & Culture · Long Island
Floral Park Keeps Its Village Story Close to the Railroad and Flowers
Floral Park's local story is easy to miss until the village history ties the name, railroad-era growth, and civic identity together.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026
Floral Park’s village history gives the name a civic backstory instead of leaving it to sound like pleasant suburban branding. The account begins in 1874, when John Lewis Childs came to the area then known as East Hinsdale.
It describes a small Queens County community with houses, one store, the Hinsdale post office, and a railroad station, then notes that Floral Park became part of Nassau County when the county was formed in 1899.
The flower story is local business history, not decoration. Childs worked for flower and seed grower C. L. Allen, then started his own seed and bulb business. Leaflets and catalogs helped that business grow into gardens, customers, printing, and wider recognition.
That origin still gives Floral Park a useful way to see itself. The place name, station-area habits, village government, and compact local identity all carry the trace of railroad access meeting a flower-and-catalog business.
It is a small but specific village story. Floral Park feels more lived-in when the name stays tied to Childs, the railroad station, seed catalogs, and the civic life that grew around them.