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Lutheran Cemetery, Danbury [1] Mapleshade Cemetery, Ridgefield, Connecticut; Memorial Garden of The Unitarian Church, Westport; Mill Hill Burying Ground, Norwalk; Mill Plain Cemetery, Danbury [1] Miry Brook Cemetery, Danbury [1] Mountain Grove Cemetery, Bridgeport; New Catholic Cemetery, Danbury [1] North Main Street Cemetery, Danbury [1] Oak ...
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]
Newspapers published in Danbury, Connecticut: Farmers Chronicle, W., June 17, 1793 - Sept. 19, 1796 [13] ... List of free daily newspapers in the United States;
The News-Times was founded on September 8, 1883 as the Danbury Evening News by James Montgomery Bailey. In 1933, it merged with the Danbury Times, which was founded on May 17, 1927, thereafter to be known as the Danbury News-Times. The Ottaway Community Newspapers chain purchased the paper in 1955.
The Danbury Preservation Trust, which had been formed in the late 1950s, received a state grant in 1979 to survey and inventory the historic buildings on Main and the nearby side streets. Eventually the effort looked at 300 buildings before settling on the area that would become today's historic district.
The house is located on the east side of Main Street at the south end of the historic district. Its 1.25-acre (0.51 ha) lot includes, at its rear, the 1836 John Dodd Shop, Danbury's oldest commercial building. Also owned by the museum, it is not part of the Register listing and is screened from view by large trees. [2]
Town of Danbury, Fairfield County, Connecticut. (inset) Mill Plain. (1867) Defined as a village in the western part of Danbury, [2] Mill Plain has also historically been considered a semi-autonomous hamlet. [3] The first home in the area was built around 1720 by Nathaniel Stevens.
Danbury's annual St. Patrick's Day Parade steps off at St. Peter's Church. In recent years the parish has welcomed a number of Brazilian and Latino Catholics who have settled in Danbury. There is a Mass offered in Spanish on Sunday evenings, and one in Portuguese on both Saturday and Sunday. [7]