Transform your home with our fireplace remodeling services in Old Bethpage, NY.Appreciate custom design and modern conversions today!
We deliver the best fireplace remodeling services in Old Bethpage, NY. Our team of skilled fireplace remodelers combines years of experience and passion for creating stunning, custom fireplace designs. Serving Nassau County, we focus on quality craftsmanship and customer satisfaction for your fireplace to be your home’s centerpiece.
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Fireplace remodeling is more than just an upgrade; it’s about transforming your living space into a warm and inviting area. We specialize in modern fireplace conversions that enrich aesthetics and improve energy savings and safety. With our skills, your fireplace will become a focal point of comfort and style. Ready to begin your transformation? Contact us at 516-795-1313 today! Serving Nassau County, we are your trusted partner in Old Bethpage, NY, for all fireplace remodeling needs.
In 1695, Thomas Powell bought about 10,000 acres (40 km2) from local Indian tribes, including the Marsapeque, Matinecoc, and Sacatogue, for 140 English pounds. This land, which includes modern Bethpage, East Farmingdale, Farmingdale, Old Bethpage, Plainedge, Plainview, South Farmingdale, and part of Melville, is known as the Bethpage Purchase and is approximately 3.5 miles (5.6 km) east to west and 5 miles (8.0 km) north to south.
Powell called his land Bethphage, because it was situated between two other places on Long Island, Jericho and Jerusalem, just as the biblical town of Bethphage (meaning “house of figs”) was situated between Jericho and Jerusalem. The Long Island place formerly called Jerusalem is known as Wantagh and Island Trees, while the placename Jericho is unaltered. Over time, Bethpage was spelled without the second “H”. Powell’s 14 children divided his purchase and it evolved into several farming communities. The one in this mostly central part of the purchase retained the name “Bethpage”.
A railroad spur completed in 1873, named the Bethpage Branch of the Central Railroad of Long Island, ran to a brickworks which had opened in the 1860s on what became Battle Row and Bethpage-Sweet Hollow Road. The railway was built to transport bricks for the construction of Alexander Stewart’s Garden City. For a few years, regularly scheduled passenger traffic also appeared in timetables, with the station named Bethpage. The line was abandoned in 1942. Remnants of a locomotive turntable can be found in the woods of Bethpage State Park on the east side of Round Swamp Road. The brickyard continued operating until 1981, with different sections known as Bethpage Brickworks, Queens Brick Manufacturing Company, Post Brick Company, and (after Nassau County split from Queens in 1899) Nassau Brick Company. The pitted terrain at the brickworks was used in investigations by Grumman for digital mapping of Earth.
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