Bartending School in Nesconset, NY

Learn How to Bartend

Want to be a bartender in Nesconset, NY? 1-800-Bartend can help!

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Our Bartending School in Suffolk County

What You'll Gain

  • Get hands-on in our mixology classes.
  • Get your bartending license and start your career.
  • Learn from bartenders.
  • Get ATAP certified.
  • A group of people sits on bar stools in a brightly lit bar in Queens, its red, blue, and yellow walls echoing the vibrant energy of nearby Bartending School. Various bottles line the shelves behind the bar, adorned with colorful sticky notes. Glasses and tools clutter the counter.

    About 1-800-Bartend

    Your Bartending School

    1-800-Bartend offers an excellent bartending education in Nesconset, NY. Our teachers will help you learn the skills you need to be a bartender.

    A large group gathers on an outdoor patio, posing for a photo amidst greenery, decorative lights, and a barbecue smoker. Enjoying a casual social event, some have just finished Long Island Bartending School classes, adding flair to the lively atmosphere.

    Bartender Course

    How to Become a Bartender

  • Sign up for our bartender course.
  • Come to class and practice.
  • Get your bartending license.
  • A group of eight people wearing matching black shirts stands behind a red bar counter with Bacardi branding, representing the Long Island Bartending School. Behind them is a large sign that reads "1-800-BARTEND." They are smiling at the camera.
    A bartender, perhaps a graduate of Queens Bartending Classes, is crafting a drink behind a long bar counter lined with various bottles. Patrons on stools watch intently in the brightly lit and organized space, featuring a large mirror and red and orange walls.

    Bartending License and Certification in Suffolk County

    Certification Matters


    You need a bartending license to work as a bartender. 1-800-Bartend in Nesconset, NY can help you get your license and ATAP certification. Contact us at 516-212-9850 to learn more.

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    About 1-800-Bartend

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    At the time of colonization, the area that would become Nesconset was likely a seasonal hunting ground visited by both eastern Algonquin-speaking and western Munsee-speaking people who lived in clans. These clans likely banded together seasonally to share resources in winter, or to unify against a common threat such as enemy clans. By the 18th century, Kieft’s War and Old World disease had reduced Long Island’s indigenous society to a few thousand people who resided in either reservations or mission-towns across Long Island. From these remaining communities, colonists ascribed tribal names to better identify parties engaging in land transactions. One of these remaining groups was in early Smithtown and would be known to them as the Nissequogue or Nesaquake (a likely descendant of today’s Matinecock tribe. The tribe’s principal sachem was known as Nassaconsett or Nassetteconsett, for whom Nesconset is named. After Smithtown passed a law in 1768 forbidding Algonquin-style living, Nesconset remained largely a deserted stretch of pine barrens. The construction of the Middle Country Road (NY 25) in the same era modestly opened the area to agricultural development.

    By the turn of the 19th century, a sparse population of farmers and seasonal residents lived along Middle Country Road and Lake Ronkonkoma. A primitive road network existed as Gibbs Pond Road, Browns Road, Old Nichols Road, Townline Road and the predecessor of Smithtown Boulevard. In 1904, brothers and French immigrants Louis and Clemen Vion came to the Pine Barrens of southeastern Smithtown from Manhattan on numerous occasions as sportsmen. By 1910, the brothers felled a line of trees off of Gibbs Pond Road immediately south of modern-day New York State Route 347 to create Midwood Avenue. They built their home on this street where it is still present.

    As the population grew, a lumber yard, general store, and post office were constructed in 1908. The historic Nesconset Schoolhouse was built in 1910 and the Nesconset Fire Department was built by 1935, A commercial center emerged where Lake Avenue South and Gibbs Pond Road meet. The brothers decided to name the newly established settlement after Smithtown’s local historical figure, Nasseconsett, who deeded the Nissequogue tribe’s land to Richard Smith. Later development was concentrated on Lake Avenue South, Southern Boulevard and the Lake Ronkonkoma area along Gibbs Pond Road in the form of summer residences.

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