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Connecticut Towns and Cities:

How They Grew

Compiled by Diane Carpenter

Think of Connecticut and one of the pictures that immediately comes to mind is a classic New England town with a central green bordered by Colonial houses and a white steepled church. Many Connecticut town and cities originally looked like this, especially those that originated as farming communities in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. By the early nineteenth century, however, industrialization began to transform the appearance of existing towns and new towns, centered around factories, rather than churches, sprang into existence. While typical farming communities were located on hilltops, typical mill towns were located in river valleys beside the streams that provided them with waterpower. The building of canals and railroads also influenced the growth of towns and cities. Towns grew and flourished or failed to grow – and even lost population –depending on their access to transportation networks. By the early twentieth century, the advent of local trolley systems and later the automobile encouraged people to move from city centers to suburban “bedroom towns,” some of which were originally nineteenth-century factory villages or Colonial farming communities. Even when a town has been totally transformed over time, its surviving buildings—its churches, factories, houses and railroad stations—and its street plan often provide clues to its origin. Every town in Connecticut has its own story to tell; together, they tell the story of the state.

South view in Thompson, CT
John Warner Barber
South view in Thompson, CT
Thompson, ca. 1830’s
Photo CD:2827 Img0003.pcd

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Photo Essays

>> Early Towns
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Town Greens
>>
Factory Villages
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Transportation Hubs
>>
Expansion into Suburban Living

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