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The Middlebury Center Historic District encompasses the historic civic and religious center of Middlebury, Connecticut.Centered at the junction of North and South Streets with Whittemore Road, the District includes churches, schools and municipal buildings, many from the late 19th or early 20th centuries, as well as a diversity of residential architecture.
Route 63 is still locally called the Straits Turnpike in Middlebury and Watertown. In the mid-1940s, Route 61 between Morris and Cornwall was reassigned to an extended Route 63. Another extension happened on September 11, 1951 when Route 63 took over part of Route 43 from Cornwall to Canaan where it ends today. [ 5 ]
Middlebury is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. The population was 7,574 at the 2020 census . [ 1 ] The town is part of the Naugatuck Valley Planning Region .
King St, Greenwich... parts in CT and other parts along NY/CT line Route 121: 5.66: 9.11 US 1 in Milford: Route 34 in Orange: 1932: current Route 122: 3.51: 5.65 I-95 in West Haven: Route 63 in New Haven: 1932: current Route 123: 8.37: 13.47 US 1 in Norwalk: NY 123 at the New York state line 1932: current realigned in 1934 Route 124 — — — —
It heads east as the southern branch of East Street, crosses the Bantam River, then intersects with Route 254 (the road to the village of Northfield). Route 118 then enters the village of East Litchfield, where there is a junction with Thomaston Road, an old alignment of Route 8 before the expressway was built.
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The Josiah Bronson House is located northeast of the village center of Middlebury in a rural-suburban setting on the north side of Breakneck Hill Road. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame structure with a gabled roof, central chimney, and clapboarded exterior. Its main façade is five bays wide with a symmetrical arrangement of windows around ...
The road linking Woodbury and Waterbury was originally laid out as a toll road in May 1823 and was known as the Woodbury and Waterbury Turnpike. [2] The Woodbury-Waterbury road was incorporated as part of New England Route 3 in 1922, which ran east–west across Connecticut and directly connected the cities of Danbury, Waterbury, Hartford, and Willimantic.