Bartending Classes in Silver Beach, NY

Become a Silver Beach 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 Silver Beach, 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 Silver Beach

    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 Silver Beach 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

    The peninsula was called Vriedelandt, “Land of Peace”, by the New Netherlanders. The current name comes from John Throckmorton, English immigrant and associate of Roger Williams in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The Dutch allowed Throckmorton to settle in this peripheral area of New Amsterdam in 1642, with thirty-five others. At this time, the peninsula was also known as Maxson’s point as the Maxson family (Richard, Rebecca, John, etc.) lived there. Many of the settlers, including Anne Hutchinson and her family, were murdered in a 1643 uprising of Native Americans. Throckmorton returned to Rhode Island. In 1668, the peninsula appeared on maps as “Frockes Neck”. The peninsula was virtually an island at high tide.

    In 1776, George Washington’s headquarters wrote of a potential British landing at “Frogs Neck”. At the bridge over Westchester Creek, now represented by an unobtrusive steel and concrete span at East Tremont Avenue near Westchester Avenue, General Howe did make an unsuccessful effort to cut off Washington’s troops in October 1776; when the British approached, the Americans ripped up the plank bridge and opened a heavy fire that forced Howe to withdraw and change his plans; six days later he landed troops at Rodman’s Neck to the north, on the far side of Eastchester Bay. A farm in the area owned by the Stephenson family was sold in 1795 to Abijah Hammond, who built a large mansion (later the offices of the Silver Beach Garden Corporation).

    In the 19th century, the area remained the site of large farms, converted into estates. In about 1848, members of the Morris family purchased a large parcel of land there. They built two mansions and many cottages and service buildings. The Morris estates had a private dock in Morris Cove, at the end of what is now Emerson Avenue, where they had nearly a mile of shoreline. After the Civil War, Collis P. Huntington, the railroad builder, owned an extensive parcel, which his heirs held until they were almost the last estate on Throggs Neck. Huntington’s property was previously owned by Frederick C. Havemeyer Jr., a sugar magnate, and the Havemeyer-Huntington mansion is now home to Preston High School, New York.

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