National Register of Historic Places listings in Fairfield County, Connecticut
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.[1]
There are 285 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including 9 National Historic Landmarks. Of these, 55 are located in the city of Bridgeport and covered separately in National Register of Historic Places listings in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Thirty-four are covered in National Register of Historic Places listings in Greenwich, Connecticut and another 34 are covered in National Register of Historic Places listings in Stamford, Connecticut. There are 164 properties and districts which are entirely outside those three cities or which span outside, and which are covered here in this list (Merritt Parkway is listed here as well as in the Greenwich and Stamford lists).
All of the National Historic Landmarks, are listed here or in the Greenwich and Stamford subareas. Forty-six of these here or in Greenwich or Stamford are historic districts.[2]
Architecture addressed in the NRHP listings is quite varied. Of special interest is an unusual concentration of modern or International Style houses in New Canaan, Connecticut, designed by the "Harvard Five" architects, including: Landis Gores House, the Richard and Geraldine Hodgson House, the Philip Johnson Glass House, and the Noyes House.
There are numerous bridges included in the listings. Seven are moveable bridges, including the Saugatuck River Bridge from 1884, the oldest moveable bridge in the state, and the Washington Bridge which carries U.S. 1 into New Haven County. Five are moveable railway bridges: the Mianus River Railroad Bridge, the Norwalk River Railroad Bridge, the Saugatuck River Railroad Bridge, the Pequonnock River Railroad Bridge (in Bridgeport), and the Housatonic River Railroad Bridge. One bridge is part of a dam and hydroelectric plant complex, the Stevenson Dam Hydroelectric Plant. Five bridges bring roads across shorter crossings: the Perry Avenue Bridge in Norwalk, the Main Street Bridge and the Turn-of-River Bridge in Stamford, the Riverside Avenue Bridge in Greenwich, and the picturesque Pine Creek Park Bridge in Fairfield. Also there are numerous bridges that are included in the Merritt Parkway listing, out of 69 original bridges of the parkway. (This includes both bridges carrying the Merritt Parkway, and bridges crossing it). Other bridges are contributing structures within historic districts, such as the Pulaski Street Bridge within the South End Historic District of Stamford,[3] and a concrete arch bridge from 1941 in the Aspetuck Historic District.[4]:12
There are nine NRHP-listed lighthouses (including two in Bridgeport).
Seven sites are listed partially or wholly for their association with the marches of French general Rochambeau's troops through the county, on their way to and from victory at Yorktown, Virginia in 1781. The sites still evoke the character of the well-mapped route of the army in 1781 and 1782.
- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted December 16, 2016.[5]
Current listings
[6] | Name on the Register[7] | Image | Date listed[8] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Allen House | (#10000492) |
4 Burritt's Landing North 41°06′57″N 73°22′32″W / 41.115833°N 73.375556°W |
Westport | Built in 1958, the house is the only known example in Westport of work by Chicago architect Roy Binkley, Jr..[9] | |
2 | Aspetuck Historic District | (#91000437) |
Roughly, Redding Rd. from its junction with Old Redding Rd. to Welles Hill Rd. and Old Redding Rd. north past the Aspetuck River 41°13′24″N 73°19′24″W / 41.223333°N 73.323333°W |
Easton and Weston | A historic district that "embodies the distinctive architectural and cultural-landscape characteristics of a farming community from the late colonial and early national periods.... The widely spaced distribution of houses, most accompanied by a barn and all ith ample yards that once served as pasture, field or garden recalls the appearance of an inland Connecticut farming community when agriculture was the basis of the local economy."[4] | |
3 | Caleb Baldwin Tavern | (#02000869) |
32 Main St. 41°24′46″N 73°18′31″W / 41.412778°N 73.308611°W |
Newtown | Built c. 1763, a two-and-a-half-story house which hosted officers of French commander Rochambeau's troops in 1781 en route to the Siege of Yorktown, Virginia. It also an example of traditional 18th-century New England architecture, and retains some details from that time period. The house is located within the Newtown Borough Historic District.[10] | |
4 | Ball and Roller Bearing Company | (#89001087) |
20-22 Maple Ave. 41°23′54″N 73°27′08″W / 41.398333°N 73.452222°W |
Danbury | Also known as American Family Crafts or Joseph McNutt House and Machine Shop, this is a building from 1917, plus a company office building that was the Queen Anne-style former home of Joseph Nutt.[11] | |
5 | Aaron Barlow House | Upload image | (#82004347) |
Umpawaug Rd. at Station Rd. 41°19′14″N 73°25′33″W / 41.320556°N 73.425833°W |
Redding | Built in 1730; important as a surviving example embodying "the characteristics of early Georgian style domestic architecture that became prominent in the Colonies beginning in the mid-18th century" and also for its association with Col. Aaron Barlow, Joel Barlow, and General Israel Putnam. It is located in the West Redding section of the town.[12] |
6 | Daniel and Esther Bartlett House | (#93000290) |
43 Lonetown Rd. 41°18′40″N 73°23′09″W / 41.311111°N 73.385833°W |
Redding | Federal style house built in 1796, well-preserved, somewhat unusual for its shingle siding.[13] | |
7 | Daniel Basset House | Upload image | (#02000870) |
1024 Monroe Turnpike 41°20′58″N 73°11′53″W / 41.349444°N 73.198056°W |
Monroe | Colonial house that was, on June 30, 1781, site of a ball given for a mounted detachment of Rochambeau's army, which camped nearby.[14] |
8 | Benedict House and Shop | (#98001440) |
57 Rockwell Rd. 41°16′19″N 73°29′32″W / 41.271944°N 73.492222°W |
Ridgefield | House was built in 1740 with an adjoining cobbler's shop, significant as a rare surviving example of a colonial artisan's workshop. Sympathetic renovated by architect Cass Gilbert and other care has preserved the property in good condition.[15] | |
9 | Beth Israel Synagogue | |
(#91001684) |
31 Concord St., in South Norwalk 41°05′34″N 73°25′12″W / 41.092778°N 73.42°W |
Norwalk | Former synagogue that is unusual for its Moorish onion domes.[16]:8–9 |
10 | Birdcraft Sanctuary | (#82004371) |
314 Unquowa Rd. 41°08′43″N 73°15′31″W / 41.145278°N 73.258611°W |
Fairfield | Oldest bird sanctuary in the U.S., where Mabel Osgood Wright originated "birdscaping". | |
11 | Nathan B. Booth House | (#92000317) |
6080 Main St. 41°14′21″N 73°06′36″W / 41.239167°N 73.11°W |
Stratford | A post-and-beam construction farmhouse built in 1843. It is of vernacular architecture and illustrates a transition between Greek Revival architecture and Federal architecture styles. The house is located in the Putney section of town.[17] | |
12 | Boothe Homestead | |
(#85000951) |
Main St. 41°13′34″N 73°06′35″W / 41.226111°N 73.109722°W |
Stratford | Historic homestead and museum of Americana. |
13 | Boston Post Road Historic District | |
(#82000997) |
567-728 Boston Post Rd., 1-25 Brookside Rd., and 45-70 Old Kingshighway N. 41°04′51″N 73°27′58″W / 41.080833°N 73.466111°W |
Darien | Historic district that includes a row of 12 nineteenth-century houses on Boston Post Road, and a town hall and a Greek Revival church.[18] |
14 | Bradley Edge Tool Company Historic District | (#95001347) |
Roughly, Lyons Plains Rd. north and south of its junction with White Birch Rd. 41°11′52″N 73°21′13″W / 41.197778°N 73.353611°W |
Weston | District of 30 contributing buildings and the site of the Bradley Edge Tool Company complex, which burned in 1911. Its Miles Bradley House is an "exceptional example of Italianate architecture", with unusual "double bullseye windows".[19] | |
15 | Bradley-Hubbell House | (#03000235) |
535 Black Rock Turnpike 41°14′41″N 73°19′15″W / 41.244722°N 73.320833°W |
Easton | ||
16 | Bradley-Wheeler House | |
(#84000791) |
25 Avery Pl. 41°08′39″N 73°21′41″W / 41.144167°N 73.361389°W |
Westport | Headquarters and museum of the Westport Historical Society |
17 | Branchville Railroad Tenement | (#82004346) |
Old Main Highway 41°15′56″N 73°26′23″W / 41.265556°N 73.439722°W |
Ridgefield | ||
18 | Marcel Breuer House II | (#10000572) |
122 Sunset Hill Rd. 41°09′21″N 73°30′25″W / 41.155833°N 73.506944°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
19 | Bronson Windmill | |
(#71000896) |
3015 Bronson Rd. 41°10′21″N 73°17′32″W / 41.1725°N 73.292222°W |
Fairfield | |
20 | Brookfield Center Historic District | |
(#91000992) |
Long Meadow Hill Rd. 41°28′04″N 73°23′17″W / 41.467778°N 73.388056°W |
Brookfield | |
21 | Hugh Cain Fulling Mill and Elias Glover Woolen Mill Archeological Site | |
(#85002440) |
Address Restricted |
Ridgefield | |
22 | Camps Nos. 10 and 41 of Rochambeau's Army | (#02000424) |
Address Restricted 41°24′53″N 73°18′08″W / 41.414604°N 73.302317°W |
Newtown | Marker on US 6 east of Newtown center. | |
23 | Cannondale Historic District | |
(#92001531) |
Roughly bounded by Cannon, Danbury and Seeley Rds. 41°13′21″N 73°25′34″W / 41.2225°N 73.426111°W |
Wilton | A 202-acre (82 ha) historic district that is significant for coherently embodying "the distinctive architectural and cultural-landscape characteristics of a small commercial center as well as an agricultural community from the early national period through the early 20th century....[including embodying] virtually the full array of human activity in this region—farming, residential, religious, educational, community groups (the Grange), small-scale manufacturing, transportation, and even government (the building that housed the first Cannondale Post Office)."[20] |
24 | Arthur and Lyn Chivvis House | (#10000564) |
2 Wydendown Rd. 41°10′56″N 73°30′27″W / 41.182222°N 73.5075°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
25 | Christ Episcopal Church and Tashua Burial Ground | (#01000401) |
5170 Madison Ave. 41°17′12″N 73°15′38″W / 41.286667°N 73.260556°W |
Trumbull | ||
26 | Commodore Hull School | (#83001251) |
130 Oak Ave. 41°19′05″N 73°06′03″W / 41.318056°N 73.100833°W |
Shelton | A former elementary school that was built in 1907, believed to be the only elementary school in Connecticut constructed of terra cotta blocks and reinforced concrete construction, and significant as an example of the movement towards completely fireproof building, in general stirred by the 1871 great fire of Chicago. Its design is "bold, colorful, and striking".[21] | |
27 | Compo-Owenoke Historic District | |
(#91000393) |
Roughly bounded by Gray's Creek, Compo Rd. S., and Long Island Sound 41°06′22″N 73°21′18″W / 41.106111°N 73.355°W |
Westport | |
28 | Cosier-Murphy House | (#91000994) |
67 CT 39 41°28′11″N 73°28′27″W / 41.469722°N 73.474167°W |
New Fairfield | ||
29 | Nathaniel Curtis House | (#82004342) |
600 Housatonic Ave. 41°11′48″N 73°07′12″W / 41.196667°N 73.12°W |
Stratford | ||
30 | Hanford Davenport House | (#89000948) |
353 Oenoke Ridge 41°09′35″N 73°30′13″W / 41.159722°N 73.503611°W |
New Canaan | ||
31 | Durisol House | (#10000566) |
43 Marshall Ridge Rd. 41°08′24″N 73°30′01″W / 41.14°N 73.500278°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
32 | Rev. John Ely House | Upload image | (#01000400) |
54 Milwaukee Ave. 41°22′30″N 73°24′13″W / 41.375°N 73.403611°W |
Bethel | |
33 | Fairfield Historic District | (#71000897) |
Old Post Rd. from Post Rd. to Turney Rd. 41°08′38″N 73°14′59″W / 41.143889°N 73.249722°W |
Fairfield | ||
34 | Fairfield Railroad Stations | (#89000926) |
Carter Henry Dr. 41°08′34″N 73°15′29″W / 41.142778°N 73.258056°W |
Fairfield | ||
35 | Five Mile River Landing Historic District | |
(#08001189) |
Rowayton Ave. to Jo's Barn Way 41°04′13″N 73°26′35″W / 41.070269°N 73.443006°W |
Norwalk | |
36 | Elinor and Sherman Ford House | (#10000574) |
55 Talmadge Hill Rd. 41°06′51″N 73°29′29″W / 41.114167°N 73.491389°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
37 | Gallaher Estate | (#11000376) |
300 Grumman Ave. 41°09′50″N 73°24′17″W / 41.163889°N 73.404722°W |
Norwalk | ||
38 | Georgetown Historic District | (#87000343) |
Roughly bounded by US 7, Portland Ave., CT 107, and the Norwalk River 41°15′19″N 73°25′53″W / 41.255278°N 73.431389°W |
Redding and Wilton | Historic district consisting of the former Gilbert and Bennett manufacturing plant, institutional housing built for the plant workers, and other private homes.[22] | |
39 | Glover House | (#82004369) |
50 Main St. 41°24′55″N 73°18′36″W / 41.415278°N 73.31°W |
Newtown | ||
40 | John Glover House | Upload image | (#01000882) |
53 Echo Valley Rd. 41°26′49″N 73°18′34″W / 41.446944°N 73.309444°W |
Newtown | |
41 | Godillot Place | (#77001396) |
60, 65 Jesup Rd. 41°08′25″N 73°21′35″W / 41.140278°N 73.359722°W |
Westport | A Stick style house built in 1879 , an associated cottage, and a carriage barn.[23] | |
42 | Landis Gores House | (#02000189) |
192 Cross Ridge Rd. 41°11′54″N 73°29′48″W / 41.198333°N 73.496667°W |
New Canaan | An austere International Style built in 1948, home of Harvard Five architect Landis Gores[24] | |
43 | Green Farms School | (#91000391) |
Junction of Morningside Dr. S. and Boston Post Rd., In the Greens Farms 41°08′13″N 73°19′31″W / 41.136944°N 73.325278°W |
Westport | Tudor Revival style school built in 1925, designed by architect Charles Cutler[25] | |
44 | Greenfield Hill Grange #133 | (#07001440) |
1873 Hillside Rd. 41°11′03″N 73°17′38″W / 41.184167°N 73.293889°W |
Fairfield | ||
45 | Greenfield Hill Historic District | (#71000899) |
Roughly bounded by Meeting House Ln., Hillside Rd., Verna Hil Rd. and Bronson Rd. 41°10′25″N 73°17′28″W / 41.173611°N 73.291111°W |
Fairfield | ||
46 | Greens Ledge Lighthouse | (#89001468) |
Long Island Sound, south of the Five Mile River and west of Norwalk Harbor 41°02′29″N 73°26′40″W / 41.041389°N 73.444444°W |
Norwalk | ||
47 | Greenwood Avenue Historic District | (#99001568) |
Roughly along Greenwood Ave., P.T. Barnum Sq., Depot Pl., and South St. 41°22′01″N 73°24′48″W / 41.366944°N 73.413333°W |
Bethel | ||
48 | Isaac Davis and Marion Dalton Hall House | (#10000573) |
25 Lambert Rd. 41°09′35″N 73°30′10″W / 41.159722°N 73.502778°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
49 | Hampton Inn | (#89001106) |
179 Oenoke Ridge 41°09′16″N 73°30′00″W / 41.154444°N 73.5°W |
New Canaan | ||
50 | Hattertown Historic District | |
(#96001461) |
Roughly, junction of Aunt Park Ln., Castle Meadow, Hattertown, and Hi Barlow Rds. 41°20′24″N 73°18′31″W / 41.34°N 73.308611°W |
Newtown | |
51 | Haviland and Elizabeth Streets-Hanford Place Historic District | |
(#88000664) |
Roughly bounded by Haviland, Day Sts., Hanford Pl., and S. Main St. 41°05′49″N 73°25′07″W / 41.096944°N 73.418611°W |
Norwalk | Cohesive group of 36 late 19th- and early 20th-century houses, exemplifying Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, Italianate, Second Empire architectural styles and vernacular interpretations thereof. The district is located in South Norwalk.[26] |
52 | Thomas Hawley House | (#80004059) |
514 Purdy Hill Rd. 41°18′20″N 73°15′10″W / 41.305556°N 73.252778°W |
Monroe | ||
53 | Hearthstone Castle | (#87002184) |
18 Brushy Hill Rd. 41°22′41″N 73°26′55″W / 41.37808°N 73.44854°W |
Danbury | ||
54 | Richard and Geraldine Hodgson House | (#04001549) |
881 Ponus Ridge Rd. 41°08′42″N 73°31′36″W / 41.145°N 73.526667°W |
New Canaan | ||
55 | Housatonic River Railroad Bridge | |
(#87000842) |
Amtrak right-of-way at the Housatonic River 41°12′19″N 73°06′37″W / 41.205278°N 73.110278°W |
Stratford and Milford | |
56 | Huntington Center Historic District | |
(#00000296) |
Roughly along Church and Huntington Sts., from Ripton Rd. to the Farmill River 41°17′29″N 73°08′39″W / 41.291389°N 73.144167°W |
Shelton | |
57 | Hurlbutt Street School | (#96000774) |
157 Hurlbutt St. 41°12′03″N 73°24′34″W / 41.200833°N 73.409444°W |
Wilton | ||
58 | Thomas Hyatt House | (#84000793) |
11 Barlow Mountain Rd. 41°19′10″N 73°30′41″W / 41.319444°N 73.511389°W |
Ridgefield | ||
59 | Charles Ives House | (#76001968) |
7 Mountainville Ave. 41°22′54″N 73°26′43″W / 41.381667°N 73.445278°W |
Danbury | 1780 house of Ives family, moved twice, was birthplace of composer Charles Ives in 1874. | |
60 | Philip Johnson Glass House | |
(#97000341) |
798-856 Ponus Ridge Rd. 41°08′31″N 73°31′47″W / 41.141944°N 73.529722°W |
New Canaan | Modern masterpiece of glass and steel by architect Philip Johnson. |
61 | Capt. David Judson House | (#73001946) |
967 Academy Hill 41°11′16″N 73°07′47″W / 41.187778°N 73.129722°W |
Stratford | Georgian home built in 1723, stone fireplace and foundation from 1639. | |
62 | Lewis June House | (#84000795) |
478 N. Salem Rd. 41°19′00″N 73°30′47″W / 41.316667°N 73.513056°W |
Ridgefield | ||
63 | Kaatz Icehouse | (#77001395) |
North of Trumbull at 255 Whitney Ave. 41°17′00″N 73°13′03″W / 41.283333°N 73.2175°W |
Trumbull | A former warehouse-type building on Kaatz Pond that operated as an icehouse from 1908 to 1955.[27] It was demolished in 1978. | |
64 | Keeler Tavern | (#82004345) |
132 Main St. 41°16′22″N 73°29′50″W / 41.272778°N 73.497222°W |
Ridgefield | ||
65 | Enos Kellogg House | (#12000356) |
210 Ponus Ave. Ext. 41°07′56″N 73°27′26″W / 41.13227°N 73.457104°W |
Norwalk | ||
66 | Kettle Creek Historic District | |
(#95001348) |
Roughly, Weston and Old Weston Rds. north of Broad St. 41°11′12″N 73°22′15″W / 41.186667°N 73.370833°W |
Weston | |
67 | Kings Highway North Historic District | |
(#98000884) |
Roughly along Kings Highway, N., from Wilton Rd. to Woodside Ave. 41°08′26″N 73°22′06″W / 41.140556°N 73.368333°W |
Westport | |
68 | David Lambert House | (#92000908) |
150 Danbury Rd. 41°10′50″N 73°25′18″W / 41.180556°N 73.421667°W |
Wilton | ||
69 | Nathan B. Lattin Farm | Upload image | (#90000760) |
22 Walker Hill Rd. 41°22′11″N 73°12′37″W / 41.369722°N 73.210278°W |
Newtown | |
70 | John Black Lee House I | (#10000568) |
729 Laurel Rd. 41°11′25″N 73°30′01″W / 41.190278°N 73.500278°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
71 | LeRoy Shirt Company Factory | (#12000357) |
11 Chestnut St. 41°05′45″N 73°25′15″W / 41.095702°N 73.420733°W |
Norwalk | ||
72 | Isaac Lewis House | (#91001739) |
50 Paradise Green Pl. 41°12′33″N 73°07′54″W / 41.209167°N 73.131667°W |
Stratford | ||
73 | Lockwood-Mathews Mansion | |
(#70000836) |
295 West Ave., in Central Norwalk 41°06′31″N 73°25′05″W / 41.108611°N 73.418056°W |
Norwalk | Second Empire style mansion built in 1864. |
74 | Locust Avenue School | (#85001162) |
26 Locust Ave. 41°24′18″N 73°26′09″W / 41.405°N 73.435833°W |
Danbury | 1896 school designed by architect Warren Briggs and featured in his Modern American School Buildings. One of the last 19th century schools still used in the state, and one of the last "lab schools", used for advanced teacher training. Today Danbury's alternative high school.[28]:2,13 | |
75 | Joseph Loth Company Building | |
(#84000804) |
25 Grand St. 41°07′29″N 73°25′26″W / 41.124722°N 73.423889°W |
Norwalk | |
76 | Phineas Chapman Lounsbury House | (#75001919) |
316 Main St. 41°16′46″N 73°29′52″W / 41.279444°N 73.497778°W |
Ridgefield | ||
77 | Main Street Historic District | (#83003508) |
Boughton, Elm, Ives, Keeler, Main, West and White Sts. 41°23′39″N 73°27′06″W / 41.394167°N 73.451667°W |
Danbury | ||
78 | David Mallett, Jr., House | (#86000266) |
420 Tashua Rd. 41°17′16″N 73°15′37″W / 41.287778°N 73.260278°W |
Trumbull | Built in 1760, an exceptionally well-preserved center-chimney colonial farmhouse, and has significance for its 150 year history of association with the Mallett family. The house is located in the Tashua District of Trumbull.[29] | |
79 | March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Reservoir Road | (#02001679) |
Junction of Reservoir Rd and Mt. Pleasant Rd. S. 41°24′48″N 73°19′23″W / 41.413333°N 73.323056°W |
Newtown | ||
80 | March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Ridgebury Road | (#03000313) |
Ridgebury Road, from intersection with Old Stagecoach S 41°20′36″N 73°31′47″W / 41.343333°N 73.529722°W |
Ridgefield | ||
81 | Marvin Tavern | (#84000806) |
405 Danbury Rd. 41°12′42″N 73°25′58″W / 41.211667°N 73.432778°W |
Wilton | ||
82 | Stephen Tyng Mather House | |
(#66000877) |
19 Stephen Mather Rd. 41°06′47″N 73°28′31″W / 41.113056°N 73.475278°W |
Darien | Home of Stephen Tyng Mather, champion for the formation of the National Park Service and its first director. |
83 | Meadowlands | (#87001408) |
274 Middlesex Rd. 41°04′43″N 73°29′12″W / 41.078611°N 73.486667°W |
Darien | ||
84 | Meeker's Hardware | (#83001253) |
86-90 White St. 41°23′50″N 73°27′04″W / 41.397222°N 73.451111°W |
Danbury | ||
85 | Merritt Parkway | |
(#91000410) |
CT 15 and right-of-way between the New York state line and the Housatonic River bridge 41°05′05″N 73°35′35″W / 41.084722°N 73.593056°W |
Greenwich, Stamford, New Canaan, Norwalk, Westport, Fairfield, Trumbull, Stratford | |
86 | Mill Cove Historic District | |
(#91000392) |
Between Compo Mill Cove and Long Island Sound 41°06′47″N 73°20′32″W / 41.113056°N 73.342222°W |
Westport | |
87 | Beaven W. Mills House | (#10000565) |
31 Chichester Rd. 41°08′52″N 73°31′11″W / 41.147778°N 73.519722°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
88 | Willis N. Mills House | (#10000567) |
1380 Ponus Ridge Rd. 41°09′31″N 73°32′02″W / 41.158611°N 73.533889°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
89 | Monroe Center Historic District | (#77001392) |
CT 110 and CT 111 41°19′57″N 73°12′26″W / 41.3325°N 73.207222°W |
Monroe | ||
90 | Charles and Peggy Murphy House | (#10000563) |
320 N Wilton Rd. 41°11′31″N 73°30′02″W / 41.191944°N 73.500556°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
91 | National Hall Historic District | |
(#84000812) |
Riverside Ave., Wilton and Post Rds.; in downtown Westport, on the west side of (and abutting) the Saugatuck River and north side of Post Road East 41°08′25″N 73°21′54″W / 41.140278°N 73.365°W |
Westport | |
92 | New Haven Railroad Danbury Turntable | Upload image | (#05001048) |
120 White St. 41°23′49″N 73°26′47″W / 41.396944°N 73.446389°W |
Danbury | A railroad turntable in the yard of the Danbury Railway Museum. |
93 | New York Belting and Packing Co. | (#82004367) |
45-71 and 79-89 Glen Rd. 41°25′52″N 73°16′42″W / 41.431111°N 73.278333°W |
Newtown | ||
94 | Newtown Borough Historic District | |
(#96001458) |
Roughly, Main St. from Hawley Rd. to Academy Ln. 41°24′43″N 73°18′32″W / 41.411944°N 73.308889°W |
Newtown | A 100-acre (40 ha)historic district including core of the original borough of Newtown. Includes 225 contributing buildings, a locally important flagpole, and the "Ram's Pasture", a meadow that was common land.[30] |
95 | Nichols Farms Historic District | (#87001392) |
Center Rd., 1681-1944 Huntington Turnpike, 5-34 Priscilla Pl., and 30-172 Shelton Rd. 41°14′33″N 73°09′53″W / 41.2425°N 73.164722°W |
Trumbull | Located atop Mischa Hill along the Farm Highway in Nichols, the district includes many good examples from a wide range of architectural styles from the 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The buildings stand together in their original village setting. Most properties include a period barn or carriage house and all have ample yards that once served as pasture, field or garden, and recalls the appearance of an inland Connecticut farming community when agriculture was the basis of the local economy. The architecture also reflects the influences of three stages of economic development, the original agricultural settlement, the 19th century industrial activity, and the 20th century function as a suburb of a large city. | |
96 | Nichols Satinet Mill Site | |
(#96000129) |
Address Restricted |
Newtown | |
97 | Norfield Historic District | (#91000955) |
Roughly, junction of Weston and Norfield Rds. northeast to Hedgerow Common 41°12′04″N 73°22′44″W / 41.201111°N 73.378889°W |
Weston | ||
98 | Norwalk City Hall | (#95000282) |
41 N. Main St., in South Norwalk 41°06′00″N 73°25′08″W / 41.1°N 73.418889°W |
Norwalk | ||
99 | Norwalk Green Historic District | (#87002122) |
Roughly bounded by Smith & Park Sts., Boston Post Rd., East, & Morgan Aves. 41°07′07″N 73°24′31″W / 41.118611°N 73.408611°W |
Norwalk | ||
100 | Noyes House | (#08000948) |
Country Club Road[31] 41°10′04″N 73°30′15″W / 41.1677°N 73.5041°W |
New Canaan | International Style house designed by Eliot Noyes. | |
101 | Norwalk Island Lighthouse | (#88003222) |
Sheffield Island 41°02′55″N 73°25′12″W / 41.048611°N 73.42°W |
Norwalk | On Sheffield Island, one of the Norwalk Islands | |
102 | Norwalk River Railroad Bridge | |
(#87000844) |
Amtrak/New Haven Line right-of-way at the Norwalk River, in South Norwalk 41°06′02″N 73°24′57″W / 41.100556°N 73.415833°W |
Norwalk | |
103 | Octagon House (Danbury) | (#73001945) |
21 Spring St. 41°23′42″N 73°27′34″W / 41.395°N 73.459444°W |
Danbury | An octagon house built in 1852 | |
104 | David Ogden House | (#79002651) |
1520 Bronson Rd. 41°09′33″N 73°16′37″W / 41.159167°N 73.276944°W |
Fairfield | ||
105 | Old Mine Park Archeological Site | (#90001807) |
Old Mine Park 41°17′17″N 73°13′34″W / 41.288°N 73.226°W |
Trumbull | ||
106 | John Osborne House | (#87000118) |
909 King's Highway, W. 41°08′15″N 73°17′43″W / 41.137411°N 73.295331°W |
Fairfield | ||
107 | Oysterman's Row | |
(#10000927) |
Roughly bounded by Pond St., Rowayton Ave., Cook St., and Roton Ave. 41°03′47″N 73°26′39″W / 41.063056°N 73.444167°W |
Norwalk | |
108 | Peck Ledge Lighthouse | (#89001472) |
Long Island Sound, southeast of Norwalk Harbor and northeast of Goose Island 41°04′38″N 73°22′13″W / 41.077222°N 73.370278°W |
Norwalk | ||
109 | Maxwell E. Perkins House | (#04000415) |
63 Park St. 41°08′49″N 73°29′45″W / 41.146944°N 73.495833°W |
New Canaan | House of Maxwell E. Perkins, the editor of Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Thomas Wolfe. | |
110 | Perry Avenue Bridge | |
(#06000951) |
Perry Avenue over Silvermine River 41°09′04″N 73°26′45″W / 41.151111°N 73.445833°W |
Norwalk | |
111 | Pine Creek Park Bridge | (#92000263) |
North of Old Dam Rd., over Pine Creek 41°07′31″N 73°15′48″W / 41.125278°N 73.263333°W |
Fairfield | ||
112 | Plumb Memorial Library | (#78002845) |
47 Wooster St. 41°19′09″N 73°05′56″W / 41.319167°N 73.098889°W |
Shelton | ||
113 | Pond-Weed House | (#78002842) |
2591 Post Rd. 41°03′35″N 73°30′11″W / 41.059722°N 73.503056°W |
Darien | ||
114 | Verneur Pratt Historic District | (#11000434) |
114-116 Perry Avenue[32][33] 41°08′40″N 73°26′10″W / 41.1444°N 73.4362°W |
Norwalk | Two adjacent properties associated with inventor Verneur Edmund Pratt, including the Keeler-Pratt House, and an adjacent converted carriage barn used by Pratt as a laboratory. | |
115 | Putnam Memorial State Park | (#70000683) |
Junction of Routes 58 (Black Rock Tpke.) and 107 (Park Rd.) 41°20′23″N 73°23′01″W / 41.339722°N 73.383611°W |
Redding | ||
116 | Redding Center Historic District | (#92001253) |
Roughly, 4-25B Cross Highway, including Read Cemetery, 61-100 Hill Rd., 0-15 Lonetown Rd. and 118 Sanfordtown Rd. 41°18′14″N 73°22′55″W / 41.303889°N 73.381944°W |
Redding | ||
117 | Frederic Remington House | (#66000880) |
36 Oak Knoll Road. 41°17′17″N 73°31′01″W / 41.288056°N 73.516944°W |
Ridgefield | Home of Frederic Remington, a painter and sculptor famous for his depictions of the American West. | |
118 | Restmore | (#09000467) |
375 Warner Hill Road 41°09′20″N 73°16′47″W / 41.155556°N 73.279861°W |
Fairfield | ||
119 | John Rider House | (#77001388) |
43 Main St. 41°23′18″N 73°26′48″W / 41.388333°N 73.446667°W |
Danbury | ||
120 | Ridgebury Congregational Church | (#84000815) |
Ridgebury Rd. and George Washington Highway 41°21′38″N 73°31′32″W / 41.360556°N 73.525556°W |
Ridgefield | ||
121 | Ridgefield Center Historic District | (#84000817) |
Roughly bounded by Pound St., Fairview Ave., Prospect, Ridge, and Whipstick Rds. 41°16′35″N 73°29′52″W / 41.276389°N 73.497778°W |
Ridgefield | ||
122 | P. Robinson Fur Cutting Company | (#82000998) |
Oil Mill Rd. 41°23′26″N 73°27′51″W / 41.390556°N 73.464167°W |
Danbury | ||
123 | Rock Ledge | (#77001394) |
South of Norwalk at 33, 40-42 Highland Ave. 41°03′57″N 73°26′11″W / 41.065833°N 73.436389°W |
Norwalk | A mansion that belonged to a U.S. Steel executive. | |
124 | John Rogers Studio | |
(#66000881) |
33 Oenoke Ridge 41°09′01″N 73°29′53″W / 41.150278°N 73.498056°W |
New Canaan | Studio of nineteenth-century American sculptor John Rogers |
125 | Sanford-Curtis-Thurber House | (#07000557) |
71 Riverside Rd. 41°25′31″N 73°15′49″W / 41.425278°N 73.263611°W |
Newtown | ||
126 | Saugatuck River Bridge | |
(#87000126) |
CT 136 41°07′22″N 73°22′10″W / 41.122778°N 73.369444°W |
Westport | From 1884, a swinging bridge |
127 | Saugatuck River Railroad Bridge | |
(#87000846) |
Amtrak right-of-way at the Saugatuck River 41°07′10″N 73°22′08″W / 41.119444°N 73.368889°W |
Westport | |
128 | Seth Seelye House | (#77001386) |
189 Greenwood Ave. 41°22′16″N 73°24′51″W / 41.371111°N 73.414167°W |
Bethel | ||
129 | Shambaugh House | (#99000432) |
12 Old Hill Rd. 41°08′38″N 73°22′12″W / 41.143889°N 73.37°W |
Westport | ||
130 | Sherman Historic District | (#91000956) |
Roughly the junction of Old Greenswood Rd. and CT 37 Center NE. past the junction of CT 37 E. and CT 39 N., and Sawmill Rd. 41°34′44″N 73°29′51″W / 41.578889°N 73.4975°W |
Sherman | ||
131 | Silvermine Center Historic District | (#07001441) |
Roughly centered on Silvermine and Perry Avenues 41°09′03″N 73°26′48″W / 41.150833°N 73.446667°W |
Norwalk | ||
132 | Sloan-Raymond-Fitch House | (#82004344) |
224 Danbury Rd. 41°11′18″N 73°25′32″W / 41.188333°N 73.425556°W |
Wilton | ||
133 | South Main and Washington Streets Historic District | (#77001393) |
68-139 Washington St. and 2-24 S. Main St.; also 11-15 through 54-60 S. Main St.; also roughly along N. Main St. from Washington St. to Ann St. 41°05′55″N 73°24′22″W / 41.098611°N 73.406111°W |
Norwalk | Second and third sets of boundaries represent boundary increases of November 8, 1985 and April 15, 1999 respectively | |
134 | Southport Historic District | (#71000898) |
Roughly bounded by Southport Harbor, RR, Old South Rd. and Rose Hill Rd. 41°07′55″N 73°17′04″W / 41.131944°N 73.284444°W |
Fairfield | District of historic, tony homes | |
135 | Southport Railroad Stations | |
(#89000927) |
96 Station St. and 100 Center St. 41°08′11″N 73°17′10″W / 41.136389°N 73.286111°W |
Fairfield | Working railroad station (westbound building) in the Southport section of Fairfield. Repaired in 2009 after a 2008 fire. Eastbound building (pictured) is no longer a working station. |
136 | Sterling Homestead | (#76001973) |
2225 Main St. 41°11′32″N 73°07′51″W / 41.192222°N 73.130833°W |
Stratford | ||
137 | Stevenson Dam Hydroelectric Plant | (#00001073) |
CT 34 41°23′03″N 73°10′16″W / 41.384167°N 73.171111°W |
Monroe and Oxford (in New Haven County) | Dam, bridge, and powerhouse built in 1917 on the Housatonic River.[34] | |
138 | Stratford Center Historic District | |
(#83003511) |
Roughly bounded by E. Broadway, Ferry Blvd., Housatonic River, Connecticut Tnpke, Birdseye and Main Sts. 41°11′10″N 73°07′49″W / 41.186111°N 73.130278°W |
Stratford | |
139 | Stratford Point Lighthouse | (#89001476) |
Stratford Point at mouth of Housatonic River 41°09′07″N 73°06′13″W / 41.151944°N 73.103611°W |
Stratford | ||
140 | Stratford Shoal Lighthouse | |
(#89001477) |
Middleground Shoal, Long Island Sound 41°03′34″N 73°06′06″W / 41.059444°N 73.101667°W |
Stratford | Lighthouse on a shoal in the middle of Long Island Sound, sometimes disputed to be located in New York State (in Nassau County, Long Island?), but probably 1,000 feet within Connecticut. |
141 | Sturges-Wright House | (#15000111) |
93 Cross Hwy. 41°09′42″N 73°20′36″W / 41.1618°N 73.3432°W |
Westport | ||
142 | Jonathan Sturges House | (#84000247) |
449 Mill Plain Rd. 41°08′56″N 73°16′06″W / 41.148889°N 73.268333°W |
Fairfield | 1840 Gothic Revival cottage | |
143 | James Swallen House | (#10000570) |
257 Wahackme Rd. 41°08′51″N 73°31′05″W / 41.1475°N 73.518056°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
144 | System House | (#10000571) |
128 Chichester Rd. 41°09′06″N 73°31′14″W / 41.151667°N 73.520556°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
145 | Ida Tarbell House | |
(#93001602) |
320 Valley Rd. 41°18′25″N 73°19′56″W / 41.306944°N 73.332222°W |
Easton | Home of the muckraking journalist and author of The History of the Standard Oil Company |
146 | Tarrywile | (#87001409) |
Southern Blvd. & Mountain Rd. 41°22′46″N 73°27′10″W / 41.379444°N 73.452778°W |
Danbury | A Shingle Style house, with gatehouse, in Danbury, Connecticut that was built in 1895.[35] | |
147 | Corinne and George Liston Tatum, Jr., House | (#10000569) |
431 Valley Rd. 41°10′17″N 73°28′29″W / 41.171389°N 73.474722°W |
New Canaan | Mid-Twentieth-Century Modern Residences in Connecticut 1930–1979, MPS | |
148 | Titicus Hill Historic District | Upload image | (#12000267) |
Roughly bounded by junction of Main St. & Danbury Rd., North St. & N. Salem Rd., New St. & N. Salem Rd. 41°17′26″N 73°30′02″W / 41.290585°N 73.500533°W |
Ridgefield | |
149 | Town Hall | (#82004343) |
90 Post Rd. E. 41°08′28″N 73°21′39″W / 41.141111°N 73.360833°W |
Westport | The former Town Hall | |
150 | Umpawaug District School | (#88002695) |
Umpawaug Rd. 41°18′56″N 73°25′46″W / 41.315556°N 73.429444°W |
Redding | ||
151 | Union Station | |
(#86002750) |
White St. and Patriot Dr. 41°23′43″N 73°26′14″W / 41.395278°N 73.437222°W |
Danbury | Next to the Danbury railroad station and close by Meeker's Hardware |
152 | US Post Office-South Norwalk Main | |
(#86000126) |
16 Washington St. 41°05′56″N 73°25′17″W / 41.098889°N 73.421389°W |
Norwalk | |
153 | United States Post Office, Westport, Connecticut | (#12000001) |
154 Post Rd. E. 41°08′28″N 73°21′35″W / 41.141233°N 73.359817°W |
Westport | Former post office, now a restaurant | |
154 | Village Creek | |
(#10000493) |
Roughly bounded by Village Creek, Hayes Creek and Woodward Ave.[36] 41°04′44″N 73°25′06″W / 41.078889°N 73.418333°W |
Norwalk | A community in South Norwalk |
155 | Wall Street Historic District | |
(#09000342) |
Roughly bounded by Commerce, Knight, and Wall Sts., West and Mott Aves. 41°07′05″N 73°24′45″W / 41.118189°N 73.412436°W |
Norwalk | |
156 | Washington Bridge | (#04001093) |
U.S. Route 1 at the Housatonic River 41°12′01″N 73°06′39″W / 41.200278°N 73.110833°W |
Stratford | Extends into Milford in New Haven County. | |
157 | David Jr. and Sarah Webb House | (#11000751) |
1161 Ponus Ridge 41°09′06″N 73°31′48″W / 41.151667°N 73.53°W |
New Canaan | ||
158 | Weir Farm National Historic Site | (#03000284) |
735 Nod Hill Road 41°15′21″N 73°27′21″W / 41.25592°N 73.455963°W |
Wilton and Ridgefield | ||
159 | West Mountain Historic District | (#84000828) |
CT 102 41°17′53″N 73°31′44″W / 41.298056°N 73.528889°W |
Ridgefield | ||
160 | Westport Bank and Trust Company | (#06000593) |
87 Post Rd. E., in downtown Westport 41°08′30″N 73°21′40″W / 41.141667°N 73.361111°W |
Westport | ||
161 | Westport Center Historic District | (#16000449) |
Avery Pl., Bay Elm & Main Sts., Imperial & Myrtle Aves., Church & Violet Lns., Post Rd., E. 41°08′29″N 73°21′40″W / 41.141400°N 73.361175°W |
Westport | ||
162 | Ephraim Wheeler House | (#92000318) |
470 Whippoorwill Ln. 41°15′11″N 73°06′55″W / 41.253056°N 73.115278°W |
Stratford | ||
163 | Williams House | (#13000525) |
5 Williams Rd. 41°27′22″N 73°29′33″W / 41.456154°N 73.492533°W |
New Fairfield | ||
164 | Wilton Center Historic District | |
(#92001003) |
Roughly the area around the junction of Lovers Ln. and Belden Hill and Ridgefield Rds. 41°11′43″N 73°26′20″W / 41.195278°N 73.438889°W |
Wilton |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Fairfield County, Connecticut. |
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Connecticut
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Connecticut
References
- ↑ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For about 1% of NRIS original coordinates, experience has shown that one or both coordinates are typos or otherwise extremely far off; some corrections may have been made. A more subtle problem causes many locations to be off by up to 150 yards, depending on location in the country: most NRIS coordinates were derived from tracing out latitude and longitudes off of USGS topographical quadrant maps created under the North American Datum of 1927, which differs from the current, highly accurate WGS84 GPS system used by most on-line maps. Chicago is about right, but NRIS longitudes in Washington are higher by about 4.5 seconds, and are lower by about 2.0 seconds in Maine. Latitudes differ by about 1.0 second in Florida. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ↑ Forty-six are historic districts that explicitly include "Historic District" in their NRHP listing name. In addition there are other listings which are technically listed as historic districts because they include additional related buildings or other elements, in addition to a primary element that is the focus of the NRHP listing.
- ↑ Nils Kerschus & John Herzan (August 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: South End Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 24 photos, from 1984 and 1985
- 1 2 Matthew Roth & Bruce Clouette (October 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Aspetuck Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 19 photos
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on December 16, 2016.
- ↑ Numbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ↑ National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ↑ "Historic Preservation Awards recipients announced for 2009". Town of Westport website. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
- ↑ Clouette, Bruce (February 1, 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Caleb Baldwin Tavern" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
- ↑ William E. Devlin (February 1, 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Ball and Roller Bearing Company / American Family Crafts / Joseph Nutt House and Machine Shop" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 9 photos, exterior and interior, from 1984 and 1988
- ↑ David F. Ransom (November 4, 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Aaron Barlow House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying eight photos, exterior and interior, from 1980
- ↑ William Devlin (October 1992). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Daniel and Esther Bartlett House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 11 photos, exterior and interior, from 1896 and 1990
- ↑ Bruce Clouette (February 1, 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Daniel Basset House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying four photos, exterior, from 2001 (see captions p. 9 of text document)
- ↑ Jan Cunningham (May 12, 1998). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Benedict House and Shop" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying nine photos, exterior and interior, from 1998
- ↑ David F. Ransom (June 22, 1991). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Beth Israel Synagogue / Canaan Institutional Baptist Church" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 15 photos, exterior and interior, historic and from 1991
- ↑ Kate Ohno (1991). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Nathan B. Booth House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 13 photos, exterior and interior, undated
- ↑ David F. Ransom & John Herzan (February 20, 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Boston Post Road Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 13 photos, from 1979
- ↑ Jan Cunningham (June 15, 1995). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Bradley Edge Tool Company Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 15 photos from 1995 (see captions page 15 of text document)
- ↑ Bruce Clouette & Matthew Roth (March 4, 1992). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Cannondale Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. p. 17. and Accompanying 20 photos (indexed on pages 22–23 of text)
- ↑ William E. Devlin & John Herzan (September 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Commodore Hull School" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 9 photos, exterior and interior
- ↑ Jan Cunningham & John Herzan (June 25, 1986). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Georgetown Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 25 photos, from 1986
- ↑ T. Robins Brown (September 1976). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Godillot Place" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 10 photos, exterior and interior, from 1976
- ↑ Bruce Clouette (June 30, 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Landis Gores House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 12 photos, exterior and interior, from 2001 (see captions on page 13 of text document)
- ↑ Jan Cunningham (August 20, 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Greens Farms School" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying nine photos, exterior and interior, from 1990 (see photo captions page 6 of text document)
- ↑ Bruce Clouette; Allen Johnson & John Herzan (November 19, 1987). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Haviland and Elizabeth Streets-Hanford Place Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 20 photos, from 1987 (see photo captions pages 18-20 of text document)
- ↑ Images of Trumbull, Trumbull Historical Society, 1997 p72 ISBN 0-7524-0901-8
- ↑ William E. Devlin; Paulette Pepin & John Herzan (May 31, 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Locust Avenue School" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 16 photos, exterior and interior, from 1984
- ↑ Jan cunningham (May 20, 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: David Mallett, Jr. House / The Mallett House" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying seven photos, exterior and interior, from 1985
- ↑ Bruce Clouette & Hoang Tinh (November 9, 1995). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Newtown Borough Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 20 photos, from 1995 (captions on page 23 of text document)
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Steven M. Bedford (January 21, 2000). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Stevenson Dam Hydroelectric Plant" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 10 photos (from HAER), from 1999
- ↑ _William E. Devlin and John Herzan (June 1987). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Tarryville" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 17 images, exterior and interior, from 1986 and pre-1910
- ↑ Coordinates derived from Village Creek Home Owners Association web site.