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The following 73 pages use this file: 2nd Connecticut Regiment (1775) Avon, Connecticut; Berlin, Connecticut; Bloomfield, Connecticut; Blue Hills, Connecticut
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Originally housed Campbell & Ervin Dry Goods. 40: Commercial Building 208-210 W. Washington St. circa 1890: Two-part commercial block. This building has been torn down. Identified as 216 W. Washington Street in Interim Report. Hartford City Natural Gas and Oil Company had an office at the 210 West Washington Street address in 1903. [10] 41 ...
Parmenio Adams (1776–1832), United States congressman; born in Hartford [23] James J. Barbour (1869–1946), Illinois lawyer and state legislator; born in Hartford [24] L. Paul Bremer (born 1941), ex-administrator of US-occupied Iraq and foreign service officer; Harold V. Camp (1935–2022), Connecticut lawyer, state legislator, and businessman
Asylum Hill. Asylum Hill is a 615-acre (2.49 km 2) centrally located Hartford neighborhood with about 10,500 residents.It rises uphill directly west of Downtown Hartford but is mostly flat until it slopes downward at its western edge, along the flood plain of the north branch of the now-buried Park River.
Connecticut's first newspaper by and for African Americans was The Clarksonian, published from 1843 to 1844 in Hartford. [1] The first known paper after that came much later, however, with the Hartford Herald in 1918. [ 2 ]
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The district includes location of the Hartford Steam Company generating plant. [2] Other contributing properties in the district include St. Patrick - St. Anthony Roman Catholic Church (built in 1849), the Masonic Temple (built in 1894) and the Hotel Lenox (also known as Hartford Hotel), a Beaux-Arts eclectic style building at 280-294 Ann ...