A Lost Block of Asylum Street in Hartford (Gionfriddo’s, Adajian’s and more)!

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My latest video is about the block of Asylum Street in downtown Hartford between Ann and Ford Streets. This was once the location of the beloved restaurants Gionfriddo’s and Adajian’s. Find out more about the history of this block and the many lost buildings and businesses that once existed here, like the old house that blocked Ann Street for over 80 years, a church that was turned into a movie theater, and a meat and fish market that flourished for 70 years!

History of Ford Street, Hartford (Before the Now Lost Statler-Hilton Hotel)

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This video is about the forgotten history of Ford Street, which is across from Bushnell Park in Hartford, Connecticut. Now a parking lot, it is remembered as the site of the old Statler-Hilton Hotel, which was demolished in 1990. But before the hotel was built in the early 1950s, there had been many other buildings here, including one where the city’s first Black labor union formed.

What was Asylum Street in Hartford Like in the Old Days?

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My latest video is about the block of Asylum Street in Hartford between High Street and Union Place. What used to be here before the current two buildings (the Hollander, originally the Capitol National bank, built in 1926, and the Capital Hotel, originally the Shoreham Motor Hotel, built in 1960)? I go all the way back to the 1860s to cover the history of this block, which is right across from the northwest section of Bushnell Park. I also have a new Substack post in which I go into greater detail about an 1899 fire that I mention in the video.

Historic Buildings that were Replaced by the Hartford Public Library and neighboring Federal Courthouse

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My latest video is about how old buildings along Main Street, Arch Street, and Sheldon Street in Hartford were replaced by the massive Hartford Public Library and Ribicoff Federal Building/US Courthouse. Back in the mid-1800s there were commercial blocks, houses and a church here, as well as the bridge over the Park River. The bridge survives, but the river was buried under a highway and the Library was built above the highway.

Born in Connecticut, Later Lived in Mansion in Pennsylvania.

Gifford Pinchot, who became the first head of the US Forest Service in Theodore Roosevelt’s administration and later served two separate stints as Governor of Pennsylvania, was born in his maternal grandfather’s home (pictured above) in Simsbury (now called the Simsbury 1820 House) on August 11, 1865. Pinchot’s father, James, erected a chateau-like mansion in Milford, PA in the mid-1880s. It was later the home of Gifford Pinchot and his wife Cornelia Bryce Pinchot. It’s not in Connecticut, but please check out my recent YouTube video about the mansion, which is called Grey Towers!

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Sunny Reach: A Hartford Insurance Executive’s 1919 Estate and His Cattle Herd

My new Substack post is about the estate of Hartford insurance executive Carl F. Sturhahn, who had herds of Jersey cattle on his dairy farm over a century ago. His farm and Tudor-style mansion were surrounded by a bend of the North Branch of the Park River (near the University of Hartford campus). The property was later subdivided as the Sunny Reach real estate development in West Hartford. The former Sturhahn barn, erected in 1918, was converted into a residence in 1939 (a contemporary view is shown above).