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The Rocky Hill–Glastonbury Ferry is a seasonal ferry crossing the Connecticut River between the towns of Glastonbury and Rocky Hill, Connecticut and is part of Route 160. It is believed to be the oldest continuously operated ferry service in the United States. [1] The river crossing has an annual average daily traffic of 400. [2]
Learn about the history, service, and ports of the ferry that connects Bridgeport, Connecticut and Port Jefferson, New York across Long Island Sound. Find out how to buy tickets, travel time, and the new vessel expected in 2024.
Locale: Lower Connecticut River Valley Chester, Connecticut, to the village of Hadlyme from to: Waterway: Connecticut River: Route: Route 148: Operator: Connecticut State Ferry Service: Authority: Connecticut Department of Transportation (ConnDOT): Began operation: 1769: Predecessor: Warner's Ferry: Travel time: 5 minutes: Frequency: as needed: No. of vessels: 1 (Selden III): Daily vehicles ...
Greenwich is a town in southwestern Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States, with a population of 63,518. It is named after Greenwich, London, and is part of the affluent Gold Coast and the Bridgeport–Stamford–Norwalk–Danbury metropolitan area.
The station was the centerpiece of Greenwich Plaza, a new mixed-use retail development. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] A proposed $45 million project, of which plans were shown in July 2019, would replace that building with a new station on the south side of the tracks.
The client, Greenwich Point Conservancy (GPC), has not yet released the results of the study, but claims that the west side of the house dates to circa 1645, the north lean-to addition made by Jeffrey Ferris to 1660, and the east side and expansion of the lean-to the James Ferris expansion of 1689. [3]
Platform construction in July 2019. The station was built in 1872 as Sound Beach, named after nearby Greenwich Point Beach.It was renamed Old Greenwich in 1931. The current station building, built about 1894, is a well-preserved example of the New Haven Railroad's period stations, with a utilitarian interior and exterior nods to period Victorian architectural styles.
The New Haven Line is a 72.7 mi (117.0 km) commuter rail line operated by Metro-North Railroad in New York and Connecticut. It connects New Haven, Connecticut, to Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan, and has three branches in Connecticut.