Litchfield, CT Furnace & Air Conditioning Installation, Repair & Maintenance

C&G's Heating and Air Conditioning is proud to serve the Litchfield community!

We are proud to be part of this community, serving your heating and air conditioning needs. Whether you need repair, replacement or a new installation of a furnace, air conditioner, heat pump or air filtration system, we get the job right the first time. Our certified technicians service all furnace and air conditioning make and models.

Please call us today at 860-482-3400 to consult with our home comfort specialist.

About Litchfield, CT - Happy to be your hometown Heating & Air Conditioning Contractor!

The town of Litchfield, founded in 1719, was at one time the county seat of Litchfield County, although today Connecticut’s counties no longer have seats and each municipality is responsible for providing its own local services. Litchfield may have been home to the nation’s first law school, as local lawyer Tapping Reeve established the Litchfield Law School here in 1784. Another famous educational institution was the Litchfield Female Academy, established by Sarah Pierce in 1792. The town has been home to a number of famous residents over the years, among them Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen, Declaration of Independence signer Oliver Wolcott, abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher, Uncle Tom’s Cabin author Harriet Beecher Stowe and Wrinkle in Time author Madeline L’Engle.

The Litchfield Historical Society today maintains a history museum featuring clothing, furniture, household objects and paintings from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and also preserves the Tapping Reeve House and Litchfield Law School, which is open to the public from April through November. The White Memorial Conservation Center maintains 4,000 acres dedicated to the preservation of local wildlife, and presents educational programs year-round. The Livingston Ripley Waterfowl Conservancy provides a sanctuary for one of the nation’s most diverse collections of ducks, geese and swans, and is open to the public on the first Sunday of each month.

In summertime, when temperatures rarely rise above 80 degrees, residents enjoy fishing, swimming, hiking and picnicking at Mount Tom State Park. Wintertime usually brings enough snow for cross-country skiing and sledding at Topsmead State Forest.