Bring quality construction to your home with expert chimney construction services from Certified Chimney CT in Brookfield, CT. Contact our chimney builders today!
About Our Company
At Certified Chimney CT, we strive to provide chimney construction services that homeowners in Brookfield, CT can trust. Our team brings the experience and attention to detail needed to build chimneys that perform well and look great, adding both value and functionality to your home.
We believe that a chimney should complement your home’s style and improve its practicality. Whether you’re starting a new project or restoring an existing chimney, our goal is to create a structure you’ll appreciate every time you use it.
Our Step-by-Step Process
Professional Brick Chimney Builders
A properly built chimney improves your home’s safety, ventilation, aesthetic appeal, and overall value. At Certified Chimney CT, we use the sturdiest materials and most dependable methods to create chimneys that perform well over time.
From Brookfield, CT, to the rest of Fairfield County, our chimney masonry builders are ready to meet your needs and exceed your expectations. Whether you need a brand-new chimney or repairs for an existing one, we’re ready to help. Call us at 877-793-3712 to get started today!
Early people who lived in Brookfield were subsistence farmers, gatherers, and hunters. The main food sources were corn, beans, squash and wild foods found in the rocky, heavily forested foothills of the Berkshire Mountains of Brookfield and New Milford. Such wild foods that were harvested were white oak acorns, American chestnuts, shag bark hickory nuts, may apples, beach nuts and Solomon’s seal. The hunted animals that were taken from the forest and rivers were deer, passenger pigeon, turkey, bass, trout, crawfish, squirrel, rabbit and others. In the 18th century the community was called “Newbury”, a name that came from the three towns from which its land was taken-New Milford, Newtown, and Danbury.
As traveling to surrounding churches was difficult in winter, in 1752 the General Assembly granted the community the right to worship in area homes from September through March. In 1754, the General Assembly granted permission for the Parish of Newbury to build its own meeting house and recruit its own minister. On September 28, 1757, the first Congregational Church building was dedicated. The Reverend Thomas Brooks was ordained as the first settled minister. When incorporated in 1778, the town’s name was changed to Brookfield in honor of Brooks, who was still the minister.
Along the Still River, mills were in operation as early as 1732 in an area that became known as the Iron Works District. Brookfield was a thriving town with iron furnaces, grist mills, sawmills, comb shops, carding and cotton mills, a paper mill, a knife factory, hat factories, stage-coach shops, lime kilns, harness shops and other plants in operation. The grist mill still stands, as the . The Iron Works Aqueduct Company, formed in 1837 to supply water from mountain springs to the Iron Works District, still supplies water as the Brookfield Water Company.
Learn more about Brookfield.Here are some chimney-related links:
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