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Cedar Park Water Heaters
Cedar Park's Certified Water Heaters Experts
Cedar Park Water Heaters
Cedar Park Water Heaters
628 Russet Valley DrCedar Park Texas 78613United States
(512) 768-4410
Business Description
Cedar Park Water Heaters is the best choice for water heater repair and installation, residential and commercial. Our contracting team is native to Texas so we know the ins and outs of proper and efficient Water Heaters work in Cedar Park. Aside of providing professional expertise and quality services, Cedar Park Water Heaters offers free & fair estimates and upfront prices on all services provided. Your Cedar Park, Texas Water Heaters Pros are only a call away!
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About Cedar Park
Cedar Park is a city and a suburb of Austin in the state of Texas, approximately 16 miles (26 km) northwest of the center of Austin. According to the 2020 U.S. census, the city's population was 77,595, and in 2022 was estimated to be 77,642. == History == Before the arrival of European settlers in the 19th century, the Cedar Park area was inhabited by Native American tribes including the Tonkawa, the Lipan Apache, and the Comanche. A paleo-American archaeological site (named the Wilson-Leonard site) was discovered in Cedar Park in 1983 that showed evidence of continual habitation of the area since circa 5000 BC. In the mid-19th century the community was known as Running Brushy, named after a spring that formed the headwaters of a creek of the same name. In 1873 George and Harriet Cluck, after having run cattle up the Chisholm Trail for many years, bought 329 acres (1.33 km2) of land that included the Running Brushy spring. Their ranch formed the core of the community that would one day become Cedar Park.Ten years later, the railroad came through. The Austin and Northwestern Railroad, which connected the state capitol with the cities of Burnet and Lampasas to the north, was finished in 1882 and passed through Running Brushy and the Cluck ranch. The community was at this point renamed Bruggerhoff, after a railroad company official. However, the name was generally disliked by locals, being both hard to spell and pronounce. In 1887, Emmett Cluck (son of George and Harriet) changed the community name to Cedar Park.