Bring quality construction to your home with expert chimney construction services from Certified Chimney CT in Ridgefield, CT. Contact our chimney builders today!
About Our Company
At Certified Chimney CT, we strive to provide chimney construction services that homeowners in Ridgefield, 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 Ridgefield, 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!
Ridgefield was first settled by English colonists from Norwalk and Milford in 1708, when a group of settlers purchased land from Chief Catoonah of the Ramapo tribe. The town was incorporated under a royal charter from the Connecticut General Assembly issued in 1709. Ridgefield was descriptively named. The most notable 18th-century event was the Battle of Ridgefield on April 27, 1777. This American Revolutionary War skirmish involved a small colonial militia force (state militia and some Continental Army soldiers), led by, among others, General David Wooster, who died in the engagement, and Benedict Arnold, whose horse was shot from under him. They faced a larger British force that had landed at Westport and was returning from a raid on the colonial supply depot in Danbury. The battle was a tactical victory for the British but a strategic one for the Colonials because the British would never again conduct inland operations in Connecticut, despite western Connecticut’s strategic importance in securing the Hudson River Valley. Today, the dead from both sides are buried together in a small cemetery on Main Street on the right of the entrance to Casagmo condominiums: “…foes in arms, brothers in death…”. The Keeler Tavern, a local inn and museum, features a British cannonball still lodged in the side of the building. There are many other landmarks from the Revolutionary War in the town, with most along Main Street.
In the summer of 1781, the French army under the Comte de Rochambeau marched through Connecticut, encamping in the Ridgebury section of town, where the first Catholic mass in Ridgefield was offered.
For much of its three centuries, Ridgefield was a farming community. Among the important families in the 19th century were the Rockwells and Lounsburys, which intermarried. They produced two Connecticut governors, George Lounsbury and Phineas Lounsbury. The Ridgefield Veterans Memorial Community Center on Main Street, also called the Lounsbury House, was built by Gov. Phineas Chapman Lounsbury around 1896 as his primary residence. The Lounsbury Farm near the Florida section of Ridgefield is one of the only remaining operational farms in Ridgefield.
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