New Video: Three Colonial Houses That Once Stood on Main Street, Hartford

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This video is about three colonial houses that once stood on Main Street in Hartford that were all torn down over 100 years ago: the Joseph Whiting House (built in the 1600s and torn down in 1914), the Governor Joseph Talcott House (built c. 1725 and torn down in 1900), and the Col. Samuel Talcott House (built in 1770 and torn down in 1898). These demolitions have interesting stories attached to them: the Whiting House had become a saloon which stayed in business even while the house was torn down around it and a new 6-story building was constructed in its place; the Joseph Talcott House was subject to years of legal wrangling between the property owners and the city that wanted to eliminate it; and numerous Revolutionary War relics were discovered during the demolition of the Samuel Talcott house. At the end of the video I also read a bonus newspaper story about a police carriage pursuit out to West Hartford in the year 1901.

New Video: Lost Buildings of Trinity College

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The campus of Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut is famous for its Gothic Revival architecture. But  long before the college moved to its current campus in the 1870s, it was located downtown, on a now lost campus on the hill where the state capitol building stands today. In this video I talk about the lost Greek Revival-style buildings of Trinity’s original campus, as well as three buildings that have been lost from the current campus.

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New Video: Harry Bond’s Hotel Empire in Hartford

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In the early 20th century, Harry Bond had a hospitality empire in Hartford, CT. He opened the Bond Restaurant downtown in 1908. The Hotel Bond on Asylum Street was built in two stages: 1912-1913 and 1920-1921. Bond also acquired two other nearby hotels, which he named the Bond Annex and the Bondmore. Bond died in 1935 and his hotel empire, facing competition from the new Hotel Statler, eventually went bankrupt in the 1950s. Special thanks to Lawrence Plourde for permission to use his photographs of the Thomas Hooker (formerly Bond Annex) Hotel.

New Video: Hartford’s Lost Riverfront

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This video is about an urban renewal project in Hartford’s old East Side that coincided with the construction of the Bulkely Bridge in the first decade of the twentieth century. The old riverfront area was cleared to make way for the construction of the new Connecticut Boulevard. The demolished buildings included old houses, tenements, warehouses and businesses dating to a lively period along the city’s waterfront. These changes took place almost a half century before the destruction that preceded the building of Constitution Plaza and the interstate highways.

Crossing the Connecticut, a 1908 book about the building of the Bulkeley Bridge.

A better photo of Asa Farwell’s warehouse at the corner of Ferry and Commerce Streets.