Bartending Classes in Old Westbury, NY

Master the Art of Mixology

Elevate your bartending skills and become a certified mixologist with 1800 Bartending School’s classes in Old Westbury.

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Bartending School Nassau County

Become a Nassau County Bartender

  • Gain confidence as a licensed bartender and boost your career.
  • Master mixology techniques and stand out in the industry.
  • Achieve ATAP certification and showcase your expertise.
  • Increase your earning potential with a bartender permit.
  • A crowded nightclub with people dancing under vibrant blue lighting and graduates from Queens Bartending School expertly crafting cocktails. A DJ performs on stage with illuminated screens, while laser beams cross the room, enhancing the energetic atmosphere.

    1800 Bartending School Bartending

    Local Bartending Leaders

    1800 Bartending School offers top-tier bartending classes in Old Westbury, NY. Our courses prepare you for success in the bartending industry by giving you practical experience. With seasoned instructors, we focus on practical skills and bartending license certification to give you a competitive edge.

    A bottle of Don Julio 1942 tequila sits elegantly on a wooden bar with a filled glass, capturing the essence taught at Long Island Bartending School. Nearby, a sleek black box with a red bull logo completes the scene against blurred shelves of various liquors.

    Bartending Classes Old Westbury

    Your Path to Bartending Mastery

  • Enroll: Start your journey to becoming a mixologist.
  • Train: Gain real-world bartending skills through hands-on sessions.
  • Certify: Earn your bartending license and ATAP certification.
  • A bar with red and blue signage, featuring a long counter with stools, various bottles of alcohol on shelves, and bar equipment such as glasses and shakers. Perfect for practice if you're taking Queens Bartending Classes. The ceiling is lined with fluorescent lights.
    Four people stand smiling behind a bar with bottles and soft purple lighting, embodying the relaxed atmosphere of New York Bartending School. The group—three men and one woman, all casually dressed—reflects the friendly vibe fostered in these popular New York bartending classes.

    Bartending License NY

    Get Certified

    A bartending license is essential for success in the hospitality industry. It validates your skills and builds your credibility as a bartender. 1800 Bartending School provides the training you need to pass your bartender permit exams and secure your future. Call us today at 516-212-9850 to start your bartending course in Old Westbury, NY, and elevate your career.

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    About 1-800-Bartend

    Contact us

    Westbury was founded by Edmond Titus, and was later joined by Henry Willis, one of the first English settlers. Westbury had been a Quaker community of isolated farms until the railroad came in 1836. After the Civil War, the New York elite discovered that the rich, well-wooded flat countryside of the Hempstead Plains was a place to raise horses, and to hunt foxes and play polo at the Meadow Brook Polo Club.

    The Village of Old Westbury was incorporated in 1924, separating itself from Westbury, the adjacent area that housed many of the families of the construction and building staffs for the Old Westbury mansions. The “Old” part of Old Westbury’s name reflects the community’s need for its postal address to be different from the Westbury in Cayuga County, as per postal requirements (it had been using a postal address of North Hempstead for this reason); residents did this when they wanted a local post office ca. 1841, and when they incorporated Old Westbury as a village, they felt that it would be confusing for the village name and post office name to be different from one another. The Village of Westbury, located adjacent to Old Westbury, adopted that designation when it incorporated in 1932 as Cayuga County’s Westbury’s name was no longer being used.

    The area was originally known as Wallage, which is related to a Native American term roughly meaning “ditch” or “hole.” By February 1663, it was known as Wood Edge, and by October 1675 it was known as “the Plains edge” or simply Plainedge. The name Westbury began to be used for the area around 1683. The name Westbury was chosen by Henry Willis, who named it after Westbury, Wiltshire, his hometown in England.

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