Bartending Classes in East Hampton, NY

Become a East Hampton Bartender

Sharpen your skills and elevate your cocktails with 1800 Bartending School’s bartending classes.

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Bartending School Suffolk County

Craft Your Bartending Skills

  • Develop the confidence to create perfect cocktails.
  • Obtain a bartending license and expand your career options.
  • Learn from seasoned mixologists and become a licensed bartender.
  • Gain a competitive edge with ATAP certification and 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

    Your Local Bartending Professional

    1800 Bartending School offers top-tier bartending classes in East Hampton, NY. Our instructors are passionate about teaching the art and science of mixology. We provide bartender courses to equip you with the skills and knowledge needed to thrive in any bar setting.

    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 East Hampton

    Your Path to Mastery

  • Sign Up: Choose a bartending course and enroll online.
  • Learn: Attend our classes led by mixologists.
  • Certify: Complete the course and get 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 in NY

    A bartending license is a valuable asset in the competitive world of mixology. 1800 Bartending School’s courses in East Hampton NY meet all the requirements. We’ll provide you with the knowledge and credentials to excel behind the bar. Contact us at 516-212-9850 to start your bartending journey today.

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    About 1-800-Bartend

    Contact us

    This area had been inhabited for thousands of years by wandering tribes of indigenous peoples. At the time of European contact, East Hampton was home to the Pequot people, part of the culture that also occupied territory on the northern side of Long Island Sound, in what is now Connecticut of southern New England. They belong to the large Algonquian-speaking language family. Bands on Long Island were identified by their geographic locations. The historical people known to the colonists as the Montaukett, who were Pequot, controlled most of the territory at the east end of Long Island.

    Indians inhabiting the western part of Long Island were part of the Lenape nation, whose language is also in the Algonquian family. Their territory extended to lower New York, western Connecticut and the mid-Atlantic coastal areas into New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Their bands were also known by the names of their geographic locations but did not constitute distinct peoples.

    In the late-17th century Chief Wyandanch of the Montaukett negotiated with English colonists for the land in the East Hampton area. The differing concepts held by the Montaukett and English about land and its use contributed to the Montaukett losing most of their lands over the ensuing centuries. Wyandanch’s elder brother, the grand sachem Poggaticut, sold an island to English colonist Lion Gardiner for “a large black dog, some powder and shot, and a few Dutch blankets.” The next trade involved the land extending from present-day Southampton to the foot of the bluffs, at what is now Hither Hills State Park, for 24 hatchets, 24 coats, 20 looking glasses and 100 muxes.

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