Judge Albert E. Purple House (1850)

The house at 34 Plains Road, across from Moodus Green in East Haddam, was built c. 1850. It was the home of Judge Albert E. Purple (1823-1924), an owner of three successful twine mills in Moodus. In 1878 he formed the Undine Twine Mills. He was also a partner in the Purple & Stillman dry goods store, a bank president, a judge of probate, a state legislator and a primary benefactor of the East Haddam Public Library, donating funds and land for a building. At the time of his death, he was the wealthiest man in town.

Frank C. Fowler House (1890)

The house at 30 Plains Road, on the east side of the Moodus Green in East Haddam, was built c. 1890. It was the home of Frank C. Fowler. Born in 1859, Fowler served in the state General Assembly in 1897. According to his biography in Taylor’s Legislative History and Souvenir of Connecticut for 1897-1898, “Since 1882 he has been prosperously engaged in the manufacture of proprietary remedies, and is also proprietor of the well known Oak Grove Stock Farm.” He is further described as, “an ardent sportsman owning one of the largest game preserves in the country, and has given attention to the propagation and protection of our native game.” He also built a harness race track on the flats above the Green. Fowler’s 110′ yacht the Huntress was commissioned by the navy in 1898 for duty in the Spanish-American War.

Trumbull Congregational Church (1899)

The Congregational Church in Trumbull was first established in 1730. Services were initially held at Pulpit Rock on White Plains Road. The first meeting house was built on the corner of White Plains Road and Unity Road. The congregation’s second meeting house was built in 1747 on what is now Church Hill Road, just west of where the Helen Plumb Building would be built in 1883. Over the years, the expanding road moved closer to the church and many a horse and wagon, coming down the hill on icy days, collided with the corner of the building. In 1842 a new church was erected on the same site, but located further back toward the Pequonnock River. A fire destroyed this building in 1898. The cornerstone for the current church, built at a new location at 3115 Reservoir Avenue, was laid on September 28, 1898 and the building was dedicated on on May 11, 1899. The church was constructed of stone quarried north of Beardsley Park.

Park Street Congregational Church (1871)

In 1867, Congregational services began to be held in East Bridgeport in the Bethesda Mission Chapel on East Washington Street. A church was formally organized the following year and in 1870-1871, Park Street Congregational Church was built at the corner of Park and Barnum Streets, fronting Washington Park. The Gothic Revival building was designed by architect Abram Skaats. The church‘s membership peaked in the 1930s and 1940s, but declined after World War II. In 1988, Park Street Congregational Church merged with Trinity United Church of Christ of Trumbull to form Unity Hill United Church of Christ, located at 364 White Plains Road in Trumbull. The former Park Street Congregational Church is now Calvary Temple Christian Center.

East Haddam

Buildings Index

Bone Mill Road
110 Hadlyme North School (1794)

Falls Road
124 Atlantic Duck Company Mill House (1855)

Johnsonville Road
39 Johnsonville Carriage House (1870)
42 Neptune Twine Mill Office (1899)
50 Gilead Chapel (1876)
50 Hyde Schoolhouse (1863)
59 Emory Johnson Homestead (1842)

Landing Hill Road
5 Epaphroditus Champion House (1794)

Main Street
6 Goodspeed Opera House (1876)
7 East Haddam Town Office Building (1935)
8 Gelston House (1853)
29 Nathan Hale Schoolhouse (1750)
30 Joseph A. Lord House (1835)
31 St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church (1890)
83 Champion House Hotel (1782)
92 Reuben Cone House (1760)

Norwich Road
7 Horace Hayden House (1818)
8 Norman S. Boardman House (1860)
12 Boardman House (1875)

Plains Road
26 James Balen House (1840)
30 Frank C. Fowler House (1890)
33 Amasa Day House (1816)
34 Judge Albert E. Purple House (1850)

River Road
67 Gillette Castle (1919)

Town Street
47 Hadlyme Congregational Church (1840)
307 Palmer-Warner House (1738)
499 First Church of Christ, Congregational (1794)

Links

East Haddam Historical Society Museum
East Haddam Historical Society & Museum – Home (easthaddamhistory.org)

Gillette Castle State Park
Gillette Castle State Park (ct.gov)

Goodspeed Opera House
http://www.goodspeed.org/

Amasa Day House (CTL)
Amasa Day House – Connecticut Landmarks (ctlandmarks.org)

Johnsonville
http://johnsonville.omeka.net/

Books

A History of the Towns of Haddam and East-Haddam (1814), by David D. Field

The Old Chimney Stacks of East Haddam, Middlesex County, Connecticut (1887), by Hosford B. Niles

“Town of East Haddam” in History of Middlesex county, Connecticut (1884)

First Congregational Church of Pomfret (2016)

The Congregational Church in Pomfret Center was organized in 1715 and its first meeting house was erected on White’s Plains, located on Pomfret Hill, just north of Needle’s Eye Road. The next meeting house was built on the town common in Pomfret Center in 1762. Interestingly, the church was painted orange. (In the coming years, the neighboring towns of Windham, Killingly, Thompson, and Brooklyn would emulate Pomfret’s example!). The church’s third meeting house was erected in 1832 on land acquired from a Dr. Waldo. The land was purchased with proceeds generated by the women of the church, who had knitted a hundred pairs of stockings to sell. In erecting the new church, builder Lemuel Holmes salvaged much of the building materials from the previous structure.

On December 7, 2013, a fire (likely caused by an accident during the repair of the building’s front steps) destroyed the historic church. It was soon rebuilt, following the original design as closely as possible, while creating a building that is a little larger than the original and set further back on the property at 13 Church Road. Construction took three years, with the new steeple being raised into place on August 30, 2016.