New Video: Old Hartford CT Riverfront – Lost Buildings at Commerce and Ferry Streets
Photographs taken in the first decade of the 20th century provide a view of buildings that stood near Hartford, CT’s riverfront in its great days as a river port. In this video you will learn about the development of Ferry Street and the old days of Hartford’s trade with the West Indies. Also the first bridge across the Connecticut River here, built in 1809, and some of the people who lived and worked in the area, including Thomas Blake, firefighter and coppersmith, and Asa Farwell, famous for his cherry bounce.
New Video: Long Lost Traces of Hartford’s Old Riverfront
Hartford, Connecticut’s riverfront has gone through many changes over the years. Long before the highway came through, the Valley Railroad was built in 1871 through the warehouse district by the river. A number of old warehouses and fish markets, documented in photographs in the 1860s and 1870s, were demolished around this time. I talk about them in this video, as well as a sycamore tree that survived next to the river from Hartford’s earliest colonial days, through its great era commercial activity along the river, and into the 1890s.
New Video: Lost GRANDeur – Hartford’s Grand/New Parsons Theater, 1914-1961
New Video on Mark Twain’s Hartford Neighborhood: Nook Farm
Mark Twain lived for 20 years in the neighborhood of Nook Farm in Hartford, Connecticut, 17 of them in his own house, which is now a museum. This video is about Mark Twain’s house in the context of Nook Farm and the houses of his neighbors, who included Harriet Beecher Stowe, John and Isabella Beecher Hooker, the young William Gillette, Charles Dudley Warner and his brother George H. Warner, and many others. Katharine Hepburn later grew up in a house in Nook Farm.
New Video: Hartford’s Lost Needham’s Corner, Main Street Before the Highway
The building at Needham’s Corner, right at the point where Main Street in Hartford, CT bends to the northwest, existed for over 90 years before it and its neighbors was demolished circa 1961 to make way for Interstate 84. The building was erected in 1868 as the home and liquor business of Michael C. Needham and was later occupied by the liquor business of Colonel William Donague and his partner Philip S. Kennedy. During Prohibition, other businesses moved in, but from 1933, until it was taken down, the building was home to two restaurants: first the Tally-ho and then the Tiara.
New Video on Lost Hartford CT: Intersection of Main and Morgan Streets Before the Highway
North of Morgan Street, where I-84 passes under Main Street in Hartford, Connecticut, once stood Rev. Horace Bushnell’s North Congregational Church. It was later Germania Hall and then Herrup’s Furniture store, which burned down in 1932. North of it on Village Street was the Silver Brothers Building. South of Morgan Street, there’s now a parking lot that was once the location of the the Cadden Building (Demolished 1920), the First Baptist Church (demolished 1927), and the 7-story Pilgard Building (demolished in 1965).