Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Windsor is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States, and was the first English settlement in the state. It lies on the northern border of Connecticut's capital, Hartford. The town is part of the Capitol Planning Region. The population of Windsor was 29,492 at the 2020 census.
Windsor Meadows State Park is a public recreation area on the west side of the Connecticut River in the town of Windsor, Connecticut. The state park occupies three largely undeveloped sections measuring 48, 19, and 88 acres (from north to south) located between railroad tracks and the river. Park activities include picnicking, fishing, boating ...
August 25, 1987. The Palisado Avenue Historic District encompasses a predominantly residential streetscape in northeastern Windsor, Connecticut. Extending along Palisado Avenue ( Connecticut Route 159) between the Farmington River and Bissell Ferry Road, it is a basically 18th-century street view, populated mainly with houses from the 18th to ...
The 41 properties and districts located in the town of Windsor include one National Historic Landmark and are listed below. The properties and districts in the remaining parts of the county are listed separately. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted August 23, 2024.[2]
Northwest Park (Windsor) Coordinates: 41.905°N 72.703°W. Nature Center. Northwest Park is a municipally owned park in the town of Windsor, Connecticut, which includes walking trails, soccer fields and a nature center. Located in the Poquonock section of Windsor along the Farmington River, the park covers 473 acres (1.91 km 2) of forests ...
Website. ct-trolley.org. The Connecticut Trolley Museum, also known as the Warehouse Point Trolley Museum, [1][2] is the oldest incorporated museum dedicated to electric railroading in the United States. [3] Founded in October 1940, the museum is located in East Windsor, Connecticut and is open to the public April through December.
Russell Henry Chittenden House. May 15, 1975. (#75001944) New Haven. 41°18′48″N 72°55′23″W / 41.3134°N 72.9231°W / 41.3134; -72.9231 (Russell Henry Chittenden House) New Haven. Home of Russell Henry Chittenden, the "father of American biochemistry".
April 11, 1986. The Windsor Farms Historic District encompasses a large historically agricultural area and the historic town center of South Windsor, Connecticut. Its built environment extends mainly along Main Street, between Interstate 291 in the south and Strong Road in the north, with a diversity of architecture spanning three centuries.