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In 1742, when Bristol (known as New Cambridge) was still a part of Farmington, its residents received the privilege, from the Connecticut General Court, to have their own congregational services during the winter months. A seperate ecclesiastical society was formed in 1744 and the congregation settled its first minister in 1747. Their first meeting house was soon completed on Federal Hill Green, which had been chosen as the center of the new community. A school was completed in 1754 and, later, a second meeting house to replace the first. The current First Congregational Church is the third building on the site, constructed in 1832 at the intersection of Maple Street and Prospect Place. It was designed by Benjamin Palmer in the Greek Revival style, although the steeple has a Gothic elements.

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First Congregational Church, Bristol (1832)
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One thought on “First Congregational Church, Bristol (1832)

  • March 15, 2023 at 10:27 pm
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    I lived about 3 blocks away from this beautiful church and walked past it every morning on my way to school at the old Paterson school house. I could actually see the beautiful steeple in the winter from my bedroom window at night. It is such a beautiful church.

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