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The vote set aside $2 million to plan and develop medical and dental schools for the residents of Connecticut. In 1962, the 106-acre campus in Farmington, seven miles west of Hartford, was selected from forty different options. [3] Dr.
Clinic sites are located on the Farmington campus, and at satellite offices in West Hartford, East Hartford, Avon, Simsbury and Southington. Through Bioscience Connecticut, a new ambulatory care center began construction in 2012 on the UConn Health campus, part of a $840 million state initiative. [ 13 ]
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The Farmington Historic District encompasses a 275-acre (111 ha) area of the town center of Farmington, Connecticut. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. The area roughly corresponds to the section of Route 10 between Route 4 and U.S. Route 6 , and includes 115 buildings, primarily residences, built before 1835.
The First Church of Christ, Congregational, also known as First Church 1652 [3] is an historic church at 75 Main Street in Farmington, Connecticut.Built in 1771, this Greek Revival church was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1975 for its role in sheltering the Amistad Africans before their return to Africa.
Farmington High School is a public high school in Farmington, Connecticut that serves grades 9-12. In Newsweek's 2005 poll, FHS was ranked #1 in Connecticut and #271 in the nation, scoring high on both the challenge index and the equity and excellence index.
35 Mountain Road, Farmington, Connecticut: Area: 150 acres (0.61 km 2) Built: 1901: Architect: Theodate Pope Riddle in association with McKim, Mead and White: Architectural style: Colonial Revival: Website: Hill–Stead Museum: Part of: Farmington Historic District : NRHP reference No. 91002056: Significant dates; Added to NRHP: July 17, 1991 ...
Wycherley's play, Love in a Wood, was produced in early 1671 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.It was published the following year. Wycherley claimed to have written the play at the age of nineteen (in 1660 or 1661) before going to Oxford, but Thomas Macaulay points to the allusions in the play to gentlemen's periwigs, to guineas, to the vests that King Charles II ordered to be worn at court ...