Transform your home with our fireplace remodeling services in Valley Stream, NY.Appreciate custom design and modern conversions today!
We deliver the best fireplace remodeling services in Valley Stream, 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 Valley Stream, NY, for all fireplace remodeling needs.
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 lists approximately 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 lists Pagan’s occupation as a farmer. Two children were born to Robert and Ellen Pagan after they settled in the Town of Hempstead.
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