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Baltic is the town center village of the town of Sprague, Connecticut, United States, [2] and a census-designated place (CDP). The population of the CDP was 1,250 as of the 2010 census . [ 3 ] The Sprague town hall is in Baltic.
Sprague is a town in New London County, Connecticut, United States. The town is part of the Southeastern Connecticut Planning Region. The town was named after William Sprague III, who laid out the industrial section. [1] The population was 2,967 at the 2020 census. [2] Sprague includes three villages: Baltic, Hanover, and Versailles. [3]
Versailles (/ ˈ v ɜːr s eɪ l s / VER-sails) is a village within the town of Sprague, Connecticut located alongside the Shetucket River opposite the village of Occum on land historically inhabited by the Mohegan tribe.
Mar. 10—Despite years of debate, land disputes and ballot measures, Sprague Avenue in Spokane Valley has remained relatively the same for decades. The thoroughfare last saw a transformative ...
Route 138 starts at Route 97, in the town of Sprague, where it is known as Bushnell Hollow Road. [1] It heads east into the town of Lisbon becoming Kinsman Road and Town House Road. It intersects with Route 169 in Lisbon center and then becomes Newent Road, as it proceeds eastward. Route 138 overlaps with Route 12 as it crosses the Griswold town
Instead, however, he bought property in the adjoining plantation of Hull, [1] and took a prominent place there; was constable (which then meant court officer, tax collector, etc., and demanded a good business education as well as efficiency). "He joined with some of his neighbours and others in taking stock in a new plantation, "Sickonke ...
The town has several elective offices as well: the town clerk, probate judge, registrar of voters, tax collector and treasurer. [23] The Board of Finance approves financial measures, including the town budget; the Board of Education controls the town's public schools; the Representative Town Meeting is the main legislative body of the town.
Joseph and One-Six flew to Afghanistan in March 2008 from Camp Lejeune, N.C., and on May 1, assaulted into a suspected Taliban stronghold in a town called Garmsir. There was little resistance. The Marines came home that October and 14 months later, in December 2009, they went again. This time was different.