This video is about an early movie theater in Hartford that existed on Asylum Street from 1912 until 1927. The Empire Theater was a conversion of a former Methodist Church that was built in 1860. Stories in this video include tales from the snow storm of 1915, a boy who fell asleep and was locked in the theater, and the acrimonious end of the Empire.
New Video: Lost Movie Theaters of Hartford, CT
In this video I talk about 10 lost movie theaters that once existed in downtown Hartford, Connecticut. I also mention several more theaters that existed beyond downtown.
New Video: History of Dutch Point Part Three: The Power Plant
This is a video about the Dutch Point power plant that stood along the Connecticut River in Hartford from 1904 until 1962. I also talk about the South Meadow power plant, the burying of the Park River and construction of the highway.
New Video: History of Dutch Point Part Two: Connecticut River Log Drives
In this video I talk about the great log drives down the Connecticut River from northern New Hampshire to Massachusetts and to Hartford, Connecticut, where millions of feet of logs were brought (circa 1876 to 1885) to the saw mill at Dutch Point.
New Video: History of Dutch Point Part One: House of Hope & Shipbuilding
This is the first in a series of videos about Dutch Point in Hartford, Connecticut. This peninsula, formed by the junction of the Park (or Little) River and the Connecticut River was called Dutch Point because it was near the Dutch trading post called the House of Hope that was here in the 17th century. By the 19th century, Dutch Point was the site of shipbuilding and a saw mill operation.
John Pelton, Jr. House (1796)
In 1796, John Pelton, Jr. erected a one and a half-story gambrel-roofed house at what is now 64 Indian Hill Avenue in Portland. At a later date the house was raised to a full two stories, with the second story having a hewn overhang above the first story.
Former Noank Jail (1913)
In 1850 a small square building was erected to serve as a temporary lock-up near where the railway Depot is located today in village of Noank in Groton. In 1913 the building was sold and moved to its current lot at 87 Main Street in Noank. It was then used for various purposes over the years, including a barbershop, a speakeasy, and an insurance office, before becoming a private residence. Additions over time have included a rear kitchen, side garage, and a back porch.