Tired of uneven heating or rising energy bills? Let Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC install a modern boiler that will keep your Point Lookout, NY home comfortable year-round.
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Who We Are
The team at Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC is here to make sure your home or business stays warm with boiler installations and replacements designed for lasting comfort. Whether it’s a residential setup or a larger commercial job, we have the experience to get the job done right the first time.
If your current system needs to be replaced or you’re starting fresh with a new electric or gas boiler installation, we’ve got you covered. Count on us to provide heating that fits your life – because you shouldn’t have to settle for anything less than the best.
How We Approach Boiler Installation
Why Professional Boiler Installation is Worthwhile
A new boiler isn’t just an upgrade – it’s a game-changer in terms of comfort and efficiency. With Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC, your boiler installation isn’t left to chance. Whether it’s a new gas or electric boiler installation, we handle all the details to make sure your system runs properly.
Serving homes and businesses in Point Lookout, NY, and across Nassau County, you can count on us to deliver exceptional results. Don’t wait until your old system breaks down – start fresh with a boiler replacement or installation built to last. Call us today at 631-430-5057 to get started.
Point Lookout’s first known inhabitants were Merrick (Meroke) Native Americans, a tribe of the Algonquin people. The first European settlers in Point Lookout were Dutch, who arrived in the 1640s, followed by the English, in the 1660s.
The barrier beach on which Point Lookout sits has been, in one incarnation or another, there for hundreds, if not thousands of years. The first mention of Point Lookout begins to appear in the mid-19th century, as a location for whalers, and as a dangerous spot for ships. A U.S. Life Saving Station was established at Point Lookout in 1872; ironically, it was due to the tragic wreck of the U.S.S. Mexico on January 2, 1837, that a U.S. Life Saving Service was created; the service remained there until farmers grew salt hay on the marshes that stretch behind the site.
A series of hotel and seasonal bungalows was built, as was a seasonal railroad connecting Point Lookout to Long Beach, but nearly all these structures were destroyed over time by either winter storms or fire. During the summer months ferries from the Woodcleft Canal in Freeport brought hundreds of day-trippers to Point Lookout’s beaches, and for those who lived in Point Lookout, or in the small community to the east called Nassau By the Sea, the barrier island was a paradise.
Learn more about Point Lookout.