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New Britain's terrain is mostly made up of gentle, rolling hills and young Connecticut forest. The many parks are populated with trees, and in small, undeveloped areas, there are also brushy woods. New Britain's streets also have many trees lining the sides of the roads. Many front yards in the northern half of the city have at least one tree.
New Britain. Hardware City [6] [16] Hard-hittin' New Britain [18] New Haven – The Elm City [6] [19] (reported in the 1880s as City of Elms [20]) New London - The Whaling City; Norwich – Rose City [21] or The Rose of New England [22] Stamford. Lock City (a reference to the now-defunct Yale & Towne lock factory) [16] "The City that Works!" [23]
Connecticut's 5th congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of Connecticut.Located in the western part of the state and spanning across parts of Fairfield, Litchfield, New Haven, and Hartford Counties, the district runs from Meriden and New Britain in central Connecticut, westward to Danbury and the surrounding Housatonic Valley, encompassing the Farmington Valley ...
Get the New Britain, CT local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. ... the Center's track forecast performance for 2024 was the best in its history. ... A long-awaited and refreshing ...
CT New Britain Division and CT Bristol Division is one division of Connecticut Transit that collectively provides local bus service to four towns in the Central Connecticut Region with connections to CT Transit Hartford Division in downtown New Britain, downtown Bristol, along the Berlin Turnpike, at UConn Health, at Tunxis Community College, CT Transit Waterbury Division and Middletown Area ...
The West End Historic District encompasses a predominantly residential area west of downtown New Britain, Connecticut.Forming a rough C shape around the west part of Walnut Hill Park, the area was developed in the late 19th century as one of its premier upper-class neighborhoods, home to business and civic leaders, with a fine array of late 19th and early 20th century architecture.
The Hartford and New Haven Railroad (H&NH) opened through the far east part of New Britain in 1839. [3] The railroad quickly established a New Britain station on what is now New Britain Avenue ( CT-174 ) just over the Wethersfield border, possibly in a privately owned building or house. [ 4 ]
Shea, Jonathan; Proko, Barbara (2005). The Polish Community of New Britain - Images of America.Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-3765-9.; Dolores Liptak, review of Daniel S. Buczek, People of God: A Centennial History of Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish, New Britain, Connecticut (1998), in Catholic Historical Review 85:2 (1999), pp. 324–325.