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Most of the residences are wood frame structures, with a significant number dating to before 1820. The town's 1774 meeting house still stands at 723 Worthington Ridge, and the 1850 Gothic Revival Congregational Church is at 878 Worthington Ridge. Brandegee Hall, a Gothic structure built in 1884, served from 1906 to 1974 as Berlin's town hall. [3]
Quick Bites: How First and Last Tavern in Hartford found success in Italian cuisine and family business. Blaine Callahan, Hartford Courant. June 24, 2022 at 6:00 AM. Every restaurant has a story.
Berlin station is a train station located in the Kensington neighborhood of Berlin, Connecticut. It is on the New Haven–Springfield Line and is served by Amtrak's Northeast Regional, Hartford Line, and Valley Flyer, in addition to the Hartford Line commuter rail. Two high-level platforms, each six cars long connected by an overhead pedestrian ...
Valley Tavern, 34 Sharon Valley Road. The Sharon Valley Iron Company used this distinctive Carpenter Gothic house at the Sharon Station Road intersection as their office. [2] Abel Woods House, 36 Sharon Valley Road. Local lore dates this to 1750 but it is more likely to have been built around 1825.
Berlin (/ ˈ b ɜːr l ɪ n / BUR-lin) is a town in the Capitol Planning Region, Connecticut, United States. The population was 20,175 at the 2020 census. [2] It was incorporated in 1785. The geographic center of Connecticut is located in the town. Berlin is residential and industrial, and is served by the Amtrak station of the same name.
The area of the district is bounded on the north by the Metro-North railroad tracks, on the south by the Mill River and Southport Harbor, on the west by Old South Road, and on the east by Rose Hill Road. It includes additional properties on both sides of Old South Road and Rose Hill Road, but excludes the commercial and industrial properties ...
A portion of the original tavern survives in altered form at 6 Factory Street. [2] The historic district is bounded on the north by the triangular town green, formed by the junction of Main Street and Under Mountain Road, and the White Hart Tavern, a rambling building dating to about 1800.
The John Cady House, also known historically as the Babcock Tavern, is a historic house at 484 Mile Hill Road in Tolland, Connecticut. With a distinctive construction history dating to 1753, [ 2 ] it serves as an important window into the construction methods and techniques of the 18th and 19th centuries.