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Middletown officials kicked off Black History Month Saturday morning by naming a street after a man who spent most of his life enslaved in Connecticut during the 18th Century.
Middletown honors historic resident in street naming ceremony. Story by Justin B. Jones • 2mo. M IDDLETOWN, ... but he was purchased by Philip Mortimer in Middletown, CT, around 1745.
A map shows the Beman Triangle, a 10-house property purchased by the Bemans in the 1800s, near Wesleyan University and Cross Street AME Zion Church. It was the first Black planned community in ...
The new owners of 11-15 King St. in Middletown have taken up the challenge of renovating the historic building. Here's what ...
MIDDLETOWN — The city will apply for a $20,000 grant from the state Office of Culture and Tourism to identify any historic properties that may qualify for a state inventory. Deputy Planning D… ...
Middletown at one point in the 1800s was the fourth-largest port in New England, and since the city’s founding in the 1600s, it has been a prominent commercial center because of its place on the ...