Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Republican-American is a conservative-leaning, family-owned newspaper based in Waterbury, Connecticut. It was established in 1990 through merger of two newspapers under the same ownership: Waterbury American and Waterbury Republican. The publication's origins date back to 1844.
Later served as a State Representative in the 100th District from 1977 to 1993 Natalie Rapoport: Democratic: 1973 – 1981: Waterbury: John G. Rowland: Republican: 1981 – 1985: Waterbury: Later elected to the U.S. Congress and as Governor Joan Hartley: Democratic: 1985 – 2001: Waterbury: Later elected to the State Senate Jeffrey J. Berger ...
Route 73 is an east–west state highway in Connecticut connecting the town center of Watertown to the Route 8 freeway in Waterbury via the village of Oakville. The road is classified as an urban principal arterial road and carries traffic volumes of about 16,400 vehicles per day.
The Bank Street Historic District is a group of four attached brick commercial buildings in different architectural styles on that street in Waterbury, Connecticut, United States. They were built over a 20-year period around the end of the 19th century, when Waterbury was a prosperous, growing industrial center.
The Downtown Waterbury Historic District is the core of the city of Waterbury, Connecticut, United States. It is a roughly rectangular area centered on West Main Street and Waterbury Green, the remnant of the original town commons, which has been called "one of the most attractive downtown parks in New England ."
The oldest house in Watertown today was built in 1735 on Main Street. [3] A poet from the Revolutionary War, John Trumbull, was born here in 1750. [3] With a population of 338, the First Ecclesiastical Society of Westbury was formed. [3] The Town of Watertown was officially established in 1780 when Westbury separated from Watterbury. [5]
Route 8 is a 67.36-mile (108.41 km) state highway in Connecticut that runs north–south from Bridgeport, through Waterbury, all the way to the Massachusetts state line where it continues as Massachusetts Route 8. Most of the highway is a four-lane freeway but the northernmost 8.8 miles (14.2 km) is a two-lane surface road. [1]
Parts of modern Route 69 belonged to two separate state highways in the 1920s. The road from Prospect to Waterbury was designated as State Highway 348, while the road from Waterbury to Bristol was known as State Highway 172. Route 69 was created in the 1932 state highway renumbering as a direct route from