SELECTED IMPORTANT DATES
IN CONNECTICUT HISTORY
Prepared by the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism
10,000 years ago, humans arrive in what will become Connecticut
1614 |
Adriaen Block, representing the Dutch, sails up the Connecticut River. |
1633 |
The Dutch erect a fort, the House of (Good) Hope, on the future site of Hartford. |
1633 |
John Oldham and others explore and trade along the Connecticut River. Plymouth Colony sends William Holmes to found a trading post at Windsor. |
1634 |
Wethersfield founded by colonists from Massachusetts. |
1634 |
First English arrive in Windsor. |
1635 |
Fort erected at Saybrook by Lion Gardiner. |
1635 |
Group from Dorchester, Massachusetts, joins Windsor settlement. |
1636 |
Thomas Hooker and company journey from Newtown (Cambridge), Massachusetts, to found Hartford. |
1637 |
Pequot War. |
1638 |
New Haven Colony established by John Davenport and Theophilus Eaton. |
1639 |
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut adopted by Freemen of Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor; John Haynes chosen first Governor. |
1639 |
Henry Whitfield House, Guilford, oldest house in state, built. |
1643 |
Connecticut joins in forming the New England Confederation. |
1646 |
New London founded by John Winthrop, Jr. |
1650 |
Code of laws drawn up by Roger Ludlow and adopted by legislature. |
1662 |
John Winthrop, Jr. obtains a charter for Connecticut. |
1665 |
Union of New Haven and Connecticut Colonies completed. |
1665 |
The first division of any Connecticut town--Lyme's separation from Saybrook. |
1675-76 |
Connecticut participates in King Philip's War fought in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. |
1687 |
Andros assumes rule over Connecticut; Charter Oak episode occurs. |
1689 |
Connecticut resumes government under charter. |
1701 |
Collegiate School authorized by General Assembly. |
1708 |
Saybrook Platform permits churches to join regional consociations or unions of churches. |
1717 |
New Haven State House erected on the Green. |
1717 |
Collegiate School moves to New Haven; called Yale the next year. |
1740s |
Height of religious "Great Awakening." |
1745 |
Connecticut troops under Roger Wolcott help capture Louisburg. |
1755 |
Connecticut Gazette of New Haven, the colony's first newspaper, printed by James Parker at New Haven. |
1763 |
Brick State House erected on New Haven Green. |
1764 |
Connecticut Courant, the oldest American newspaper in continuous existence to the present, launched at Hartford by Thomas Green. |
1766 |
Governor Thomas Fitch who refused to reject the Stamp Act defeated by William Pitkin. |
1767 |
Thomas and Samuel Green launch newspaper which after many changes becomes New Haven Journal-Courier. |
1773 |
Old New-Gate Prison opens as Connecticut's first prison. |
1774 |
Connecticut officially extends jurisdiction over Susquehanna Company area in Northern Pennsylvania. |
1774 |
Silas Deane, Eliphalet Dyer, and Roger Sherman represent Connecticut at First Continental Congress. |
1775 |
Several thousand militia rush to Massachusetts in "Lexington Alarm." |
1775 |
Connecticut men help plan and carry out seizure of Ft. Ticonderoga. |
1775 |
First gun powder mill in Connecticut started in East Hartford. |
1776 |
Samuel Huntington, Roger Sherman, William Williams, and Oliver Wolcott sign the Declaration of Independence; large majority of Connecticut people under Governor Jonathan Trumbull support the Declaration. |
1777 |
British troops under General Tryon raid Danbury. |
1779 |
British troops under General Tryon raid New Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk. |
1781 |
Benedict Arnold's attack upon New London and Groton results in massacre at Ft. Griswold. |
1781 |
Generals George Washington and comte de Rochambeau confer at Webb House in Wethersfield. |
1783 |
Meeting of 10 Anglican clergy at Glebe House, Woodbury, leads to consecration of Bishop Samuel Seabury and beginning of Protestant Episcopal Church in United States. |
1784 |
Tapping Reeve establishes the first law school in the United States in Litchfield. |
1784 |
Earliest Connecticut cities incorporated--Hartford, Middletown, New Haven, New London, and Norwich. |
1784 |
Governor Trumbull retires from governorship. |
1784 |
Connecticut relinquishes Westmoreland area to Pennsylvania. |
1784 |
Act passed providing for emancipation at age of twenty-five of all African- Americans born after March 1784. In 1797 the age was lowered to 21. |
1785 |
First Register and Manual published. |
1787 |
Oliver Ellsworth, William Samuel Johnson, and Roger Sherman serve as Connecticut's representatives at Philadelphia Constitutional Convention. |
1788 |
Convention at Hartford approves federal Constitution by 128-40 vote. |
1789 |
Oliver Ellsworth and William Samuel Johnson begin service as first United States Senators from Connecticut. |
1792 |
First turnpike road company, New London to Norwich, incorporated. |
1792 |
First banks established at Hartford, New London, and New Haven. |
1793-96 |
Old State House, Hartford, erected; designed by Charles Bulfinch. |
1795 |
Connecticut Western Reserve lands (now Northeastern Ohio) sold for $1.2 million and the proceeds used to establish the School Fund. |
1795 |
First insurance company incorporated as the Mutual Assurance Company of the City of Norwich. |
1796 |
Thomas Hubbard starts Courier at Norwich. In 1860 paper merges with the Morning Bulletin and continues as Norwich Bulletin to present. |
1799 |
Eli Whitney procures his first federal musket contract. |
1802 |
Brass industry begun at Waterbury by Abel Porter and associates. |
1806 |
First important English dictionary in United States published by Noah Webster. |
1810 |
Hartford Fire Insurance Company incorporated. |
1812 |
Joseph Barber starts Columbian Register at New Haven. In 1911 combined with New Haven Register and continues as Register to present. |
1812-14 |
War of 1812 unpopular in Connecticut; new manufacturers, especially of textiles, boom. |
1814 |
The British Raid on Essex results in the loss of over 25 American ships at Pettipaug Point. |
1814 |
Hartford Convention held in Old State House. |
1815 |
First steamboat voyage up the Connecticut River to Hartford. |
1817 |
Federalists defeated by reformers in political revolution. |
1817 |
Thomas Gallaudet founds school for the deaf in Hartford. |
1817 |
Hartford Times founded by Frederick D. Bolles and John M. Niles. |
1818 |
New Constitution adopted by convention in Hartford and approved by voters; ends system of established church. |
1820 |
Captain Nathaniel Palmer of Stonington is the first American to sight the Antarctic continent. Peter Harvey, a crewman on Palmer's ship, is the first African-American to sail to the Antarctic. |
1821 |
Crewmen under Captain John Davis of New Haven make the first documented landing on Antarctica. |
1821 |
Captain Nathaniel Palmer of Stonington and British sealer George Powell jointly discover the South Orkney Islands in the Antarctic. |
1823 |
Washington College (now Trinity) founded in Hartford. |
1827 |
"New" State House erected in New Haven; Ithiel Town, architect. |
1827 |
Old New-Gate Prison closed. After a brief period of returning to mining, it soon became a tourist attraction. |
1828 |
Farmington Canal opened. |
1831 |
Wesleyan University founded in Middletown. |
1831 |
Mutual Insurance Company of Hartford founded. |
1832 |
First Connecticut railroad incorporated as the Boston, Norwich and New London. |
1833-34 |
State Heroine Prudence Crandall opens school for young African-American girls. |
1835 |
Revolver patented by Samuel Colt. |
1835 |
Music Vale Seminary, first American music school, founded at Salem by Oramel Whittlesey. |
1838 |
Railroad completed between New Haven and Hartford. |
1839-41 |
The Amistad legal case heard before the U.S. Supreme Court. |
1840s and 1850s |
Peak of whaling from Connecticut ports and especially from New London. |
1842 |
Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, first public art museum, established. |
1843 |
Charles Goodyear develops vulcanizing process for rubber. |
1843 |
Civil rights of Jews protected through act guaranteeing equal privileges with Christians in forming religious societies. |
1844 |
Dr. Horace Wells uses anesthesia at Hartford. |
1846 |
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, the first life insurance company, chartered in Connecticut. |
1848 |
Slavery abolished in Connecticut. |
1849 |
First teachers' college founded at New Britain (now Central Connecticut State University). |
1851 |
Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company started (under another name) in Hartford. |
1853 |
Aetna Life Insurance Company started in Hartford. |
1860 |
Lincoln speaks in several Connecticut cities. |
1861-65 |
Approximately 55,000 men serve in Union Army; William Buckingham serves as wartime governor. |
1864 |
Travelers Insurance issues its first policy. |
1865 |
Connecticut General Life Insurance Company founded. |
1868 |
Land at Groton given by Connecticut to U.S. Navy for a naval station. |
1875 |
Hartford made sole capital city. |
1877 |
First telephone exchange in world opened in New Haven. |
1879 |
New Capitol building in Hartford completed; Richard M. Upjohn, architect. |
1881 |
Storrs Agricultural College founded (becomes University of Connecticut in 1939). |
1897 |
Manufacture of automobiles begun by Pope Manufacturing Company of Hartford. |
1900 |
First United States Navy submarine, Holland, constructed by Electric Boat Co. |
1901 |
First American state law regulating automobile speeds. |
1902 |
Constitutional Convention held; proposed new Constitution defeated in a statewide referendum. |
1905 |
General Assembly adopts public accommodations act ordering full and equal service in all places of public accommodation. |
1907 |
The first Boy Scout Troop in Connecticut (Troop 1) is established in East Hartford. |
1910 |
U.S. Coast Guard Academy moves to New London. |
1911 |
Connecticut College for Women founded at New London. |
1917 |
U.S. Navy Submarine School formally established at New London Naval Base, Groton. |
1917-18 |
Approximately 67,000 Connecticut men serve in World War I. |
1920 |
University of New Haven founded. |
1927 |
University of Bridgeport founded. |
1928 |
Igor Sikorsky purchases land in Stratford for new aviation factory; becomes Sikorsky Aviation Company. |
1932 |
St. Joseph College founded in West Hartford. |
1936 |
Floods cause enormous damage in Connecticut River Valley. |
1938 |
Hurricane and floods produce heavy loss of life and property. |
1938 |
First section of Merritt Parkway opened. |
1939 |
First section of Wilbur Cross Parkway opened. |
1941-45 |
Approximately 210,000 Connecticut men serve in World War II. |
1943 |
General Assembly establishes Inter-Racial Commission, recognized as the nation's first statutory civil rights agency. |
1944 |
Ringling Brothers Circus tent fire in Hartford takes 168 lives. |
1947 |
Fair Employment Practices Act adopted outlawing job discrimination. |
1950-52 |
Approximately 52,000 Connecticut men serve in Korean War. |
1954 |
Nautilus, world's first atomic-powered submarine, launched at Groton. |
1955 |
Serious floods cause heavy damage and loss of life. |
1957 |
Ground broken for first building in New Haven's Oak Street redevelopment area. |
1958 |
129-mile Connecticut Turnpike opened. |
1959 |
General Assembly votes to abolish county government (effective 1960); also to abolish local justice courts and establish district courts. |
1960 |
Ground broken for first building in Hartford's Front Street redevelopment area; now known as Constitution Plaza. |
1961 |
New state circuit court system goes into effect. |
1962-75 |
Approximately 104,000 Connecticut men and women serve in the armed forces during the Vietnam War era. |
1965 |
Constitutional Convention held; New Constitution approved by voters. |
1966 |
First elections held for reapportioned General Assembly under new Constitution. |
1966 |
Constance Baker Motley of New Haven, first African-American woman appointed to be a federal judge. |
1972 |
Under constitutional amendment adopted in 1970, General Assembly holds first annual session since 1886. |
1974 |
Ella T. Grasso, first woman elected Governor in Connecticut. |
1978 |
Common pleas and Juvenile Courts become part of the Superior Court. |
1982 |
Appellate Court created by Constitutional Amendment (Effective July 1, 1983.) |
1990 |
Eunice S. Groark, first woman elected Lieutenant Governor in Connecticut. |
2001 |
Reapportionment Commission creates five Congressional districts due to national population shifts identified in the 2000 census. |
2001 |
9/11 Terrorist attacks on New York City kill 152 Connecticut citizens. |
2005 |
Connecticut first state to adopt civil unions for same-sex couples without being directed to do so by a court. |
2006 |
M. Jodi Rell becomes Connecticut's second female Governor elected in her own right. |
2008 |
Connecticut becomes one of the first three states to perform marriages of same-sex couples. |
PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES
Year of Qualification |
Name |
State* |
Term of Office |
1789 |
George Washington |
Virginia |
8 yrs. |
1797 |
John Adams |
Massachusetts |
4 yrs. |
1801 |
Thomas Jefferson |
Virginia |
8 yrs. |
1809 |
James Madison |
Virginia |
8 yrs. |
1817 |
James Monroe |
Virginia |
8 yrs. |
1825 |
John Quincy Adams |
Massachusetts |
4 yrs. |
1829 |
Andrew Jackson |
Tennessee |
8 yrs. |
1837 |
Martin Van Buren |
New York |
4 yrs. |
1841 |
William H. Harrison1 |
Ohio |
1 m. |
1841 |
John Tyler |
Virginia |
3 yrs. 11 m. |
1845 |
James Knox Polk |
Tennessee |
4 yrs. |
1849 |
Zachary Taylor2 |
Louisiana |
1 yr. 4 m. 5 d. |
1850 |
Millard Fillmore |
New York |
2 yrs. 7 m. 26 d. |
1853 |
Franklin Pierce |
New Hampshire |
4 yrs. |
1857 |
James Buchanan |
Pennsylvania |
4 yrs. |
1861 |
Abraham Lincoln3 |
Illinois |
4 yrs. 1 m. 10 d. |
1865 |
Andrew Johnson |
Tennessee |
3 yrs. 10 m. 20 d. |
1869 |
Ulysses S. Grant |
Illinois |
8 yrs. |
1877 |
Rutherford B. Hayes |
Ohio |
4 yrs. |
1881 |
James A. Garfield4 |
Ohio |
6 m. 15 d. |
1881 |
Chester A. Arthur |
New York |
3 yrs. 5 m. 15 d. |
1885 |
Grover Cleveland |
New York |
4 yrs. |
1889 |
Benjamin Harrison |
Indiana |
4 yrs. |
1893 |
Grover Cleveland |
New York |
4 yrs. |
1897 |
William McKinley5 |
Ohio |
4 yrs. 6 m. 9 d. |
1901 |
Theodore Roosevelt |
New York |
7 yrs. 5 m. 21 d. |
1909 |
William H. Taft |
Ohio |
4 yrs. |
1913 |
Woodrow Wilson |
New Jersey |
8 yrs. |
1921 |
Warren G. Harding6 |
Ohio |
2 yrs. 4 m. 27 d. |
1923 |
Calvin Coolidge |
Massachusetts |
5 yrs. 7 m. 4 d. |
1929 |
Herbert C. Hoover |
California |
4 yrs. |
1933 |
Franklin D. Roosevelt7 |
New York |
12 yrs. 1 m. 8 d. |
1945 |
Harry S. Truman |
Missouri |
7 yrs. 9 m. 9 d. |
1953 |
Dwight D. Eisenhower |
New York/ Pennsylvania8 |
8 yrs. |
1961 |
John F. Kennedy9 |
Massachusetts |
2 yrs. 10 m. 2 d. |
1963 |
Lyndon B. Johnson10 |
Texas |
5 yrs. 1 m. 29 d. |
1969 |
Richard M. Nixon11 |
New York |
5 yrs. 6 m. 20 d. |
1974 |
Gerald R. Ford12 |
Michigan |
2 yrs. 5 m. 11 d. |
1977 |
Jimmy Carter |
Georgia |
4 yrs. |
1981 |
Ronald Reagan |
California |
8 yrs. |
1989 |
George Bush |
Texas |
4 yrs. |
1993 |
William J. Clinton |
Arkansas |
8 yrs. |
2001 |
George W. Bush |
Texas |
8 yrs. |
2009 |
Barack H. Obama |
Illinois |
8 yrs. |
2017 |
Donald J. Trump |
New York |
Currently serving |
*State of residence for election purposes.
1Died in office, April 4, 1841, and was succeeded by Vice President Tyler.
2Died in office, July 9, 1850, and was succeeded by Vice President Fillmore.
3Assassinated April 14, 1865, and was succeeded by Vice President Johnson, April 15, 1865.
4Died September 19, 1881, from wounds by assassin, and was succeeded by Vice President Arthur.
5Died September 14, 1901, from wounds by assassin, and was succeeded by Vice President Roosevelt.
6Died in office, August 2, 1923, and was succeeded by Vice President Coolidge.
7Died in office, April 12, 1945, and was succeeded by Vice President Truman.
8Electoral College results from the National Archives list New York as Eisenhower's home state for the 1952 and 1956 elections. The Official Register of the United States for 1956, the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-2005, and various state-level election result resources list Pennsylvania as Eisenhower's home state in 1956.
9Assassinated November 22, 1963, and was succeeded by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.
10Acceded to the Presidency November 22, 1963; elected President on November 3, 1964.
11Elected November 5, 1968, reelected November 7, 1972; resigned on August 9, 1974.
12Acceded to the Presidency August 9, 1974.
VICE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES
Year of Qualification |
Name |
State* |
1789 |
John Adams |
Massachusetts |
1797 |
Thomas Jefferson |
Virginia |
1801 |
Aaron Burr |
New York |
1805 |
George Clinton1 |
New York |
1813 |
Elbridge Gerry2 |
Massachusetts |
1817 |
Daniel D. Tompkins |
New York |
1825 |
John C. Calhoun3 |
South Carolina |
1833 |
Martin Van Buren |
New York |
1837 |
Richard M. Johnson |
Kentucky |
1841 |
John Tyler4 |
Virginia |
1845 |
George M. Dallas |
Pennsylvania |
1849 |
Millard Fillmore5 |
New York |
1853 |
William R. King1 |
Alabama |
1857 |
John C. Breckinridge |
Kentucky |
1861 |
Hannibal Hamlin |
Maine |
1865 |
Andrew Johnson6 |
Tennessee |
1869 |
Schuyler Colfax |
Indiana |
1873 |
Henry Wilson1 |
Massachusetts |
1877 |
William A. Wheeler |
New York |
1881 |
Chester A. Arthur7 |
New York |
1885 |
Thomas A. Hendricks1 |
Indiana |
1889 |
Levi P. Morton |
New York |
1893 |
Adlai E. Stevenson |
Illinois |
1897 |
Garret A. Hobart1 |
New Jersey |
1901 |
Theodore Roosevelt8 |
New York |
1905 |
Charles W. Fairbanks |
Indiana |
1909 |
James S. Sherman1 |
New York |
1913 |
Thomas R. Marshall |
Indiana |
1921 |
Calvin Coolidge9 |
Massachusetts |
1925 |
Charles G. Dawes |
Illinois |
1929 |
Charles Curtis |
Kansas |
1933 |
John N. Garner |
Texas |
1941 |
Henry A. Wallace |
Iowa |
1945 |
Harry S. Truman10 |
Missouri |
1949 |
Alben W. Barkley |
Kentucky |
1953 |
Richard M. Nixon |
California |
1961 |
Lyndon B. Johnson11 |
Texas |
1965 |
Hubert H. Humphrey |
Minnesota |
1969 |
Spiro T. Agnew12 |
Maryland |
1973 |
Gerald R. Ford13 |
Michigan |
1974 |
Nelson A. Rockefeller14 |
New York |
1977 |
Walter F. Mondale |
Minnesota |
1981 |
George Bush |
Texas |
1989 |
Dan Quayle |
Indiana |
1993 |
Albert A. Gore |
Tennessee |
2001 |
Richard B. Cheney |
Wyoming |
2009 |
Joseph R. Biden, Jr. |
Delaware |
2017 |
Michael R. Pence |
Indiana |
*State of residence for election purposes.
1Died in office.
2Died in office, Nov. 23, 1814.
3Resigned December 28, 1832, to become U.S. Senator.
4Became President by death of Harrison.
5Became President by death of Taylor.
6Became President by death of Lincoln.
7Became President by death of Garfield.
8Became President by death of McKinley.
9Became President by death of Harding.
10Became President by death of Roosevelt.
11Became President by death of John F. Kennedy, November 22, 1963.
12Elected November 5, 1968; reelected November 7, 1972; resigned October 10, 1973.
13First Vice President nominated by the President and confirmed by the Congress pursuant to the 25th amendment to the Constitution of the United States; took oath of office on December 6, 1973; succeeded to the Presidency on August 9, 1974 upon resignation of Richard M. Nixon.
14Nominated to be Vice President by President Ford on August 20, 1974; confirmed by the Senate on December 10, 1974; confirmed by the House and took oath of office on December 19, 1974.