In my recent Substack article I talk about a lost Federal style mansion that stood on Pavilion Street in the city’s Clay-Arsenal neighborhood. Check out the article to learn more about this house’s history, which over the years served as a billiard resort and a school.
My latest video is about two lost Hartford mansions. The Ely family homes stood on Main Street, where the Capitol Prep Magnet School is today. They were built in 1811 and 1830-1832 by William Ely, a wealthy shipping merchant who had a town called Elyton named for him in Alabama. Elton was later absorbed into the city of Birmingham, but the Elyton Hotel in Birmingham and Ely Street in Hartford perpetuate his name today.
This video gives the background on the Keney Memorial Clock Tower in Hartford, Connecticut. It was built on the site of Henry and Walter Keney’s wholesale grocery business and next door was the brother’s Greek Revival style mansion, which is now lost. There is doubt about whether the Tower was built as a monument to Keney business or to the mother who raised them.
This is a compilation of my videos about Hartford department stores: Steiger-Vedder, Sage-Allen, Wise-Smith, Brown-Thomson, G. Fox, and the West Hartford Lord & Taylor.
This video features fifteen houses considered to be mansions in their time that were built between 1798 and the 1870s in Hartford, CT. They range from the elegant Federal-style residences of the early 1800s to later homes built in the Greek Revival, Gothic Revival, Italianate and French Second Empire styles.
This video is a series of extended quotations from the Hartford Courant newspaper printed between 1905 and 1908 about old buildings that existed along the Connecticut River in Hartford, Connecticut, some that were lost when the Bulkeley Bridge was built in 1908 and some when the Valley Railroad came through in 1871.
Calvary Episcopal Church, which is a Gothic Revival-style stone building on Church Street in the Borough of Stonington, is not large, but is connected to a huge name in ecclesiastical architecture: Richard Upjohn, who also designed Trinity Church in Manhattan. His son, Richard M. Upjohn, was the architect of the Connecticut State Capitol Building in Hartford. The Calvary Episcopal parish was established in 1849 and the church was consecrated in 1849. The church faces west, with its side along Church Street, and directly across from it is a board-and-batten chapel, also designed by Upjohn, that was built as a Sunday School room in 1859. It was moved to its current location in 1892 and faces east. A three-sided enclosure is formed because a rectory, that is set back from the other two buildings and faces north, was erected where the chapel had stood.
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