Properties Covered by Historic Preservation Ordinance
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Coltsville National Park Visitor Experience Study
Coltsville National Park Visitor Experience Study museumINSIGHTS in association with objectIDEA Roberts Consulting Economic Stewardship November 2008 Coltsville National Park Visitor Experience Study! The proposed Coltsville National Park will help reassert Coltsville’s identity as one of Hartford’s most important historic neighborhoods. That clear and vibrant identity will help create a compelling destination for visitors and a more vibrant community for the people of Hartford and Connecticut. Developed for the Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation by: museumINSIGHTS In association with Roberts Consulting objectIdea Economic Stewardship November 2008 The Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation received support for this historic preservation project from the Commission on Culture & Tourism with funds from the Community Investment Act of the State of Connecticut. Contents Executive Summary ....................................................................! 1 A. Introduction ..............................................................................! 4 • Background • History of Colt and Coltsville • Goals of the Coltsville Ad Hoc Committee • Opportunities and Challenges • Coltsville Ad Hoc Committee Partners B. The Place, People, and Partners ..................................! 8 • The Place: Coltsville Resources • The People: Potential Audiences • The Partners in the Coltsville Project C. Planning Scenarios ............................................................! 14 • Overview • Audiences & Potential Visitation • Scenario -
Nscda-Ct Newsletter
NSCDA-CT NEWSLETTER VOLUME 6, NUMBER 2 SEPTEMBER 2011 Message from the President Message from the Director Nancy MacColl Charles T. Lyle Dear Connecticut Dames, The summer has been busy with the exterior th I am privileged and honored to be the 39 President restoration of the Deane House in progress, which of the NSCDA in Connecticut. Torrey Cooke did an we expect to be finished in September. There are outstanding job as President for the last three years. also two or three weddings scheduled almost every She will continue as third Vice-President. weekend, bringing in over 100 people for each event. Katie Sullivan has booked sixty-nine A brief biography weddings and other rentals for this year and over for those of you who thirty are already booked for next year. do not know me. I was born in Boston, Work on the exterior of the Deane house started on MA, educated in June 17. The painters spent the bulk of the summer Washington, D.C. stripping paint and preparing the surfaces. At the (Holton-Arms School) same time, the carpenters have replaced rotted or and New York broken clapboards and made numerous woodwork (Bennett Junior repairs. All of the window sashes have been College). reglazed and broken window panes have been Torrey and Nancy in the Garden of Webb House replaced with old style wavy glass, a painstaking I married N. Alexander job that has taken most of the summer. Soon the MacColl (Alex), whose mother, Mary Kimbark masons will arrive to make repairs to the MacColl was a R.I. -
2008 11 Falling Plaster Sparked Preservation Technical Assistance Grants Fund Discussions at Center Church in Hartford
Connecticut Preservation News January/February 2008 Volume XXXI, No. 1 Buildings of Connecticut Richard Platt G. Farmer David Merwin house, Milford going . going . gone. A Cautionary Tale t looked as though Milford had scored another preserva- that Westwood wanted to take down the Merwin house. Not I tion victory with the David Merwin house, built around only was there the preservation restriction, but Milford also has 1790 overlooking Gulf Pond, an inlet off Long Island Sound. In a delay of demolition ordinance requiring that Platt, as city his- recent years the pressure to replace the house and its surround- torian, be informed of any proposals to demolish historic build- ing farmland with new housing had grown intense. In February ings in the city, a provision that allows time for preservationists of last year the City of Milford bought the property, which to try to find alternatives to demolition. had already been divided into five building lots. Two lots were But on December 3, Platt heard that workers had in fact retained as open space and the remaining three sold to developer begun taking down the house. Within a few days nothing Westwood Ranches LLC. The lot containing the Merwin house remained but piles of timbers and stones. Westwood’s plan, it sold for only $200,000 because the city added deed restrictions turned out, was to re-erect the house on the same lot, only requiring that the house’s exterior appearance be preserved. farther from the road, and turned 90 degrees to face the view. Milford has an admirable record for preserving historic The house would look just the same, Platt was assured. -
Legislative Hearing
H.R. 272, H.R. 437 and H.R. 1113 LEGISLATIVE HEARING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON NATIONAL PARKS, RECREATION, AND PUBLIC LANDS OF THE COMMITTEE ON RESOURCES U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED EIGHTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION Tuesday, April 8, 2003 Serial No. 108-14 Printed for the use of the Committee on Resources ( Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress/house or Committee address: http://resourcescommittee.house.gov U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 86-339 PS WASHINGTON : 2003 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402–0001 VerDate 11-MAY-2000 11:49 Jun 26, 2003 Jkt 000000 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 5011 Sfmt 5011 86339.TXT HRESOUR1 PsN: HRESOUR1 COMMITTEE ON RESOURCES RICHARD W. POMBO, California, Chairman NICK J. RAHALL II, West Virginia, Ranking Democrat Member Don Young, Alaska Dale E. Kildee, Michigan W.J. ‘‘Billy’’ Tauzin, Louisiana Eni F.H. Faleomavaega, American Samoa Jim Saxton, New Jersey Neil Abercrombie, Hawaii Elton Gallegly, California Solomon P. Ortiz, Texas John J. Duncan, Jr., Tennessee Frank Pallone, Jr., New Jersey Wayne T. Gilchrest, Maryland Calvin M. Dooley, California Ken Calvert, California Donna M. Christensen, Virgin Islands Scott McInnis, Colorado Ron Kind, Wisconsin Barbara Cubin, Wyoming Jay Inslee, Washington George Radanovich, California Grace F. Napolitano, California Walter B. Jones, Jr., North Carolina Tom Udall, New Mexico Chris Cannon, Utah Mark Udall, Colorado John E. Peterson, Pennsylvania Anı´bal Acevedo-Vila´, Puerto Rico Jim Gibbons, Nevada, Brad Carson, Oklahoma Vice Chairman Rau´ l M. -
Coltsville National Historical Park Yo U R Park
Coltsville National Historical Park Yo u r Park A report prepared for the people of Hartford to brainstorm early ideas for the recently authorized Coltsville National Historical Park in Hartford, Connecticut in a collaboration between the National Park Service, the Van Alen Institute and Performing Parks. 2016 From the National Park Service Next Parks: Imagining the Next Parks: Imagining the Future of Future of Parks Parks takes this collaboration one step further to push beyond preconceptions The National Park Service (NPS) and Van of what national parks – and any park or Alen Institute launched its partnership public space – can be, and to reimagine in 2008 through the highly acclaimed how these places shape and impact our “Designing the Parks” initiative, a program everyday lives. to advance a framework for planning and This initiative includes a series of designing public parks that are innovative, stakeholder workshops focused on a new responsive, respectful, sustainable, national park aimed at developing a range and inclusive. The findings from this of design and engagement strategies to program led to a design competition shape this park as well as future NPS led by the two organizations in 2012 sites. The park that serves as the point of called Parks for the People: A Student focus for this project is Coltsville National Competition to Reimagine America’s Historical Park in Hartford, Connecticut. National Parks, an initiative to engage This park represents a 21st-century model young people, especially students and that relies on managing the national park young professionals, through design in partnership with nearby organizations, studios and competitions. -
Connecticut Project Helper
Connecticut Project Helper Resources for Creating a Great Connecticut Project From the Connecticut Colonial Robin and ConneCT Kids! Connecticut State Symbols Famous Connecticut People Connecticut Information and Facts Famous Connecticut Places Connecticut Outline Map Do-it-Yourself Connecticut Flag Six Connecticut Project Ideas Connecticut Postcard and more…. www.kids.ct.gov What Makes a Great Connecticut Project? You! You and your ability to show how much you have learned about Connecticut. So, the most important part of your project will not be found in this booklet. But, we can help to give you ideas, resources, facts, and information that would be hard for you to find. Some students are good at drawing and art, some students are good at writing reports, and some students are good at crafts and other skills. But that part of the project will be only the beginning. A great Connecticut Project will be the one where you have become a Connecticut expert to the best of your abilities. Every State in the United States has a special character that comes from a unique blend of land, people, climate, location, history, industry, government, economy and culture. A great Connecticut Project will be the one where you can answer the question: "What makes Connecticut special?" In addition to this booklet, you should look for Connecticut information in your school library or town library. There are many online resources that can be found by doing internet searches. The more you find, the easier it will be to put together that Great Connecticut Project! The Connecticut Project Helper is produced and distributed by The ConneCT Kids Committee, and is intended for educational purposes only. -
One Hundred Eighth Congress of the United States of America
S. 233 One Hundred Eighth Congress of the United States of America AT THE FIRST SESSION Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday, the seventh day of January, two thousand and three An Act To direct the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study of Coltsville in the State of Connecticut for potential inclusion in the National Park System. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This Act may be cited as the ‘‘Coltsville Study Act of 2003’’. SEC. 2. FINDINGS. Congress finds that— (1) Hartford, Connecticut, home to Colt Manufacturing Company (referred to in this Act as ‘‘Colt’’), played a major role in the Industrial Revolution; (2) Samuel Colt, founder of Colt, and his wife, Elizabeth Colt, inspired Coltsville, a community in the State of Con- necticut that flourished during the Industrial Revolution and included Victorian mansions, an open green area, botanical gardens, and a deer park; (3) the residence of Samuel and Elizabeth Colt in Hartford, Connecticut, known as ‘‘Armsmear’’, is a national historic land- mark, and the distinctive Colt factory is a prominent feature of the Hartford, Connecticut, skyline; (4) the Colt legacy is not only about firearms, but also about industrial innovation and the development of technology that would change the way of life in the United States, including— (A) the development of telegraph technology; and (B) advancements in jet engine technology by Francis Pratt and Amos Whitney, who served as apprentices -
Architectural History: As Connecticut Grew, Buildings Reflected
Architectural History: As Connecticut Grew, Buildings Reflected Changing Styles Styles and building materials -- whether brownstone from Portland or brick from Windsor -- tell only part of the story of Connecticut's architectural heritage, which stretches back even before the country was born. The structures erected, those torn down and replaced and those still standing reflect the evolving social and economic fabric of the state, from buildings clustered around a town green in Colonial times to bringing back pedestrian-friendly downtowns in the 21st century. The Courant asked experts for their list of "must-see" building. From dozens of the suggestions, the first 12 structures in this gallery were selected, with the help of Essex architect Michael J. Crosbie, a professor of architecture at the University of Hartford who occasionally writes about architecture and design for The Courant. Some selections may surprise, but all were intended to give the sense of place that is Connecticut. Keep clicking after the first 12 for more historic architecture around Connecticut. SOURCES: Avon Old Farms web site; cthistoryonline.org; "Structures and Styles" by David Ransom; Tyler Smith, Smith Edwards McCoy Architects, Hartford; Andrew Walsh, historian, Trinity College; the glasshouse.org; connecticuthistory.org; Michael J. Crosby; "Beauty & the Beast, 300 Years of Connecticut Architecture" by William Hosley. Kenneth R. Gosselin Contact Reporter Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum — the country's oldest public art museum — positioned itself at the vanguard of Modern architecture in the 1930s with exhibits and visits by the movement's leading proponents. But the Wadsworth took it a step further: the interior spaces of the Avery Memorial addition, opened in 1934, embraced the Modernist movement: little ornamentation, wide open exhibit areas and skylights flooding the space with light. -
Public Law 108–94 108Th Congress an Act to Direct the Secretary of the Interior to Conduct a Study of Coltsville in the Oct
PUBLIC LAW 108–94—OCT. 3, 2003 117 STAT. 1163 Public Law 108–94 108th Congress An Act To direct the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study of Coltsville in the Oct. 3, 2003 State of Connecticut for potential inclusion in the National Park System. [S. 233] Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, Coltsville Study Act of 2003. SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This Act may be cited as the ‘‘Coltsville Study Act of 2003’’. SEC. 2. FINDINGS. Congress finds that— (1) Hartford, Connecticut, home to Colt Manufacturing Colt Company (referred to in this Act as ‘‘Colt’’), played a major Manufacturing role in the Industrial Revolution; Company. (2) Samuel Colt, founder of Colt, and his wife, Elizabeth Colt, inspired Coltsville, a community in the State of Con- necticut that flourished during the Industrial Revolution and included Victorian mansions, an open green area, botanical gardens, and a deer park; (3) the residence of Samuel and Elizabeth Colt in Hartford, Connecticut, known as ‘‘Armsmear’’, is a national historic land- mark, and the distinctive Colt factory is a prominent feature of the Hartford, Connecticut, skyline; (4) the Colt legacy is not only about firearms, but also about industrial innovation and the development of technology that would change the way of life in the United States, including— (A) the development of telegraph technology; and (B) advancements in jet engine technology by Francis Pratt and Amos Whitney, who served as apprentices at Colt; (5) Coltsville— -
Tour of Sheldon-Charter Oak Neighborhood
Whit t ehead H CSS/CON NRZ ee ighw ay r St Boundary n 400 0 400 800 Feet i Ma Department of Housing and Community Development I- City Planning Division 91 October 1999 C o nn ec tic ut W R e iv th er er sf ie ld A ve n u e Avenue W aw arm e The Sheldon – Charter Oak Neighborhood Page 1 Tour developed by Lynn Ferrari, June, 2007 SHELDON/CHARTER OAK NEIGHBORHOOD HISTORY Sheldon/Charter Oak is Hartford’s oldest neighborhood (occupying 335 acres on the eastern edge of Hartford, adjacent to the downtown business district and the Connecticut River). The Charter Oak neighborhood takes its name from the enormous oak tree which, until 1856, stood close to the spot where Charter Oak Place and Charter Oak Avenue intersect. The tree came down in a windstorm on August 21, 1856. In 1623 Dutch traders established a trading post at the mouth of the Park River in the area which became known as Dutch Point. By 1636 Thomas Hooker and a group of colonists arrived from Massachusetts and began setting out fields and house lots. The English colonists from Massachusetts settled in two areas of what is now called Hartford, creating two plantations: north of the Park River (the northern plantation) and south of the Park River. Some of the first governors of colonial Connecticut lived in the Charter Oak neighborhood, or the southern plantation. Edward Hopkins, Thomas Welles, John Webster, and George Wyllys, (after which Wyllys Street was named), all made their homes in this neighborhood between 1640 and 1657. -
Coltsville Special Resource Study November 2009
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Coltsville Special Resource Study November 2009 i This report has been prepared to provide Congress and the public with information about the resources in the study area and how they relate to criteria for inclusion within the national park system. Publication and transmittal of this report should not be considered an endorsement or a commitment by the National Park Service to seek or support either specific legislative authorization for the project or appropriation for its implementation. Authorization and funding for any new commitments by the National Park Service will have to be considered in light of competing priorities for existing units of the national park system and other programs. This report was prepared by the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Northeast Region. For additional copies or more information contact: National Park Service Northeast Region Division of Park Planning & Special Studies 200 Chestnut Street, 3rd Floor Philadelphia, PA 19106 215 597 1848 National Park Service Northeast Region Division of Park Planning & Special Studies 15 State Street Boston, MA 02109 617 223 5222 ii Coltsville Special Resource Study November 2009 Executive Summary Public Law 108-94, the Coltsville Study Act of 2003, authorized the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a Special Resource Study regarding the national significance, suitability and feasibility of the Coltsville Historic District, in Hartford, Connecticut, for potential designation as a unit of the national park system. This report constitutes the results of the study undertaken by the Northeast Regional Office of the National Park ServiceNPS ( ). -
Blackstone Heritage Corridor
Blackstone River Vall ey SPECIAL RESOURCE STUDY STUDY REPORT 2011 223-905_5-18.pdf 1 5/18/11 2:29 PM This report has been prepared to provide United States Congress and the public with information about the resources in the study area and how they relate to criteria for feasibility of a National Heritage Area. Publication and transmittal of this report should not be considered an endorsement or a commitment by the National Park Service to seek or to support either specifi c legislative authorization for the project or appropriation for its implementation. Authorization and funding for any new commitments by the National Park Service will have to be considered in light of competing priorities for existing units of the National Park System and other programs. This report was prepared by the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Northeast Region. For additional copies or more information contact: National Park Service Northeast Region / Boston Offi ce Park Planning and Special Studies 15 State Street Boston, Massachusetts 02109 617.223.5048 223-905_5-18.pdf 2 5/18/11 2:29 PM TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5 CHAPTER ONE: STUDY PURPOSE AND BACKGROUND Project Overview . 13 Special Resource Study Process . 15 Planning Context . 17 CHAPTER TWO: HISTORICAL OVERVIEW AND RESOURCE DESCRIPTION Historical Overview . 21 Cultural Resource Areas . .27 Visitor Resource Areas . .39 Natural Resources . 40 Socioeconomic Environment . 42 FINDINGS FOR NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE, CHAPTER THREE: SUITABILITY, FEASIBILITY, AND NEED FOR NPS MANAGEMENT Evaluation of National Signifi cance . .47 Suitability Analysis . 57 Feasibility Analysis . 62 Need For NPS Management .