Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
windsorlockshistory.com - an on-line listing of books, articles, maps and videos on the history of Windsor Locks, including many on the canal. Windsor Locks Canal State Park Trail Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection; The Rise and Fall of the Canal and the Factories Along it, by Dr. Melvin D. Montemerlo, July 25, 2016 ...
The Rippowam River is a river in Fairfield County, Connecticut and Westchester County, New York (United States). It drains a catchment area of 37.5 square miles (97 km 2) and flows for 17 miles (27 km) from Ridgefield to Long Island Sound, which it enters in Stamford's harbor. [1] Streamflow in the Rippowam River is controlled by several small ...
Pawcatuck River – easternmost CT river basin Shunock River; Ashaway River (Rhode Island) ... Rippowam River – also known as Mill River in its lower end in Stamford;
Kinsmen Brewing Company [45] – Southington; Lock City Brewery [46] [9] – Stamford; Luppoleto Brewing Company [47] - Windsor; Milford Point Brewing [48] – Milford; New England Brewing Company [26] [49] – Woodbridge; New Park Brewing [26] [50] – West Hartford; Nod Hill Brewery [51] – Ridgefield; OEC Brewing [52] – Oxford; Off the ...
Enfield Falls Canal – along Connecticut River from Windsor Locks north to Suffield CT at a location directly across the Connecticut River from Thompsonville (added May 22, 1976) J. R. Montgomery Company Industrial Complex – 25 Canal Bank Rd. (added December 31, 2017)
Windsor Locks Canal State Park Trail is a public recreation area that parallels the Connecticut River for 4.5 miles (7.2 km) between Suffield and Windsor Locks, Connecticut. The modern paved surface covers the original dirt towpath of the historic Enfield Falls Canal. The park is used for fishing, hiking, and biking. [1]
The city sits atop bluffs beside the Connecticut's confluence with two major tributaries, the Chicopee River to the east and Westfield River to the west. [60] The region around the Connecticut River is known locally as the Pioneer Valley , and the name adorns many local civic organizations and local businesses.
This is a list of bridges and other crossings of the Connecticut River from its mouth at Long Island Sound upstream to its source at the Connecticut Lakes. The list includes current road and rail crossings, as well as ferries carrying a state highway across the river. Some pedestrian bridges and abandoned bridges are also listed.