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Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Is the U.S. strategic stockpile empty? Lamont, Trump spar

On a day when he announced 33 deaths in Connecticut from COVID-19, Gov. Ned Lamont mused that the social distancing rules were working well but not well enough, and lamented the state isn’t getting the supplies and materials it needs.

“It was disturbing today to find out that the national strategic stockpile is now empty. We did get 50 ventilators, for which I am very thankful,” he said at his daily news briefing at the Capitol.

“For now, we’re on our own. For now, we are working our hearts out scouring the globe for PPEs as best we can,” Lamont added, referring to personal protective equipment such as face masks and haz-mat suits.

Less thsn two hours later a reporter asked President Donald Trump about Lamont’s remarks.

“Well, it’s not empty,” Trump shot back. “Let me explain something. What we’re doing, I thought I said it accurately, I certainly meant to, where appropriate, other than certain things, like we have quite a few of the ventilators....We’re trying to have supply sent directly to the states...We don’t want medical supplies coming in to warehouses all over the place and then we take then from there and bring them to another warehouse. So we’re having them brought ideally from the manufacturer ideally to the hospital or the state where it’s going.”

Lamont said Connecticut is the No 4 hardest hit state in the coronavirus crisis, in illnesses per capita, after New York, New Jersey and Louisiana. When it comes to federal aid, he wants to position Connecticut as part of the hard-hit New York metro area, rather than as a state on its own.

Trump also suggested that some governors — such as Andrew Cuomo of New York — believe they need more ventilators than they really need. He...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Is-the-U-S-strategic-stockpile-empty-Lamont-15170567.php

Bridgeport domestic violence center staff goes remote, still helping clients

The staff at the Center for Family Justice continue to work remotely to help clients in crisis during the COVID-19 pandemic.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-domestic-violence-center-staff-goes-15170290.php

Bridgeport mayor closes playgrounds, basketball courts to prevent spread of coronavirus

Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim is urging residents to stay away from playgrounds and basketball courts.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Bridgeport-mayor-closes-playgrounds-basketball-15170293.php

Chloroquine helped CT’s first coronavirus patient, but not a ‘magic bullet’

Chris Tillett, the Wilton man who has recovered from COVID-19, was given the anti-malarial chloroquine as part of his treatment.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Chloroquine-helped-CT-s-first-coronavirus-15170135.php

Kindness Counts Nominations

Kindness Counts is HERE...and we could all use a little bit of that right now!

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1298

COVID-19 Update March 31, 2020.

Connecticut Public Health releases COVID-19 Update March 31, 2020.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1297

State announces 17 previously unreported coronavirus deaths

The state announced 33 more deaths from coronavirus, including 17 that were previously unreported, bringing the total to 69.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/16-more-deaths-from-coronavirus-in-CT-announced-15169644.php

State police: Wallet stolen from Fairfield rest area

Troopers are asking for the public’s help to solve a recent larceny at a Fairfield rest area.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/State-police-Wallet-stolen-from-Fairfield-rest-15169596.php

Coronavirus: A list of resources we compiled to help you navigate this chaotic time

The journalists at Hearst have compiled resources and answered some of the most pressing questions being asked about the virus.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Coronavirus-A-list-of-resources-we-compiled-to-15169493.php

NFL Team Owners Vote to Expand Playoffs by Two Teams

NFL team owners voted to expand the playoffs by one team in each conference for next season

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/nfl-team-owners-vote-to-expand-playoffs-by-two-teams/2247998/

Second inmate at same prison tests positive for coronavirus

Advocates have feared an outbreak of the COVID-19 coronavirus within the state prison system could spread rapidly among inmates housed in close quarters.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Second-inmate-tests-positive-for-coronavirus-15169376.php

Kindness Counts Nominations

Kindness Counts is HERE...and we could all use a little bit of that right now!

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1296

No hospital beds coming to Bridgeport’s Webster Bank Arena for now

The Webster Bank Arena had been designated as an overflow hospital site holding 128 beds. Those plans have been shelved for now.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/No-hospital-beds-coming-to-Bridgeport-s-Webster-15169170.php

Shaquille O’Neal Addresses Controversial ‘Tiger King’ Appearance

Former NBA player Shaquille O'Neal has addressed his controversial cameo in Netflix's "Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness," a true crime docuseries about Oklahoma zookeeper Joseph Maldonado-Passage, stating that he is "not friends" with Maldonado-Passage and had "no idea any of that stuff was going on," according to NBC News.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/shaquille-oneal-addresses-controversial-tiger-king-appearance/2247923/

Worker treated after excavator fire in Stratford

The call came in around 10:30 a.m. on a report of fire at 1075 Honeyspot Road.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Worker-treated-after-excavator-fire-in-Stratford-15168716.php

Bridgeport police get kits with temporary virus protection gear

Bridgeport police officers were handed out packets of temporary safety equipment on Monday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Bridgeport-police-get-kits-with-temporary-virus-15168780.php

CT National Guard starts new coronavirus ‘missions’

The National Guard is expected to play a growing role in fighting the coronavirus in Connecticut, after the White House the federal government would pick up 100 percent the cost.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-National-Guard-starts-new-coronavirus-15168754.php

IRS offers Q & A on federal stimulus checks

Payments will begin in the next three weeks and will be distributed automatically



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/IRS-offers-Q-A-on-federal-stimulus-checks-15168557.php

Lamont: ‘Certainly April is going to be a horrible month.’

Gov. Ned Lamont says he is studying the list of ‘essential’ jobs to see if further business closures are warranted in CT.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Lamont-Certainly-April-is-going-to-be-a-15168466.php

Need a quick $10K for your business? SBA details programs

Details are emerging from the Small Business Administration on grants and loans being freed up for struggling businesses during the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic and aftermath.



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/Need-a-quick-10K-for-your-business-SBA-details-15168416.php

CT first responders deployed in NY to help coronavirus effort

American Medical Response ambulances and emergency personnel crews from Bridgeport and New Haven have headed to New York to help with the response effort.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-first-responders-deployed-in-NY-to-help-15168411.php

A warm March ending with cool temperatures across CT

This March’s average temperature was about 5 degrees warmer than normal, according to the Northeast Regional Climate Center.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/weather/article/A-warm-March-ending-with-cool-temperatures-across-15168299.php

Fuller Brush Tower Collapses – Today in History: March 31

Fuller Brush building following collapse of tower

Fuller Brush building following collapse of tower, 1080 Windsor Avenue, Hartford – Connecticut Historical Society

On March 31, 1923, a 56,000-gallon water tank dropped through 4 concrete floors of the Fuller Brush Company Tower, which was in the final stages of construction. Nearing completion, the 160-foot-high, 4-story tower formed the entrance and elevator shaft of the new plant on Windsor Avenue in Hartford. The collapse occurred at 11:40 a.m. when the 200-ton water supply tank for the factory’s sprinkler system, located on the upper 2 stories, failed taking out the south and west walls, as well as the lower half of the north wall. Nine victims were pulled away from the wreckage before the firemen ordered everyone back from the building. Gas had filled the area from damaged lines, and the roof of the tower remained almost entirely intact leaving a large portion of it swinging back and forth dangerously in the wind. The roof needed to come down before further rescue attempts could be made. The Connecticut Company, Hartford’s electric street railway, offered assistance. Crews attached heavy cables to two trolleys in an effort to bring the roof and remaining brick work down but failed in their attempts. Eventually dynamite was used and rescue and recovery efforts continued through the night despite freezing temperatures and a 30-foot pile of debris.

Ten people were killed and later investigations into the accident revealed that the removal of eight steel tension support rods from the tank the day before were the likely cause of the accident. The rods reinforced the four upright supports of the water tank but took up quite a bit of space. The company had suggested the use of the space directly under the tank as a likely location for a school to instruct branch managers and the support rods had been removed after consulting the engineers on the project



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/fuller-brush-tower-collapses-today-in-history/

Hartford’s Fuller Brush Company Goes Door-to-Door Across US

Founded in 1906 by Alfred C. Fuller, the Fuller Brush Company was one of Connecticut’s most notable corporations. Fuller developed both its original products and its iconic door-to-door sales force. In his first year, with an investment of $375, Fuller moved his one-man shop from his sister’s basement to Hartford. There, he set up shop as the Capitol Brush Company in a Park Street building that he rented for $8 a month. He renamed his enterprise the Fuller Brush Company in 1913.

From One-Man Shop to National Corporation

In its first year, the fledgling company offered 32 different types of brushes, mops, and brooms. By 1908, it also had a new employee. Fuller’s wife Evelyn became one of the first Fuller Brush representatives—and she outsold him her first day on the job and nearly every day thereafter for two years. In 1909 the business became a national corporation after an ad for sales distributors in the Syracuse Post-Standard yielded 260 dealers. These door-to-door salespeople received no base salary, walked an average of six miles per day, and sold to only one of every five homes. According to archival documents from the Fuller Brush Company, seven out of ten recruits failed in the first three months.

The Fuller Brush plant in East Hartford, 1960

The Fuller Brush plant in East Hartford, 1960 – The Fuller Brush plant in East Hartford, 1960 – Hartford Public Library, Hartford History Center, Hartford Times

The “Fuller Brush Man” Becomes an Icon

During the next 20 years, company sales grew from $87,000 in 1916 to $15 million in 1923; the number of distributors increased to more than 1,000. World War I created a demand for specialized brushes that Fuller supplied to the military, and, on the home front, the Fuller “Handy Brush” was developed as a door-opening gift. By the mid-1920s, the Fuller Brush Company had an established national identity. Fuller products were sold to President Franklin D. Roosevelt at his home in Hyde Park and to John D. Rockefeller at Pocantico Hills. In 1922 The Saturday Evening Post coined the phrase “Fuller Brush Man,” and in following years, this iconic character of American life appeared in such comic strips as Blondie, Mutt and Jeff, and Mickey Mouse. Even the Walt Disney film The Three Little Pigs included a scene in which the wolf poses as a Fuller Brush Man.

Fuller’s oldest son, Howard, joined the company in 1942 and became its president in 1943. He modernized its manufacturing operations, expanded the product line to include household cleaners, vitamins, and cosmetics. He also introduced a female sales force known as the Fullerettes. By 1956 the company had 7,000 full-time distributors who visited 90% of American homes and a company catalog that reached approximately 5 million people. In 1959, the company, which had expanded and consolidated a few times within the city of Hartford, moved to a new factory in East Hartford. In 1960 sales reached $109 million, and in 1968 the company was sold to Consolidated Foods Corporation, later called The Sara Lee Corporation. In 1972 Sara Lee constructed a 600,000-square-foot facility near Great Bend, Kansas, and the Fuller Brush Company left Connecticut. The Kansas plant remains its manufacturing, distribution, and operating center.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/hartfords-fuller-brush-company-goes-door-to-door-across-us/

How many get infected: The coronavirus infection rate in CT

How many people get infected from a single patient is called the “reproduction number.” In Connecticut it appears to be higher than other states, at least for now.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/How-many-get-infected-The-coronavirus-infection-15167116.php

Monday, March 30, 2020

Screening suspects for coronavirus prompts exposure concerns

A plan was quickly eliminated to have court marshals take the temperatures of detainees with oral thermometers.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Screening-suspects-for-coronavirus-prompts-15167494.php

NCAA to Give Spring Sport Athletes Extra Year of Eligibility

The NCAA will permit spring sport athletes who had their seasons shortened by the coronavirus outbreak to have an additional year of eligibility

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/coronavirus/ncaa-to-give-spring-sport-athletes-extra-year-of-eligibility/2247581/

Bridgeport mayor suggests buying 2,000 student laptops for $500k

Mayor Joseph Ganim said he is not willing to wait for the laptops the state has promised to help students get through the distant learning programs enacted during the coronavirus school shutdown.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Bridgeport-mayor-suggests-buying-2-000-student-15167371.php

Biker critically injured in Bridgeport collision dies

The biker critically injured in a collision nearly a week ago has died, officials confirmed Monday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Biker-critically-injured-in-Bridgeport-collision-15167373.php

COVID-19 Update March 30, 2020.

Connecticut Public Health releases COVID-19 Update March 30, 2020.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1294

Free laptop distribution is a month away for students at home due to due the coronavirus

Districts say they will make due until the computer cavalry comes in the form of 60,000 laptops to be used in Alliance Districts during the coronavirus shutdown.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Free-laptop-distribution-is-a-month-away-for-15167036.php

CT grocery lobby talking to chains about limiting number of shoppers in stores

The stricter shopping rules imposed this weekend on Norwalk stores during the pandemic may be implemented statewide.

Wayne Pesce, who runs the West Hartford-based Connecticut Food Association, an industry group that promotes retail grocers and their suppliers, said he would be talking to about a dozen of the large chains Monday afternoon about recommending Gov. Ned Lamont issue an executive order.

“We’d rather have it on a state level than go town by town,” Pesce said in an interview. “We’re willing to do that stuff, but we’ve got a bunch of people that need to come together and agree.”

With coronavirus cases surging in Norwalk, Mayor Harry Rilling on Sunday issued a handful of emergency orders aimed at forcing social-distancing. Those included reducing the maximum occupancy of Norwalk businesses to 50 percent of the fire marshal’s allowed limit, and requiring family’s to send only one member to a store at a time.

“I understand that families, especially those with young children, are experiencing cabin fever staying at home,” Rilling said. “However, taking the entire family out to a store to get out of the house during the outbreak is unnecessarily dangerous to both your family and everyone else in the store.”

Pesce said he and his members discussed the measures over the weekend with Rilling and state Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, D-Norwalk, and were supportive. Pesce said another recommendation was for one-way traffic in store aisles to further reduce the opportunities for customers to come into close contact.

“We were having conversations with them over the weekend around how do we just keep people safer? How do we do more,” said...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-grocery-lobby-talking-to-chains-about-limiting-15166798.php

State DOC confirms first positive case of coronavirus

UNCASVILLE — A man being held at a correctional facility tested positive for COVID-19 Monday afternoon, according to the Department of Corrections.

The 32-year-old man, who is incarcerated at the Corrigan-Radgowski Correctional Center in Uncasville, is the first inmate in the state to test positive for the virus.

Officials said in a release Monday that the offender was isolated as soon as he displayed symptoms consistent with the coronavirus.

He was later placed in a negative pressure isolation room, the DOC said, which allows air to flow in, but not out of the room.

The inmate’s name was withheld by officials.

Other inmates located in the same housing unit will be isolated from the rest of the population for 14 days, the DOC said.

Other offenders believed to have had possible contact with the infected inmate received temperature checks and are continued to be closely monitored, they said.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/DOC-Prisoner-tests-positive-for-coronavirus-15166839.php

Army Corps assessing Mohegan Sun and CT Convention Center for overflow

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday that he doesn’t want to get in a politial fight over the White House’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Army-Corps-assessing-Mohegan-Sun-and-CT-15166752.php

Hoopla - Instantly read, listen and watch with your library card

Access thousands of movies, television shows, music albums, audiobooks, eBooks and comics, all available for mobile and online access through Hoopla Digital! All you need is a Newington Public Library card!

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1292

Monroe, with six coronavirus cases, offering telehealth service

MONROED — Monroe has six positive coronavirus cases, and town officials are offering free resources over the phone for those needing assistance.

First Selectman Ken Kellogg, in a CodeRED update Sunday, confirmed the six positive cases, adding that “we should all expect to have additional cases in the days ahead, just as other towns in Fairfield County are experiencing.

“I want to emphasize the Governor’s order that now limits social and recreational gatherings to no more than five people,” said Kellogg. “While our parks and trails have plenty of open space to enjoy safely, you must maintain social distancing.

“I implore everyone to follow these requirements so that further restrictions do not become necessary,” he said.

Kellogg said that as the community gets ready for another week of “living in a way that may have seemed unimaginable less than a month ago, remember to focus on what we can control.”

The first selectman pointed residents to links on the town’s website for things to do at home, reminders to take a stress-break and how to access support services.

“Remember that we must remain connected while doing our part to keep our neighbors safe. We’re all in this together,” said Kellogg.

Residents who are “stressed, anxious, isolated or having difficulty concentrating” are urged to contact town social worker Jessica Champagne. Champagne can provide resources by phone through the town’s free telehealth service.

To schedule an appointment with Champagne, call 203-913-6955 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

brian.gioiele@hearstmediact.com



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Monroe-with-six-coronavirus-cases-offering-15166688.php

Milford residents accused of having sex in Eisenhower Park

Frank Steele, 39, and Danielle Dionne, 29, of the same address on Columbia Drive, were both charged with public indecency and breach of peace.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Milford-residents-accused-of-having-sex-in-15166470.php

SHU sues food provider in pancake contest death

SHU claims in a lawsuit that its food service provider is legally responsible for the death of a student during a pancake-eating contest.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/SHU-sues-food-provider-in-pancake-contest-death-15166060.php

Tokyo Olympics Rescheduled for July 23-Aug. 8 in 2021

Tokyo Olympic opening ceremony rescheduled for July 23, 2021; closing ceremony on Aug. 8

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/tokyo-olympics-rescheduled-for-july-23-2021/2247127/

From Bombs to Bras: World War I Conservation Measures Transform the Lives of Women

By Christina Nhean

Did you ever wonder how women in the United States began using a bra as part of their daily wardrobe? Would it be surprising to find out that the use of bras in the United States originated from helping soldiers fight in the Great War in 1917? Contributions from designers and inventors, such as Mary Phelps Jacob, allowed women to embrace newfound freedom with a bra. The evolution of the bra all began when Mary Jacob refused to wear a typical 20th-century corset.

Warner Company’s Redfern corset

Warner Company’s “Redfern” corset, worn by Eva Follett at her marriage to I. DeVer Warner (one of the founders of the company) in 1897 – Courtesy of Fairfield Museum and History Center

New York socialite Mary “Polly” Phelps Jacob was getting ready for a ball when the support rod from her corset poked through the fabric, causing her significant discomfort. Tired of the pain caused by the corset, Jacob requested from her maid, two handkerchiefs and a ribbon. Jacob proceeded to sew the handkerchiefs with the ribbon, which created a comfortable alternative to the corset, providing a flattering shape to her bust. When she attended the ball, friends and family asked for the secret behind her new look, to which she explained her creation of the brassiere (“upper arm” in French).

Bridgeport’s Warner Brothers Corset Company

As word got out to the community, Jacob realized the potential of turning the brassieres into a business. On November 3, 1914, Jacob received a patent for the “backless brassiere” under the name “Caresse Crosby,” the first person to patent the backless brassiere in the United States. Unfortunately, Jacob was unsuccessful in marketing the brassiere, and in 1915 sold her patent to the Warner Brothers Corset Company in Bridgeport, Connecticut, for $1,500 (approximately $35,000 in today’s dollars).

By the late 1800s, Connecticut was among the most proficient producers of manufactured goods in the nation, and Bridgeport, a leading manufacturer of corsets—providing nearly three-fourths of the total corsets to the United States. One of the most important companies in Bridgeport was the Warner Brothers Corset Company, which successfully produced a variety of health corsets, including the “Coraline” corset. By 1912, the Warner Brothers Company was the leading corset manufacturing company in the world.

Cotton and Lace Bra, ca. 1915-1925

Cotton and Lace Bra, ca. 1915-1925 – Courtesy of Connecticut Historical Society, 1994.59.71

Cotton and Lace Bra, ca. 1915-1925

Cotton and Lace Bra, ca. 1915-1925 – Courtesy of Connecticut Historical Society, 1994.59.71

As the United States entered the First World War in 1917, the nation placed conservation and rationing policies on items such as food, rubber, and metal. In effort to conserve metal, manufacturing companies such as the Warner Brothers Corset Company halted the production of corsets, conserving roughly 28,000 tons of metal—about enough to build two battleships. These companies remolded the metal to produce military equipment such as helmets, armor, and wristwatches. More importantly, metal went to the armament industries such as the Remington Arms company in Bridgeport and the Colt Factory in Hartford, to build small arms and munitions for the soldiers fighting overseas.

The First World War’s Lasting Impression on Women’s Fashion

With the decline of available corsets during the Great War era, the backless brassiere gained popularity. D. H. Warner, President of Warner Brothers Corset Company from 1894 to 1934, began mass producing the backless brassieres, increasing the company’s revenues to $12.6 million by the 1920s. These boosted revenues helped transform the Warner Brothers Corset Company into an enormous corporation.

Postcard of the Warners Brothers Company Factories

Postcard of the Warners Brothers Company Factories – Courtesy of Museum of Connecticut History

The growth in brassiere sales came at a time when women began to express themselves through the use of more non-restrictive clothing. The emergence of different styles and sizes of bras coincided with a growing women’s movement in the country that witnessed women finding new ways to assert their independence. (The brassieres and other styles of bras such as the bandeaus (strips) also earned acclaim among women due their ability to flatten-down breasts, an important feature of “Roaring Twenties” fashion.) As a result of the Great War, women found new ways to showcase their freedom and individuality, including the manner in which they shaped their bustlines.

Cream silk brassiere lined with cotton, ca. 1925

Cream silk brassiere lined with cotton, ca. 1925 – Courtesy of Connecticut Historical Society, 2012.410.3.2

Cream silk brassiere lined with cotton, ca. 1925

Cream silk brassiere lined with cotton, ca. 1925 – Courtesy of Connecticut Historical Society, 2012.410.3.2

Christina Nhean wrote this piece while an intern at the Connecticut State Library and student at Central Connecticut State University. It served as part of the library’s Remembering World War One: Sharing History/Preserving Memories project.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/from-bombs-to-bras-world-war-i-conservation-measures-transform-the-lives-of-women/

Theodate Pope Riddle: Connecticut’s Pioneering Woman Architect

By Nancy Finlay

She was not originally called Theodate. Her parents named her Effie Brooks Pope, but when she was 19, she chose the name Theodate, after a much-admired grandmother. She insisted on being called Theodate ever afterwards. Her choice of name reflected a desire to control her own destiny and shape her own life. For a young woman coming of age in the late 19th century, this was revolutionary.

Effie “Theodate” Pope was born in Ohio in 1867. Her father, Alfred Pope, was a self-made millionaire and a serious art collector who doted on his headstrong, determined daughter. Theodate attended Miss Mittelberger’s School for Girls in Cleveland, followed by two years at Miss Porter’s School in Farmington, Connecticut. Despite not being a good student, she enjoyed her time at Miss Porter’s, fell in love with Farmington, and decided to make it her permanent home. She rented—and later bought—a small house on High Street, where she ran a farm and a small shop while trying to figure out what to do with the rest of her life.

She considered a career as a writer or an artist; but finally decided that her true calling was architecture. She did not attend college and had no formal training as an architect, although by the end of the 19th century, architectural programs at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris admitted women. She learned about the history of architecture during trips to Europe with her family, from her extensive reading, and in the course of a short period of study with Allan Marquand, the founder of the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University.

Gertrude Käsebier photo, of Ada, Alfred and Theodate Pope on their West Lawn walkway, ca. 1902 - Hill-Stead Museum

Gertrude Käsebier photo, of Ada, Alfred and Theodate Pope on their West Lawn walkway, ca. 1902 – Hill-Stead Museum

Building Hill-Stead

Strong-willed and forceful, Pope convinced her parents to retire to Farmington, purchasing 250 acres adjoining her property on High Street. Her father engaged the prestigious New York architectural firm McKim, Mead & White to design his new house and invited his daughter to participate in the project. Theodate quickly seized control, insisting that Hill-Stead should be a “Pope house,” not a McKim, Mead & White house. She envisioned a rambling Connecticut farmhouse, with strong colonial revival elements and a monumental portico recalling Washington’s Mount Vernon. She relied on professional draftsmen to give form to her ideas, but she oversaw every stage of the design process. Critics hailed Hill-Stead (completed in 1906) as a masterpiece. Early publications credited it to McKim, Mead & White, but it is now recognized as the work of Theodate Pope Riddle. Following the deaths of her parents, the house became Theodate’s own home.

Pope went on to design other Connecticut landmarks, such as the Westover School in Middlebury, Connecticut (1909), the Hop Brook School in Naugatuck, Connecticut (1915), and several private houses. She established an office in a small building on the Hill-Stead estate with a sign on the door reading “Theodate Pope, Architect.” Although licensed as an architect in New York as early as 1916 and elected to the American Institute of Architects in 1918, she did not get a license to officially work in Connecticut until 1933.

Among her most prestigious early accomplishments was earning a commission to reconstruct Theodore Roosevelt’s boyhood home in New York City. Commissions for an untrained woman architect, however, remained few and far between, and depended mostly on personal connections (despite Pope’s unmistakable talent).

At the age of 49, Theodate Pope married diplomat John Wallace Riddle; this is a photograph from their wedding day, May 6, 1916 - Hill-Stead Museum

At the age of 49, Theodate Pope married diplomat John Wallace Riddle; this is a photograph from their wedding day, May 6, 1916 – Hill-Stead Museum

In 1916 (one year after surviving passage on the ill-fated liner Lusitania), Pope astonished her family and friends by agreeing to marry John Wallace Riddle, a charming former diplomat who courted her for years. Contrary to expectations, the marriage proved a happy one. Riddle supported Theodate’s architectural aspirations and encouraged her in her final significant project, the creation of Avon Old Farms School. Theodate conceived of the school as a memorial to her father. She purchased nearly three thousand acres in Avon, and in a sudden flash of inspiration, laid out the basic design for the campus and its buildings in an architectural style inspired by the British Arts and Crafts movement and the vernacular architecture of the Cotswolds in England. She hired English craftsmen and insisted on the use of traditional hand tools and construction methods. Work began in 1918, but went on for years, with Theodate overseeing every detail. The school finally opened in 1927 with Pope contributing not only to its architecture, but also to its curriculum.

Theodate Pope Riddle Prospers in a Male-Dominated Profession

Early in her career Theodate Pope submitted a photograph of herself for inclusion in a publication on prominent architects and their work. When the publication’s editors saw the photograph and realized that she was a woman, they opted not to include her in the book. Her career was a long struggle against prejudice. At the time of her death in 1946, she was just beginning to receive proper recognition for her work as an architect, but enthusiasm for modern architecture was at its height and critics frequently dismissed her work as old-fashioned. Pope herself had little patience with modern architecture. She regarded it as a failure, as “purely intellectual, without regard to the emotions.” Pope lamented, “Men who work with machinery during the day might rather not sleep in a machine at night.” Today, in the post-modern period, many authorities agree with her.

Her legacy is one of a pioneering woman architect, whose buildings withstand the test of time and remain as fine as the work of any of her contemporary male colleagues. The home she designed for her parents remains open to the public as a museum—a showcase for the world-class collection of impressionist paintings assembled by Theodate’s father.

Nancy Finlay grew up in Manchester, Connecticut. She has a BA from Smith College and an MFA and PhD from Princeton University. From 1998 to 2015, she was Curator of Graphics at the Connecticut Historical Society.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/theodate-pope-riddle-connecticuts-pioneering-woman-architect/

Video – Sophie Tucker Tribute Film

YouTubeConnecticut Women’s Hall of Fame

The Connecticut Women’s Hall of Fame pays tribute to celebrated singer and actress, and long-time Hartford resident, Sophie Tucker. “The Last of the Red-Hot Mamas,” Tucker’s five-decade career spanned the vaudeville stage to Royal Command Performances—for three generations of British monarchs. Tucker shared top billing with many of the 20th century’s most famous stars, including W. C. Fields, Will Rogers, Eddie Cantor, Jack Benny, and Fanny Brice.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/video-sophie-tucker-tribute-film/

Reduced train service begins today with new schedules

The reduced service is the result of massive ridership reductions — Metro-North is now carrying 94 percent less commuters than usual.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Reduced-train-service-begins-today-with-new-15165651.php

Tokyo’s Infection Spike After Olympic Delay Sparks Questions

Before the Olympics were postponed, Japan appears to have the coronavirus infection contained.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/national-international/tokyos-infection-spike-after-olympic-delay-sparks-questions/2247102/

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Ganim: Webster Bank Arena to be coronavirus alternate care site

Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim announced on Sunday that he approved an emergency plan with the State of Connecticut Department of Emergency Management to stage Webster Bank Arena as the site for hospital overflow. The plan will provide hospitals in Connecticut with an alternate care site for patients if there is a surge, or patient overflow, due to Coronavirus.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Webster-Bank-Arena-to-be-alternate-care-site-15165276.php

Trump approves disaster declaration, calls off quarantine for CT

The emergency action makes federal funding available to state, tribal and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations for emergency protective measures.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Trump-approves-disaster-declaration-calls-off-15164697.php

MLB Uniform Maker Switches to Making Medical Masks, Gowns

The Easton, Pennsylvania-based company that makes Major League Baseball uniforms has switched to producing masks and gowns in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/pa-mlb-uniform-maker-switches-to-making-medical-masks-gowns/2246874/

A soggy Sunday with light rain, drizzle

The first half of the week will be mostly cloudy. Sunshine returns on Thursday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/weather/article/A-soggy-Sunday-with-light-rain-drizzle-15164561.php

Five displaced in 2-alarm fire in Bridgeport

Heavy fire was in all three floors of the house.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Five-displaced-in-Bridgeport-2-alarm-fire-15164526.php

Girl wearing PJs, hoodie missing in Stratford

The alert, issued by State Police at 6:29 a.m., said Dazire Quinones is described as a white female with brown hair and eyes.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Girl-wearing-PJs-hoodie-missing-in-Stratford-15164530.php

Tokyo Olympics: Signs Suggest Summer Dates for 2021 Olympics

Tokyo Olympic organizers are leaning away from starting the rescheduled games in the spring of 2021.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/tokyo-olympics-summer-dates-2021-olympics/2246826/

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Reports: Trump considers enforced quarantine of NY, CT, NJ

The voluntary self-isolation many state residents have practiced over the last couple of weeks may take another turn, as President Donald Trump considers enforcing a quarantine in parts of Connecticut as well as New York and New Jersey.

Trump told reporters Saturday morning that he was considering the measure, which would last for two weeks, CNN reported.

Nearly 1,300 Connecticut residents had tested positive for COVID-19 by the end of day Friday.

New York City had over 29,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 as of 10:00 a.m. Saturday, an NYC Health data summary indicates.

That’s almost a third of the country’s total cases, which hit 100,000 Friday.

There were over 44,000 cases across New York by the end of the week, according to ny.gov.

And over 11,000 people in New Jersey had tested positive for the virus by Saturday, per the state’s website.

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

The Associate Press contributed to this report.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Report-Trump-considers-enforced-quarantine-of-CT-15163713.php

Friday, March 27, 2020

Bridgeport detectives investigate homicide

A person was killed in Bridgeport late Saturday night.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/1-dead-in-Bridgeport-shooting-15163207.php

COVID-19 Update March 27, 2020.

Connecticut Public Health releases COVID-19 Update March 27, 2020.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1289

Monroe crash ends with car in woods

No one was seriously injured when a vehicle crashed into the woods Friday afternoon, fire officials said.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/Monroe-crash-ends-with-car-in-woods-15162930.php

MLB Final Pitch Could Be Closer to Christmas Than Halloween

The final pitch of the 2020 baseball season could be thrown closer to Christmas than Halloween

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/mlb-final-pitch-could-be-closer-to-christmas-than-halloween/2246469/

CT prison population declines due to coronavirus

The reduction comes even as the governor refuses to release prisoners threatened by COVID-19, as sentencing declines and more families accept paroled ex-offenders.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/CT-prison-population-declines-due-to-coronavirus-15162852.php

NBA Broadcaster Doris Burke Tests Positive for Coronavirus

ESPN NBA broadcaster Doris Burke, a Curt Gowdy Award recipient by the Basketball Hall of Fame for excellence in her field, has revealed that she tested positive for the coronavirus. Burke made the announcement Friday on an ESPN podcast hosted by NBA reporter Adrian Wojnarowski. Burke says she started feeling extreme fatigue on March 11, the day the NBA was...

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/national-international/nba-broadcaster-doris-burke-tests-positive-for-coronavirus/2246368/

Bridgeport FD battles fire on Bay Street

Units responded for a report of a possible structure fire at 155 Bay St. shortly before 5:45 p.m.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-FD-battles-fire-on-Bay-Street-15162544.php

Bridgeport police move to one-man cars during coronavirus outbreak

The department is no longer allowing two officers per car, and cops are receiving masks and other personal protective equipment.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-police-move-to-one-man-cars-during-15162450.php

Bridgeport school meal handouts now include supper during coronavirus shutdown

State-wide, 128 districts are authorized to serve meals at 387 locations during the coronavirus shutdown of schools.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/School-meals-mushroom-as-supper-is-added-to-the-15162303.php

Lamont: Coronavirus hospitalizations beginning to surge

Connecticut commissions said they have received reports of discrimination against Asian Americans due to the coronavirus outbreak.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Lamont-Coronavirus-hospitalizations-beginning-to-15162249.php

As economy seizes up, CT borrowers size up bank spigot

Heading into the Great Recession, it took six months before Connecticut banks began constricting their total loans outstanding across both commercial and individual finance.



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/As-pandemic-economy-seizes-up-borrowers-size-up-15162032.php

Watch Acorn TV through your computer or device with your Newington Library card

The library offers free access to Acorn TV with your Newington Library Card. Acorn TV features world-class mysteries, dramas and comedies from Britain. Watch it through RBdigital mobile apps or online in your browser.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1288

Access Ancestry.com from home with your Newington Library card

Due to the current situation with COVID-19, access to our library edition of Ancestry.com has been temporarily expanded to Newington Library cardholders working remotely, courtesy of ProQuest and its partner Ancestry.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1287

CT allows day cares to stay open amid coronavirus crisis

One-third of the state’s facilities report they cannot financially survive being closed for two to four weeks.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/CT-allows-day-cares-to-stay-open-amid-coronavirus-15161752.php

State’s cache of old masks leads to false coronavirus rumors

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent word that the masks were indeed too old to use — as N95 masks.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/State-s-cache-of-old-masks-leads-to-false-15161655.php

State ACLU wants pretrial incarceration rules changed

The state ACLU has sent an emergency letter to the rules committee of the state Judicial Branch seeking changes in the rules governing the incarceration of pretrial defendants.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/State-ACLU-wants-pretrial-incarceration-rules-15161356.php

CT Reps return to D.C. as vote on coronavirus stimulus is “uncertain”

“There are still people with gripes about the bill,” said Rep. Jim Himes, “But a delay in this case means more people die.”



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/CT-Reps-return-to-D-C-as-vote-on-coronavirus-15161124.php

AAA: People staying home drives down CT gas prices

“We’re seeing less traffic, which ultimately is driving down demand, increasing inventories and pushing pump prices down,” said AAA’s Fran Mayko.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/AAA-People-staying-home-drives-gas-prices-down-15150794.php

Bridgeport struggles to provide safe haven for its homeless

Finding beds, giving information and protecting clients and staff are made harder during the rules now in effect because of the coronavirus pandemic, workers say.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-struggles-to-provide-safe-haven-for-15160971.php

ZBA Public Hearing Notice 04/08/2020

Notice is hereby given that the Newington Zoning Board of Appeals will hold a Public Hearing...

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1284

Read Across America - LIVE today (3/27/20) at 10:00 A.M.

Read Across America - LIVE today...

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1286

A Candy Bar Empire in Naugatuck

A staple of Naugatuck industry for nearly a century, the Peter Paul Manufacturing Company began as a small candy shop operated by Armenian immigrant Peter Halajian (who later changed his last name to Paul). Initially running the small operation as a side business while he worked in Naugatuck’s rubber factories, Paul founded the company that introduced the wildly popular Mounds bar in 1921 and Almond Joy bar in 1946, helping make it one of the most successful candy manufacturers of the 20th century.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/a-candy-bar-empire-in-naugatuck/

Much Good Might be Accomplished: Catharine Esther Beecher and the Pursuit of Domestic Economy

By Karen DePauw for Your Public Media

It is believed that much good, which might be accomplished, remains unaffected, from the mere fact that mankind either do not know that it can be done, or are ignorant of the means to accomplish it. ~Catharine Beecher

These words opened Catharine’s first publication entitled, Suggestions Respecting Improvements in Education and would come to personify her theory of education. As the daughter of Congregational Church minister Lyman Beecher and Roxana Foote Beecher, Catharine grew up in an intellectual world. She attended the Litchfield Female Academy from 1810 to 1816 and went on to work as a teacher. In 1823, Catharine opened her own school, the Hartford Female Seminary, to educate young women for their future lives.

Goodwill Club, 25 Keney Tower Square, Hartford

Goodwill Club, 25 Keney Tower Square, Hartford, ca. 1910s. The Hartford Female Seminary building was later used by the Goodwill Club – Connecticut Historical Society and Connecticut History Illustrated

Catharine’s first publication on domestic economy appeared in 1841 under the title A Treatise on Domestic Economy. In it, she discussed the importance of making domestic economy a branch of women’s formal education—“ for how can we expect women to have this knowledge if it is not taught to them?” She argued that although many believed that domestic economy should be taught by mothers, mothers either did not know how to teach it or were too busy practicing it themselves; therefore, they had neither the time nor energy to teach their daughters. She maintained that it was up to female academies to teach these necessary skills. Catharine suggested that since subjects such as chemical science were taught, “Why, then, should not that science and art, which a woman is to practise during her whole life, be studied and recited?” A few years later she published Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt-book, a cookbook that was meant to serve as a supplement to her Treatise.

Catharine spent the following decades writing further on the topic of women: their health, their rights, and their education. In 1869, she joined forces with her younger sister, Harriet Beecher Stowe, to write The American Woman’s Home. This book continued Catharine’s focus on domestic economy, including everything from cooking to child care.

Catharine Beecher’s insistence on the importance of domestic economy as a subject worthy of study that deserved to be taught formally resulted in the inclusion of coursework in female academies that went beyond needlework and arithmetic. Today, both men and women can take courses in home economics to further their education in this area, which is perhaps just as important today as it was in the mid-1800s.

Karen DePauw is a Research and Collections Associate at The Connecticut Historical Society.

© Connecticut Public Broadcasting Network and Connecticut Historical Society. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared on Your Public Media



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/much-good-might-be-accomplished-catharine-esther-beecher-and-the-pursuit-of-domestic-economy/

Bursting of the Staffordville Reservoir – Today in History: March 27

On March 27, 1877, the Staffordville Reservoir Company’s dam burst, flooding the valley for a distance of five miles and causing the loss of two lives. The dam, on the east branch of the Willimantic River, gave way at 6 a.m. and washed away bridges, smaller dams, houses, tenements, a church, livery stables and the manufacturing district from Staffordville to Stafford Springs, placing about one thousand people out of work. Most of the mills destroyed were cotton and woolen factories. The freight depot, a large number of freight cars, and two to three miles of the New London Northern railroad were also destroyed or swept away. At the time the reservoir was one and one quarter miles long and covered six-hundred acres. The dam had been recently raised several feet and at the time of the flood was full for the first time since the changes. The pressure of the additional water and the recent rains caused its failure.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/bursting-of-the-staffordville-reservoir-today-in-history/

Thursday, March 26, 2020

CT does not track nursing home workers with coronavirus

State officials are not tracking how many nursing home workers systemwide have tested positive or are self-isolating, raising concerns about transmission and staffing levels.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-does-not-track-nursing-home-workers-with-15160616.php

Golf Courses Take Measures to Keep Golfers Safe During Coronavirus Pandemic

A beautiful day in Connecticut brought out a lot of golfers looking for some fresh air and a safe outdoor activity. “I just needed to get out of the house,” said Rich Maiolo from Winchester. “You need to get out on days like today and I’m tired of raking my yard already,” added Joe Koniusheski from Cromwell. “Enough TV and...

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/golf-courses-take-measures-to-keep-golfers-safe-during-coronavirus-pandemic/2245876/

NFL Keeping Its Draft in April as Scheduled

Commissioner Roger Goodell told NFL teams on Thursday that the draft will go on as originally scheduled for next month. The draft will still take place April 23-25. It was originally scheduled for a big outdoor production in Las Vegas, but those plans were scrapped because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a memo obtained by The Associated Press, Goodell said...

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/nfl-keeping-its-draft-in-april-as-scheduled/2245883/

CT hospitals scramble for needed supplies

Hospitals across the state are scrambling to obtain supplies for what could be a tsunami of coronavirus patients in the next few weeks — and hoping those supplies can be found.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-hospitals-scramble-for-needed-supplies-15160229.php

COVID-19 Update March 26, 2020.

Connecticut Public Health releases COVID-19 Update March 26, 2020.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1285

Google classroom falters, students lose connection

Sometime around noon Thursday, the popular school web-based learning system faltered in some districts.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/Google-classroom-down-for-some-15159693.php

Harlem Globetrotters Great Curly Neal Dies at 77

Fred “Curly” Neal, the dribbling wizard who entertained millions with the Harlem Globetrotters for parts of three decades, has died

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/harlem-globetrotters-great-curly-neal-dies-at-77/2245706/

Indianapolis 500 Postponed Until August

The Indianapolis 500 scheduled for May 24 has been postponed until August because of the coronavirus pandemic and won't run on Memorial Day weekend for the first time since 1946

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/indianapolis-500-postponed-until-august/2245628/

Gov. Lamont wants disaster declaration from Trump

Citing accelerating coronavirus cases in CT, Gov. Ned Lamont on Thursday asked the White House to declare a disaster to make state eligible for a variety of relief.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Gov-Lamont-wants-disaster-declaration-from-Trump-15159208.php

DOT releases figures on how much traffic has decreased

“It’s pretty obvious the reduced traffic volume coincides with people working from home and only going out when they really need to,” a DOT spokesman said.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/DOT-releases-figures-on-how-much-traffic-has-15159207.php

Two new flu deaths in Connecticut

Flu is still in Connecticut and two more people died from the illness last week.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Two-new-flu-deaths-in-Connecticut-15158960.php

Water main break reported in Stratford

Estimated restoration time is between 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Water-main-break-reported-in-Stratford-15158793.php

BBB warns CT residents of all-out blitz by scammers

The Better Business Bureau warns that scammers are already attempting to dupe people into entering bank numbers on websites tricked up as gateways to stimulus funds.



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/BBB-warns-CT-residents-of-all-out-blitz-by-15158833.php

WNBA Draft Will Be Virtual Event This Season Due to Pandemic

The WNBA has announced its draft will be a virtual event this season due to the coronavirus pandemic

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/wnba-draft-will-be-virtual-event-this-season-due-to-pandemic/2245517/

CT State Police officer charged with assault in Rhode Island

Trooper Marwing Pena was charged with disorderly conduct and simple assault by the Pawtucket, R.I. police department and is due to appear in Providence District Court Thursday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/CT-State-Police-officer-charged-with-assault-in-15158333.php

I-95 Reaches New London

By Nancy Finlay

The Thames River crossing at New London has always been a critical point on the overland route from New York to Providence, Rhode Island. Initially, travelers relied on a ferry to help them complete their journey through southeastern Connecticut. Additional help came in the late 19th century in the form of a railroad bridge that carried people and freight across the river. Later, upon the arrival of the automobile, authorities built a new railroad bridge and converted the old bridge for use by cars and trucks, but even this soon proved inadequate.

Photograph of the Railroad Bridge over the Thames, New London

Photograph of the “Railroad Bridge over the Thames” from Views of New London, 1908

The Gold Star Memorial Bridge

Construction of a new highway bridge across the Thames River between New London and Groton began in 1941. Despite delays caused by the United States’ entry into World War II, workers completed the bridge for its opening to the public on February 27, 1943. In 1951, officials renamed it the Gold Star Memorial Bridge in honor of servicemen who gave their lives in World War I and World War II.

With the postwar development of the Interstate Highway System, the single-span bridge soon proved unable to handle the ever-increasing flow of traffic. In 1963, planning began for a second span to carry additional lanes of traffic and for an elaborate interchange connecting the highway with local roads, and a year later, the bridge officially became part of Interstate 95.

Local businessmen opposed the original plan for the new bridge, which called for the elimination of Hodges Square, a flourishing business district with appliance stores, bakeries, food markets, and plenty of parking. The Hodges Square Businessmen’s Association protested the destruction of the area. Eventually officials approved an alternate plan that “saved” Hodges Square, though cynical city officials predicted that the businesses would “wither away” once the highway entered service and the area found itself cut-off from the rest of the city.

I-95 Construction Carves Up New London

The new highway ramps cut through densely built-up areas occupied by houses, businesses, and historic sites in New London. One ramp looped around the Old Town Mill, a structure originally constructed in the 17th century and rebuilt following the burning of New London by Benedict Arnold during the Revolutionary War.

Photograph of the Old Town Mill, Built 1650

Photograph of the “Old Town Mill, Built 1650” from Views of New London, 1908

Officials seized entire blocks by right of eminent domain and tore them down to make way for the highway. The 1773 Nathan Hale School House, where the patriot spy taught from 1774 to 1775, had to be moved from a site on Crystal Avenue (not its original location) to a more accessible site downtown. The rectory of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, a Roman Catholic church built to serve Polish immigrants to New London, had been torn down when the first span of the bridge was built. When the second span began to emerge, the church itself was in the way and had to be moved to Watertown, leaving its parishioners behind in an area that was becoming increasingly marginalized. A firehouse, a school, and numerous other structures were also in the way of construction and had to be relocated.

Traffic patterns changed as construction proceeded and the district slid into what appeared to be an irreversible decline. Riverside Park, a popular destination in the early 20th century, also wound up on the “wrong side” of the highway. Early postcards show winding drives, grassy lawns, and spectacular views of the Thames River, but by the 1970s, the park became much reduced in size and few amenities remained.

Historic Preservation Efforts

In the 1960s and 1970s, many simply viewed these changes as the price of progress. The same thing was happening in other cities in Connecticut, and all across America. To combat the loss of important sites, historic preservation efforts focused on significant architectural monuments. In New London, for example, successful efforts managed to save such buildings as the H. H. Richardson train station and a series of Greek revival houses known as Whale Oil Row.

It was not until the 21st century that preservationists began to take a broader approach, however, preserving or restoring whole neighborhoods. Efforts to revitalize Hodges Square began in 2012 with the creation of a master plan to reconnect the area with downtown New London. The location, sandwiched between Connecticut College and the United States Coast Guard Academy and in close proximity to the river, has become a symbol of New London’s efforts to revitalize a once-thriving commercial district.

Nancy Finlay grew up in Manchester, Connecticut. She has a BA from Smith College and an MFA and PhD from Princeton University. From 1998 to 2015, she was Curator of Graphics at the Connecticut Historical Society.

Photograph A View of Riverside Park, New London

Photograph “A View of Riverside Park,” New London from Views of New London, 1908



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/i-95-reaches-new-london/

Video – Emily Dunning Barringer Tribute Film

YouTubeConnecticut Women’s Hall of Fame

The Connecticut Women’s Hall of Fame pays tribute to long-time New Canaan resident, Dr. Emily Barringer, the first female ambulance surgeon and first female physician in the nation to secure a surgical residency. A pioneer for women in medicine, Barringer was determined to overcome the barriers that limited female physicians at the turn of the century. She successfully lobbied Congress during World War II to allow woman physicians to serve as commissioned officers in the medical corps of the army and navy.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/video-emily-dunning-barringer-tribute-film/

Connecticut Suffragists 1919

Connecticut Suffragists, 1919

Connecticut Suffragists, 1919 – Connecticut State Library

Despite the fact that the women in this well-known photograph are unidentified, Connecticut was home to many important figures in women’s struggle for equal rights. One of the most prominent early suffragists in Connecticut was Isabella Beecher Hooker, sister of Harriet Beecher Stowe.  Hooker was one of the founders of the New England Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. In 1871, the group helped to sponsor a suffrage convention in Washington, DC Hooker also testified with Susan B. Anthony at various Congressional hearings, supporting a Constitutional amendment to grant women the right to vote.  Advocates in Connecticut, as well as across the nation, stepped up their campaign for equal rights in the years immediately following World War I. These efforts paid off handsomely, and Congress passed the 19th amendment erasing gender discrimination in voter eligibility. The amendment was ratified in 1920.  Connecticut’s Republican political boss, J. Henry Roraback, urged Connecticut’s congressional delegation not to support the amendment.  He also rejected all calls for a special legislative session  to ratify it, in fear that 200,000 new voters would disrupt the Republican control of the state.  Only after the necessary 36 states had ratified did Connecticut act. In 1920, five women were elected to the Connecticut House of Representatives, and four years later, one was elected to the Senate. The state has made significant progress since then, offering dozens of women the opportunity to serve both in the House of Representatives and in the Senate.

<< PreviousNext >>



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/connecticut-suffragists-1919/

William Redfield Born – Today in History: March 26

On March 26, 1789, William C. Redfield, the noted American meteorologist, was born in Middletown. Redfield had observed after a hurricane that trees in central Connecticut had toppled toward the northeast, but trees to the west had fallen in the opposite direction. From these observations, he was able to demonstrate that tropical storms move in a cyclonic path and his research helped develop a set of rules to assist mariners caught in tropical storms avoid the worst dangers. Redfield was also the first president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/william-redfield-born-today-in-history/

New highway ramps planned on Route 15 in Orange

The project will include a NB Route 15 acceleration lane from Route 34 westbound and a SB Route 15 deceleration lane.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/New-highway-ramps-planned-on-Route-15-in-Orange-15158236.php

Tokyo Olympics Looking for a New Date for Opening, Closing

The Tokyo Olympics need new dates for the opening and closing ceremonies in 2021.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/tokyo-olympics-looking-for-a-new-date-for-opening-closing/2245360/

Sunny skies, mild temps; a good day to go outside

Rain is in the forecast for Friday and the weekend



from News https://www.ctpost.com/weather/article/Sunny-skies-mild-temps-a-good-day-to-go-outside-15158097.php

Metro-North announces details of reduced service that starts Friday

Metro-North announces details of reduced service that starts Friday



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Metro-North-announces-details-of-reduced-service-15158070.php

Coronavirus in Connecticut: Live updates, hour-by-hour

Here are the latest coronavirus updates, reported as they become available.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Coronavirus-in-Connecticut-Live-updates-15156705.php

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

New US Soccer Leadership Says Settling Women’s Inequality Lawsuit Is a Priority

The newly installed president and chief executive officer of the U.S. Soccer Federation used their first news conference to state that settling a lawsuit filed by women's national team players is a top priority.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/us-soccer-women-inequality/2245263/

No injuries in Bridgeport armed robbery

Bridgeport police are investigating an armed robbery Wednesday night.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/No-injuries-in-Bridgeport-armed-robbery-15157696.php

FAA says no passengers on Collings Foundation aircraft after deadly CT crash

Passengers are no longer allowed aboard the Collings Foundation’s aircraft, according to a recent FAA decision.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/FAA-says-no-passengers-on-Collings-Foundations-15157635.php

Olympic Delay Leaves Athletes Uncertain About Sponsorships

Sponsorship executives in the Olympic world are mulling the ramifications of the postponement of the Tokyo Games until 2021 due to the coronavirus.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/olympic-delay-leaves-athletes-uncertain-sponsorships/2245171/

Trumbull priests bestow Lenten blessings against coronavirus from overhead

The pastor and associate pastor of St. Theresa Roman Catholic Church took to the skies to bless parishioners and non-parishioners alike during the coronavirus pandemic.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Trumbull-priests-bestow-Lenten-blessings-against-15157253.php

US Justice Department: Don’t Treat Trans Athletes as Girls

The U.S. Justice Department is getting involved in a federal civil rights lawsuit that seeks to block transgender athletes in Connecticut from competing as girls in interscholastic sports. Attorney General William Barr signed what is known as a statement of interest Tuesday, arguing against the policy of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference, the board that oversees the state’s high school athletic competitions....

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/us-justice-department-dont-treat-trans-athletes-as-girls/2245100/

COVID-19 Update March 25, 2020.

Connecticut Public Health releases COVID-19 Update March 25, 2020.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1282

Proposed Capital Improvement Plan

The Proposed Capital Improvement Plan 2020-2021 through 2024-2025

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1281

Playground and Court Restrictions

Dear Newington, It is our responsibility to keep the residents of our community as safe as possible. In order to do so, we must enforce an appropriate level of park and school ground restrictions to mitigate the spread of COVID -19.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1280

TPZ Public Hearing 04/06/2020

The Town Plan and Zoning Commission will consider the following petitions...

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1277

Town Plan and Zoning Commission Meetings During the COVID-19 Emergency

TPZ meetings will resume in April using a different format...

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1278

Playground and Court Restrictions

Dear Newington, It is our responsibility to keep the residents of our community as safe as possible. In order to do so, we must enforce an appropriate level of park and school ground restrictions to mitigate the spread of COVID -19.

from Newington, CT - News Flash https://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=1279

CT private schools tackle remote learning, fee collection and recruitment during coronavirus shutdown

Private and Catholic schools in Connecticut are aligning their schedule with the governor’s mandates, but have the added charge of trying to recruit students and collect tuition amidst the shutdown.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/CT-private-schools-tackle-remote-learning-fee-15156789.php

MLB Airing 30 Classic Games Digitally on Postponed Opening Day

Major League Baseball will air 30 games across its digital platforms Thursday, filling the schedule for an Opening Day postponed by the coronavirus pandemic

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/mlb-airing-30-classic-games-digitally-on-postponed-opening-day/2244970/

University of Bridgeport cuts athletics staff due to coronavirus shutdown

University of Bridgeport President Laura Trombley says athletics are not being cut, but for now the athletic staff has been furloughed.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/University-of-Bridgeport-cuts-athletics-staff-due-15156605.php

Lamont, New York governor dismiss White House advice for NYC visitors to self-quarantine

Noting a sharp reduction of riders on New Haven-New York train line, Gov. Lamont says social distancing is taking place and more commuters are working remotely.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Lamont-New-York-governor-dismiss-White-House-15156575.php

State rolling out small business loans up to $75,000

The state will immediately roll out a no-interest loan program of up to $75,000 for small businesses hit by the coronavirus crisis, David Lehman, Gov. Ned Lamont’s economics chief, said Wednesday.

The program is small by the standards of the tsunami washing out commerce in the state, the nation and the world. In the first round it will total $20 million to $25 million, enough to finance about 600 businesses with a quick cash infusion in the range of $40,000 each.

In a state economy worth $280 billion a year, with about 90,000 companies — many of them sole proprietorships — that’s not meant to save the state on its own. Rather, Lehman said, it’s a fast-turnaround bridge until small businesses can borrow through much larger federal programs, or through banks and other private lenders - all of which have huge new infusions totaling trillions of dollars.

“The state is not going to be the small biz lender to the entire state. We’re trying to do something meaningful and flexible and we’re trying to lead by example,” Lehman said. “The banking system is where the money is going to come from.”

Lehman said his Department of Economic and Community Development surveys show 90 percent of Connecticut businesses have taken a hit to revenue, but 50 percent are still working at or near full capacity, with a lot of supply chains, in manufacturing, for example, still intact.

The Connecticut recovery bridge loan program is about the same size in dollars as a similar plan launched by Massachusetts, which has a much larger economy. Previously, Lamont and Lehman announced a loan forbearance program, under which 800 existing borrowers in the Small Business Express program received three-month reprieves for payments - a benefit worth a...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/State-rolling-out-small-business-loans-up-to-15156547.php

Danbury Hospital ‘saved my husband’s life,’ wife of CT’s first coronavirus patient says

The Wilton man is now breathing on his own after being placed in a medically induced coma.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Danbury-Hospital-saved-my-husband-s-life-15156369.php

Coronavirus stimulus will include ‘four-figure checks’ for Americans

After five days of furious negotiating, the bill is expected to pass the Senate Wednesday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/Coronavirus-stimulus-will-include-four-figure-15156402.php

NBA Star Reveals Mother is in Medically-Induced Coma Because of Coronavirus

Minnesota Timberwolves star Karl-Anthony Towns revealed his mother is in a medically-induced coma because of coronavirus.

from Sports – NBC Connecticut https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/coronavirus/nba-star-reveals-his-mother-in-medically-induced-coma-because-of-coronavirus/2244834/

Triangle Shirtwaist Fire: Connecticut Lessons from a Tragedy

Sol Bidek’s family lived in a tenement on Market Street in Hartford. They waited several days for word from New York. Finally, they got the news: their sister was safe. The young garment worker had not been killed in the horrific Triangle Shirtwaist fire.

The disaster occurred in the New York City garment factory on March 25, 1911. One hundred forty-six workers perished, mostly young Jewish and Italian women, some as young as 14. Their escape from the inferno was blocked by poor building construction, a lack of adequate fire escapes, and an exit door the boss locked, workers said, to keep employees from stealing the goods.

News article from the Hartford Courant referencing Zephyriah Couture's Death, March 27, 1911.

News article from the Hartford Courant referencing Zephyriah Couture’s Death, March 27, 1911.

The infamous Triangle Shirtwaist fire also had another Hartford connection—one of the many acts of bravery that saved lives that March day. George LeWitt was a Hartford High School graduate whose family lived on Windsor Street. On the day of the fire, George was studying law at New York University. He was in a school building directly across from the Triangle shop when he and other students heard workers’ screams and saw bodies falling. George and others raced to the roof and extended ladders to the desperate garment workers. The students’ actions saved at least forty young women.

Reports of the tragedy rocked the country. Newspapers filled their pages with shocking descriptions of working girls flinging themselves to their deaths from the tenth floor of the Triangle building. Authorities lined up badly burned bodies in a makeshift morgue; it took days to identify those burned beyond recognition. (The names of the final six victims were only ascertained in 2011.) Triangle owners Max Blanck and Isaac Harris never spent a day in jail, and even when they lost a 1913 civil suit, the company’s insurance policy awarded the two men more than they paid out in fines to the victims’ families.

The Triangle Shirtwaist tragedy sparked union organizing efforts and a wide range of new safety laws despite manufacturers in Hartford and throughout the nation moving vigorously to block those reforms. If workplaces are safer today—and they are, thanks to state and federal OSHA laws and labor unions’ vigilance—it is in part because of the Triangle victims.

Early 20th-Century Worker Safety in Connecticut

In 1911, Connecticut workplaces were extremely dangerous. On the very same day as the Triangle fire, Hartford’s Zephyriah Couture was crushed to death while he oiled a pumping engine at the Dunbar Brothers factory. In fact, during the thirty-day period before and after the Triangle disaster, fires destroyed five Connecticut businesses, causing hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages. Couture and at least six other workers—mechanics, laborers, and trolley car conductors—died in separate incidents around the state. Others became permanently disabled, like Bridgeport worker Thomas Gray whose leg required amputation after an accident during the repair of a freight elevator.

News article from the Hartford Courant referencing Thomas Gray's accident, March 21, 1911.

News article from the Hartford Courant referencing Thomas Gray’s accident, March 21, 1911.

At Hartford’s state capitol, debate raged over safety legislation and other laws that protected workers’ rights to organize effective unions. A West Hartford lawmaker pressed for tough new safety standards, charging that Connecticut’s factories and hotels were the worst in New England. The few fire laws that existed, he reported, lacked enforcement. A spokesman for the Manufacturers’ Association, however, thought the present laws sufficient. A legislative move to reduce children’s work hours to 58 hours a week received support from those who feared for the minors’ health and safety, but State Comptroller Thomas Bradstreet opposed the bill, arguing that “the boys and girls of the factories will take care of themselves.”

The growing movement for worker safety had many allies, which helped, in part, to offset the power of the big business lobby to obstruct reforms. Assistance came from sympathetic legislators including State Senator Thomas Spellacy (a local attorney who also defended striking workers arrested on picket lines), Consumers League head Mary Welles, and Rev. Rockwell Harmon Potter, pastor of Center Congregational Church, who spoke in the pulpit and at the state house in favor of labor and safety law improvements.

But working people themselves really led the fight for safer jobs. As the famous union organizer Rose Schneiderman told a New York crowd just days after the Triangle fire: “The life of men and women is so cheap! And property is so sacred! Too much blood has been spilled. I know from experience it is up to working people to save themselves. And the only way is a strong working class movement.”

Connecticut’s Working Class Organizes

Sage Allen delivery truck, Market Street, Hartford, ca. 1913 - Connecticut Historical Society

Sage Allen delivery truck, Market Street, Hartford, ca. 1913 – Connecticut Historical Society

Hartford’s Rebecca Weiner took that charge seriously. Management fired her from the Sage Allen department store for trying to organize a union. Three hundred Hartford tailors at ten clothing stores were then locked out of their jobs when they refused to handle work from Sage Allen. Weiner and the other alteration tailors exposed the “insanitary conditions” at the store, according to the president of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU). Hartford shops, the union reported, had no fire escapes even though they operated many floors above street level. Rebecca Weiner argued that without a union, “no working girl could ply her honest trade in the…polluting atmosphere that environs her struggle for a living wage and decent working conditions.” Despite losing this strike, the union survived and continued organizing immigrant workers in Hartford.

Today, the fight continues for safe workplaces. The labor/community coalition known as ConnectiCOSH stresses that workers need the proper protections, the right tools, complete training, and independent monitoring to keep them safe. But accountability is the key to making sure that companies require workers to “do the job safe, not just quick,” according to ConnectiCOSH spokesman Steven Schrag. The group holds CEOs personally responsible for providing adequate safety and health programs in the workplace.

In Hartford’s Bushnell Park, near the Civil War arch, is a new Workers Memorial monument. Its dedication took place a few weeks after the 2010 explosion at the Kleen Energy construction site in Middletown that killed 6 workers and injured more than 50. On the memorial is a quote from Mother Jones, who organized workers during the time of the Triangle tragedy. It is a sentiment in need of remembrance: “Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the living.”

Steve Thornton is a retired union organizer who writes for the Shoeleather History Project



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/triangle-shirtwaist-fire-connecticut-lessons-from-a-tragedy/

CT governor mulls the $2B question: grace period on premiums?

Connecticut’s insurance commissioner extended a formal request to carriers to allow a grace period on payments spanning all types of coverage over the coming two months.



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/CT-governor-mulls-the-2B-question-grace-period-15155667.php

Starting Friday, Metro-North to reduce service

Starting Friday, Metro-North will provide hourly service on the Harlem, Hudson and New Haven lines, with extra trains added during peak ties.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Starting-Friday-Metro-North-to-reduce-service-15155633.php

Connecticut’s First Municipal Electric Utility

By Edward T. Howe

The first municipal electric plant in Connecticut began operating in the City of South Norwalk in 1892 to provide low-cost electricity for street lighting and, a few years later, for homes and businesses. Four more municipalities acquired their own facilities between the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1976 a wholesale power supply system was created that would serve the needs of both municipal electric utilities and other participants.

South Norwalk, located in the southwestern part of the state on Long Island Sound, was known in the 18th century as “Old Well.” Its economy centered on farming, shipbuilding, crafts, shellfish, and coastal trade. During the 19th century it industrialized, with factories providing woolen goods, locks and keys, shoes, and hats. As it prospered, Old Well formally became the City of South Norwalk – within the town of Norwalk – in 1870.

Gas-Lighting in Connecticut

Gas for lighting purposes, at least that offered by private firms, had been evident in Connecticut since at least the mid-19th century. However, a new source of illumination appeared in Hartford in 1882 when a private electrical generating plant began operating. Meanwhile, the first municipal electric plant in the nation opened in Fairfield, Iowa in the same year.

Article from the Norwalk Evening Gazette (December 10, 1898)

Although small investor-owned electric facilities quickly spread across Connecticut, it took a decade before the first municipal electric plant opened in the state. The rationale for the plant can be traced to 1887 when two private firms – the Norwalk Gas Light Company and the Norwalk and South Norwalk Electric Light Company – were authorized to sell electricity. Although they initially competed, the Norwalk Gas Light Company sold its electrical assets to the latter company on February 8, 1892, creating a monopoly.

Critics in South Norwalk complained, even before the monopoly was created, that the cost of street lighting was too high and the service undependable. Finding that their complaints went unheeded by the electric company, a citizens group proposed municipal ownership of a generating plant as a not-for-profit alternative. The monopoly argued that the proposed plant could not be built for the appropriated amount and, if constructed, not capable of being operated at its estimated outlays. Nevertheless, city residents approved a bond issue of $22,500 for construction of the municipal electric plant – the first such facility in Connecticut.

On October 13, 1892 the plant (South Norwalk Electric Works) began operating, but only to supply street lighting. The original electric installation had an iron chimney, one horizontal tubular boiler, a 100 horsepower steam engine (with diesel oil engines installed after 1905), a feed water heater, a pump, an injector, all necessary piping, two 60 light arc dynamos, a switch-board, all necessary electrical appliances, tools, office fixtures, and a pole line system supplying 86 arc lamps. In 1897 an addition to the plant was approved for commercial lighting (homes and businesses), with service beginning on August 1, 1898. As with street lighting, a flat rate system for service was initially used, but the firm switched to a meter system for all services in 1903. Commercial demand for electric service was so great that the plant had to be enlarged six times between 1892 and 1910.

Meanwhile, the East Norwalk Fire District (created in 1894) was authorized by the state legislature in 1906 to maintain sewers and light the streets. In 1908 it created its electric substation and bought its electricity from the South Norwalk plant for street lighting. It built its own generating facility in 1914, negating the need for electricity from the South Norwalk plant.

Norwalk Consolidates

In 1913 the City of Norwalk was incorporated by consolidating the cities of South Norwalk and Norwalk, the East Norwalk Fire District, and the remaining portions of the surrounding town of Norwalk. After the consolidation, the city of South Norwalk became the Second Taxing District and the East Norwalk Fire District became the Third Taxing District. Each taxing district retained ownership and operation of its electric plants. Since the Second Taxing District also retained ownership of its water facilities, it formed a new entity – South Norwalk Electric and Water.

Utility Poles Outside the South Norwalk Railroad Station – 1909

An 1893 law authorizing gas and electric plants for cities, towns, and boroughs encouraged other municipalities to construct their own facilities. Consequently, electric utilities were established in the Boroughs of Jewett City in 1897, Wallingford in 1899, Groton in 1904, and the City of Norwich in 1904. Bozrah Power and Light Company, originally a private firm, was bought by the City of Groton in 1995 and became a wholly-owned subsidiary. As with South Norwalk, these utilities own their retail distribution facilities (poles and wires connected to homes and businesses). They are governed by elected or appointed commissioners regarding their financial condition and operations.

Faced with the need to purchase increasingly expensive electric power from investor-owned firms, three municipal utilities – Groton, Jewett City, and Norwich – formed the Connecticut Municipal Electric Energy Cooperative (CMEEC) in 1976. Over time, the other municipal electric utilities joined the wholesaler – including South Norwalk Electric and Water on March 1, 1988. Located in Norwich, this member-directed wholesale supplier has continued to provide low-cost electric power from various sources to its municipal owners and other participants who, in turn, have distributed it to their residential, commercial, industrial, and business customers.

Edward T. Howe, Ph.D., is a Professor of Economics, Emeritus, at Siena College near Albany, New York.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/connecticuts-first-municipal-electric-utility/

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Orange mother’s quick action saves 4 kids from fire

Officials are praising an Orange mother after she saved her four children from a house fire late Monday afternoon.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Orange-mother-s-quick-action-saves-4-kids-from-15155080.php

White House: People recently in New York City area should self-isolate for two weeks

Due to high rates of coronavirus infection, individuals should self-isolate for a total of 14 days from the date they departed New York City and surrounding metro area.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/White-House-People-recently-in-New-York-City-15154915.php

1 charged in Waterbury murder case

Waterbury police say a homicide suspect turned himself in to police on an active arrest warrant Tuesday.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/policereports/article/1-charged-in-Waterbury-murder-case-15154312.php

200 new infections, growing numbers in New Haven County

Virus is rapidly expanding into New Haven County.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/coronavirus/article/200-new-infections-growing-numbers-in-New-Haven-15154304.php

Passersby pull driver from tractor trailer rollover in Monroe

Firefighters responded for a reported rollover crash with injuries. When they got there, passersby had already helped the driver out of the vehicle.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Passersby-pull-driver-from-tractor-trailer-15154140.php

Bridgeport man gets 3 years in prison for trafficking guns to CT from Georgia

Brannon Winston, 24, was sentenced to 40 months in prison for trafficking firearms to Bridgeport, some of which were used in shootings, offi...