Connecticut State Facts & Information

Connecticut, one of the six New England states, in the northeastern United States. Connecticut was the fifth of the original 13 states ratifying the Constitution of the United States on January 9, 1788, and it played an important role in the development of the United States. Settlement in Connecticut dates from the 1630s and many of the state’s modern towns and cities can trace their origins back to the 17th or 18th century. Hartford is the capital of Connecticut and the center of the state’s largest metropolitan area. Bridgeport is the state’s largest city.

Rural Connecticut retains much of the charm of colonial New England. It is an area of churches with white steeples, charming colonial homes that face elm-shaded streets, and village greens where once, perhaps, the local militia trained for the Continental Army. However, modern Connecticut is principally an urban and suburban residential state. Many of the nation’s early industrial advances, including the development of mass production, first took place in Connecticut. Cities and towns in the state were identified by the products they produced—hats in Danbury, brass in Waterbury, thread in Colchester. Although the economy today is decreasing its reliance on manufacturing, becoming instead more diverse and service-based, the state remains an important producer of such products as electronic equipment, aircraft engines, and spacecraft equipment.

The name Connecticut is probably derived from a Native American word, Quinnehtukqut, meaning “beside the long tidal river.” The state’s official nickname, adopted in 1959, is the Constitution State, chosen to commemorate the colony’s adoption in 1639 of the Fundamental Orders, sometimes regarded as the first written constitution. Among its numerous unofficial nicknames are the Nutmeg State, an unflattering reference to the reputed attempts of Yankee peddlers from Connecticut to sell wooden nutmegs in the 18th and 19th centuries, and the Arsenal of the Nation, a reference to Connecticut’s role as a major supplier of weapons in the American Revolution (1775-1783) and other wars.

Immigration - Connecticut’s immigration lists are included in the NARA microfilm publication, M575, Copies of Lists of Passengers Arriving at Miscellaneous Ports on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts, 1820–1873.

Naturalization - As with other states, naturalizations might have been granted in any Connecticut court up to the twentieth century. Some are still in the county courthouses, but all that were held at the Connecticut State Library were transferred to the National Archives—Northeast Region in 1984 and have been microfilmed with a copy of the film returned for research at the state library. Those filed and granted after 1906 are in the federal district court in Bridgeport, Hartford, or New Haven. See <www.cslib.org/natural.htm> for a full description and explanation.

African American - From colonial times, African Americans have been a major ethnic group in Connecticut, providing a large number of Revolutionary soldiers. A research guide is available on the Connecticut State Library website <www.cslib.org/blagen.htm>.

  • White, David Oliver. Connecticut’s Black Soldiers, 1775–1783. Connecticut Bicentennial Series, no. 4. Chester, Conn.: Pequot Press, 1973.
  • Rose, James M., and Barbara W. Brown. Black Roots in Southeastern Connecticut, 1650–1900. Reprint. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2001.
  • Rose, James M. Tapestry: A Living History of the Black Family in Southeastern Connecticut. New London, Conn.: New London Historical Society, 1979.
  • Weed, Ralph Foster. Slavery in Connecticut. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1935.

Native American - A research guide is available on the Connecticut State Library website <www.cslib.org/indians.htm>.

Search Connecticut Historical Records - Databases include Court, Land, Wills & Financial Records; Birth, Marriage & Death Records; Voter Lists & Census Records; Immigration & Emigration Records; Obituary Records; Military Records; Family Tree Records; Pictures; Stories, Memories & Histories; Directories & Member Lists and much more....

List of Connecticut Counties

Select a county from the table below to to view more information on genealogical information & records pertaining to each county.

Counties were abolished officially in 1959 though their purpose had been chiefly to define county court districts. For genealogical research purposes, counties become necessary when using the federal census returns, since they are all cataloged by county. Connecticut's original four counties had become eight counties by the time of the first federal census in 1790. Keep in mind some towns on the borders crossed county jurisdictions for different census enumerations

In the list of town offices, the town clerk has town meeting, vital records, and land records. If the address specifies “city” or “town,” the official in charge of the records is the city or municipal clerk. The Town Establisment page indicates the date the town was incorporated and the parent town or towns; dashes (——) indicate that the town was not original but was formed from unorganized land rather than another town. Some seventeenth-century towns were settled or organized a year or two before incorporation. The third column lists the present county, which can be used for census identification and superior court records. For earlier probate divisions see Probate Records section.

All deeds, vital records, and probate records for all Connecticut towns are available to 1900 on microfilm at the Connecticut State Library or through the FHL. Town meeting records are not automatically included in the microfilms

Fairfield County Hartford County Litchfield County Middlesex County New Haven County
New London County Tolland County Windham County    

 

Connecticut State History

The Official State Website is http://www.ct.gov/

The first colonies that would become Connecticut flanked the shores of Long Island Sound and the banks of the Housatonic and Connecticut Rivers. Influenced by Rev. Thomas Hooker's principle of authority growing out of the free expression of its people, the utopian experiment of Connecticut Colony, begun in 1636, produced little class distinction, a change from the heavy-handed authoritarian expectations of the Massachusetts colonies. The Congregational church would not only be thoroughly integrated in town life, but interpretation of its theology seemed to create less social stratification.

Similar to Rhode Island in its political organization, Connecticut differed from the new settlements in Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in possessing a rich agricultural terrain. First settlements along the Connecticut River, co-existing with the Native Americans and Dutch at a trading post at what is now Windsor and Hartford, were reached primarily on foot by settlers from Massachusetts towns. Concurrently, John Winthrop, Jr., brought a group of more notable settlers from England to establish Saybrook along the coast. By 1638, with other settlements already harvesting their crops and increasing their number of clapboard houses, New Haven Colony, under the theological leadership of John Davenport, entrenched itself along the coast building the more elaborate houses they had become accustomed to in England.

New Haven Colony merged with Connecticut Colony in 1662 while others, dissatisfied, moved farther north on the Connecticut River to settle western Massachusetts towns, and one group founded Newark, New Jersey. More and more of the rich agricultural land was purchased from the Native Americans, but through the middle of the eighteenth century, Connecticut's, as well as the rest of New England's, relationship with the original inhabitants deteriorated as the French and Indian wars heated up and persisted.

Connecticut's homogeneous, community centered form of government, out of the mainstream of royal imperial affairs, remained focused on the town and its people. With events of the impending Revolution espousing the principles of freedom of expression, Connecticut began to move away from a solely town focus and look out toward the broader community of colonies opposing Royal authority. Connecticut people fought on both sides of the conflict, with many Loyalists migrating north and east to Canada and its eastern provinces.

By the end of the Revolution family farms were unable to support the large number of young people in the area. The population boom made it necessary for more and more descendants of original settlers to leave for the north, west, and south to provide for themselves and their families. Cheaper, available land elsewhere provided much of the motivation. Farms gave way to the newly burgeoning Industrial Revolution, and new ethnic groups wended their ways along the Long Island Shoreline of Connecticut's growing metropolitan areas.

Connecticut Towns and Their Establishment

 

Town Year Est. Parent Town County
Andover 1848 Coventry, Hebron Tolland
Ansonia 1889 Derby New Haven
Ashford 1714 ---- Windham
Avon 1830 Farmington Hartford
Barkhamsted 1779 ---- Litchfield
Beacon Falls 1871 Bethany, Seymour,
Oxford, Naugatuck
New Haven
Berlin 1785 Farmington, Wethersfield,
Middletown
Hartford
Bethany 1832 Woodbridge New Haven
Bethel 1855 Danbury Fairfield
Bethlehem 1787 Woodbury Litchfield
Bloomfield 1835 Windsor, Farmington, Simsbury Hartford
Bolton 1720 ---- Tolland
Bozrah 1786 Norwich New London
Branford 1685 New Haven New Haven
Bridgeport 1821 Stratford, Fairfield Fairfield
Bridgewater 1856 New Milford Litchfield
Bristol 1785 Farmington Hartford
Brookfield 1788 Danbury, New Milford,
Newtown
Fairfield
Brooklyn 1786 Pomfret, Canterbury Windham
Burlington 1806 Bristol Hartford
Canaan 1739 ---- Litchfield
Canterbury 1703 Plainfield Windham
Canton 1806 Simsbury Hartford
Chaplin 1822 Windham, Hampton,
Mansfield
Windham
Chatham      
Cheshire 1780 Wallingford New Haven
Chester 1836 Saybrook Middlesex
Clinton 1838 Killingworth Middlesex
Colchester 1698 ---- New London
Colebrook 1779 ---- Litchfield
Columbia 1804 Lebanon Tolland
Cornwall 1740 ---- Litchfield
Coventry 1712 ---- Tolland
Cromwell 1851 Middletown Middlesex
Danbury 1687 ---- Fairfield
Darien 1820 Stamford Fairfield
Deep River 1635 ---- Middlesex
Derby 1675 ---- New Haven
Durham 1708 ---- Middlesex
Eastford 1847 Ashford Windham
East Granby 1858 Granby, Windsor Locks Hartford
East Haddam 1734 Haddam Middlesex
East Hampton 1767 Middletown Middlesex
East Hartford 1783 Hartford Hartford
East Haven 1785 New Haven New Haven
East Lyme 1839 Lyme, Waterford New London
Easton 1845 Weston Fairfield
East Windsor 1768 Windsor Hartford
Ellington 1786 East Windsor Tolland
Enfield 1683 ---- Hartford
Essex* 1852 Saybrook Middlesex
Fairfield 1639 ---- Fairfield
Farmington 1645 ---- Hartford
Franklin 1786 Norwich New London
Glastonbury 1690 Wethersfield Hartford
Goshen 1739 ---- Litchfield
Granby 1786 Simsbury Hartford
Greenwich 1665 Stamford Fairfield
Griswold 1815 Preston New London
Groton 1705 New London New London
Guilford 1643 ---- New Haven
Haddam 1668 ---- Middlesex
Hamden 1786 New Haven New Haven
Hampton 1786 Windham, Pomfret, Brooklyn, Canterbury, Mansfield Windham
Hartford 1635 ---- Hartford
Hartland 1761 ---- Hartford
Harwinton 1737 ---- Litchfield
Hebron 1708 ---- Tolland
Huntington      
Kent 1739 ---- Litchfield
Killingly 1708 ---- Windham
Killingworth 1667 ---- Middlesex
Lebanon 1700 ---- New London
Ledyard 1836 Groton New London
Lisbon 1786 Norwich New London
Litchfield 1719 ---- Litchfield
Lyme 1667 Saybrook New London
Madison 1826 Guilford New Haven
Manchester 1823 East Hartford Hartford
Mansfield 1702 Windham Tolland
Marlborough 1803 Colchester, Glastonbury, Hebron Hartford
Meriden 1806 Wallingford New Haven
Middlebury 1807 Waterbury, Woodbury, Southbury New Haven
Middlefield 1866 Middletown Middlesex
Middletown 1651 ---- Middlesex
Milford 1639 ---- New Haven
Monroe 1823 Huntington Fairfield
Montville 1786 New London New London
Morris 1859 Litchfield Litchfield
Naugatuck 1844 Waterbury, Bethany, Oxford New Haven
New Britain 1850 Berlin Hartford
New Canaan 1801 Norwalk, Stamford Fairfield
New Fairfield 1740 ---- Fairfield
New Hartford 1738 ---- Litchfield
New Haven 1638 ---- New Haven
Newington 1871 Wethersfield Hartford
New London 1648 ---- New London
New Milford 1712 ---- Litchfield
Newtown 1711 ---- Fairfield
Norfolk 1758 ---- Litchfield
No. Branford 1831 Branford New Haven
North Canaan 1858 Canaan Litchfield
North Haven 1786 New Haven New Haven
No. Stonington 1807 Stonington New London
Norwalk 1651 ---- Fairfield
Norwich 1662 ---- New London
Old Lyme 1855 Lyme New London
Old Saybrook 1854 Old Saybrook (i.e., the modern Essex) Middlesex
Orange 1822 Milford, New Haven New Haven
Oxford 1798 Derby, Southbury New Haven
Plainfield 1699 ---- Windham
Plainville 1869 Farmington Hartford
Plymouth 1795 Watertown Litchfield
Pomfret 1713 ---- Windham
Portland 1841 Chatham Middlesex
Preston 1687 ---- New London
Prospect 1827 Cheshire, Waterbury New Haven
Putnam 1855 Thompson, Pomfret, Killingly Windham
Redding 1767 Fairfield Fairfield
Ridgefield 1709 ---- Fairfield
Rocky Hill 1843 Wethersfield Hartford
Roxbury 1796 Woodbury Litchfield
Salem 1819 Colchester, Lyme, Montville New London
Salisbury 1741 ---- Litchfield
Saybrook      
Scotland 1857 Windham Windham
Seymour 1850 Derby New Haven
Sharon 1739 ---- Litchfield
Shelton 1789 Stratford Fairfield
Sherman 1802 New Fairfield Fairfield
Simsbury 1670 ---- Hartford
Somers 1734 Enfield Tolland
Southbury 1787 Woodbury New Haven
Southington 1779 Farmington Hartford
South Windsor 1845 East Windsor Hartford
Sprague 1861 Lisbon, Franklin New London
Stafford 1719 ---- Tolland
Stamford 1641 ---- Fairfield
Sterling 1794 Voluntown Windham
Stonington 1662 ---- New London
Stratford 1639 ---- Fairfield
Suffield 1674 ---- Hartford
Thomaston 1875 Plymouth Litchfield
Thompson 1785 Killingly Windham
Tolland 1715 ---- Tolland
Torrington 1740 ---- Litchfield
Trumbull 1797 Stratford Fairfield
Union 1734 ---- Tolland
Vernon 1808 Bolton Tolland
Voluntown 1721 ---- New London
Wallingford 1670 New Haven New Haven
Warren 1786 Kent Litchfield
Washington 1779 Woodbury, Litchfield, Kent, New Milford Litchfield
Waterbury 1686 ---- New Haven
Waterford 1801 New London New London
Watertown 1780 Waterbury Litchfield
Westbrook 1840 Saybrook Middlesex
West Hartford 1854 Hartford Hartford
West Haven 1921 Orange New Haven
Weston 1787 Fairfield Fairfield
Westport 1835 Fairfield, Norwalk, Weston Fairfield
Wethersfield 1634 ---- Hartford
Willington 1727 ---- Tolland
Wilton 1802 Norwalk Fairfield
Winchester 1771 ---- Litchfield
Windham 1692 ---- Windham
Windsor 1633 ---- Hartford
Windsor Locks 1854 Windsor Hartford
Wolcott 1796 Waterbury, Southington New Haven
Woodbridge 1784 New Haven, Milford New Haven
Woodbury 1673 ---- Litchfield
Woodstock 1690 ---- Windham

 

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