Dedicated on February 14, 1849, this is the fourth meetinghouse for Enfield's Congregational Church. It is located at the corner of Enfield Street and South Road.
Photograph of the home of Colonel Augustus G. Hazard on Enfield Street. The mansion was located across from the current Enfield High School. For many years, the home was operated as the Enfield Inn and was later destroyed by fire while undergoing...
Photograph of Colonel Augustus G. Hazard, for whom Hazardville is named. Hazard served as Chairman of the Church Builidng Committee. Later, he was the owner and manager of the Hazard Powder Mills in Hazardville. He lived from 1802 to 1868.
Photograph of the gravestone of Colonel Augustus G. Hazard born 1802 Apr. 28 and died 1868 May 7 at age 66. Hazard's wife Salome G. Hazard is buried with him. Mrs. Hazard was born 1802 Sept.12 and died 1880 Nov. 16 at age 78. The gravestone is in...
Attached note reads: An 1873 view of the Elm Street side of Old Brick Row showing North after the removal of Divinity College. To the left of North is Second Chapel and to the right rear of Brick Row stands the Old Trumbull Gallery then in use as...
A colonial revival house with a picket fence in front. Handwritten on reverse: "Prof Charles Cameron Clark Jr Yale 83." Clark, a Professor of French, acquired the house in 1903 from Henry Farnum.
Interior of the Calvary Baptist Church showing the organ. Designed by Rufus G. Russell and built in 1871 at 1120 Chapel Street, the building now houses the Yale Repertory Theatre.
Handwritten on reverse: "This house was purchased in an unfinished condition by the Hon. Elizur Goodrich, father of Professor Chauncey A. Goodrich in 1801 or 1802 and completed to suit his needs. Northwest corner of Temple and Wall Sts. Demolished...
View of a stone building, designed by architect John Russell Pope and completed in 1932. The structure occupies the site of the old Divinity School building.
View of a building with a concave stone faade and a portico supported by four columns. Several cars are parked along the street. The Sterling Hall of Medicine opened in 1924, and the Institute of Human Relations, in 1930.
View of a Gothic brick building with a tower and stone entryway. Designed by Charles Klauder, the museum reopened in this building in 1926 (on the corner of Whitney Avenue and Sachem Street) after moving from its original location in 1917.
Located at 222 York Street and completed in 1926. The building was designed by Blackall, Clapp, and Whittemore; a new faade designed by James Gamble Rogers was added in 1931.