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Southbury Revisited
Southbury Revisited
Southbury Revisited
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Southbury Revisited

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Settlers from Stratford first camped under a white oak tree in Ancient Woodbury in 1673. Over 300 years later, the bustling and near-suburban community of Southbury takes its place. Farming was integral to the economy throughout this time period, and small industries flourished utilizing the numerous waterways. The advent of railroad transportation, followed by the interstate highway system, brought more people to this thriving rural community for commerce. Beautiful rolling hills and several lakes and rivers attracted crowds for recreational purposes. The unique town seal reads, "Unica Unaque," which translates as "the One and Only." Intense interest in the first volume has led to this edition, Southbury Revisited. Donated vintage photographs enrich these pages with highlights of the community's history.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 18, 2012
ISBN9781439632659
Southbury Revisited
Author

Virginia Palmer-Skok

Virginia Palmer-Skok, a Southbury native and freelance writer, is past vice president of the Connecticut Press Club and a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. She traces her lineage to Gov. William Bradford of Plimoth Plantation.

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    Southbury Revisited - Virginia Palmer-Skok

    Palmer.

    INTRODUCTION

    Southbury Revisited is a continuation of the stepping into the past that began with Southbury. Southbury’s history has evolved through its residents and the paths they followed through time in their stewardship of this once forested wilderness. The peaceful and industrious Pootatuck Indians were here in Southbury’s early days as hunters, fishermen, farmers, and creators of a culture of note. A wealth of natural resources provided a stable environment in which there was a food supply, materials for shelter, and opportunity to develop a social order. A governing council with leadership by a chieftain and tribal rules assured the functioning of the community. Trade was conducted with tribes outside the area, and trade routes were established. Footpaths along waterways later became cart and wagon paths as other settlers moved in the area.

    The next settlers recorded in Southbury’s past were 15 families who petitioned their church society in Stratford to come to Pomperaug Plantation, as this area was named. They wished to leave their church because of religious dissatisfaction with church practices, as well as the need to acquire more farming land for their growing families. Granted permission, they arrived in the area now known as Settler’s Park in 1673 and rested under a spreading white oak tree. Another group arrived a few days later. The Hinman, Stiles, and Curtiss families were granted land in the area of town that became known as the White Oak section. Other families settled in parts of Woodbury. From 1678 to 1759, the Pootatucks sold their property to the settlers. With the last transaction, they left the area and settled in Kent. Their early settlement became memorialized in the 20th century, with designation on the National Register of Archaeological Sites. Connecticut Light and Power Company has owned this site since 1917.

    The Congregational Church Society in Ancient Woodbury was formed and endured. During the next 100 years, the settlement’s six parishes sought meetinghouses closer to their homes, particularly necessary during the winter months when travel was difficult. Petitions for separate townships were also successful, and Southbury became a town apart from Ancient Woodbury in 1787. Southbury encompasses an area of 40.9 square miles.

    Manufacturing of a variety of goods began to flourish near streams and rivers. Waterpower generated the energy to power machinery to produce products sold locally and to other communities. Over 60 small mills and factories were in operation in the 1800s. The use of coal and oil as longer-lasting energy sources added to the development of manufacturing. Cars replaced horse-and-wagon travel. Farming employed the use of machinery to plant and harvest crops. District schoolchildren came together in one large consolidated school when cars and buses took the place of walking to school. The construction of dams to create hydroelectric plants in harnessing waterpower for generating electricity brought enormous progress to Southbury. The dams also created the formation of Lake Zoar in 1919 and Lake Lillinonah in 1955. The appeal of these beautiful man-made lakes drew summer vacationers for the enjoyment of boating, swimming, and camping. Many visitors became year-round residents.

    Interstate 84 was built in 1963. This highway opened the community for both travelers and new residents. Larger cities became more easily accessible for commuting, and the lure of country living appealed to former city dwellers. A unique retirement community of 2,500 condominiums, called Heritage Village, was built in the late 1960s. This attracted citizens of age 55 and older to settle here.

    As fewer working farms remained in Southbury, land was sold to developers for residential growth. The population grew by leaps and bounds. Back in the 1970s, the population was between 5,000 and 6,000 residents. Route 67 was a two-lane road through Southbury, with few traffic lights. K-Mart Plaza was the former location of a large home with business offices on the first floor and a shop on the second floor. A laundromat operated in the rear of the area for the convenience of residents. Green’s General Store was located where a furniture store is currently located next to the Talbot’s store. On Sunday mornings after church, a shopper could buy the Sunday newspaper, groceries, and if needed, a pair of boots or other necessary sundries in this then busy store.

    The Pootatuck Indians and the Ancient Woodbury’s first settlers started on this path that progressed from footpath to cart to wagon trail and to the present bustling Main Street, over which some 20,000 inhabitants and a steady stream of commuters from neighboring communities drive on a regular basis. Southbury’s historical heritage spans the past three centuries and reflects the resourcefulness of both the earliest Americans and current residents in preserving the town’s attributes of the past for future generations.

    One

    SOUTHBURY PROPER

    Settlers came to Southbury only half a century after the Pilgrims settled Plymouth Colony. They came due to religious dissent in their Stratford Ecclesiastical Society. Many descendants of those early 15 families live in the area today.

    Yesterday’s Town lay shy and green

    With Purple Haunts passing unseen

    But hidden in Its Simple Sphere

    Were Emerald Dreams that quickened there—

    I once knew Meadows—rank with Spring—

    Where Rivulets beguiling spell

    Trickled to Babbling Brooks that sped

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