Recreation
and Places of Interest
Connecticut has numerous recreational facilities.
Swimming, boating, and other water sports are
popular along the coastal beaches and at lakes.
Facilities for hiking, camping, and other activities
are provided in a statewide system of public
parks and forests, and skiing and other winter
sports are popular. The Connecticut Forest and
Park Association, a private organization, maintains
miles of hiking trails.
National Sites
American Impressionist painter J. Alden Weir
summered at what is now Weir Farm National Historic
Site. The 24-hectare (60-acre) park includes
Weir’s home, studio, barns and outbuildings,
a visitor center, and a second studio built by
sculptor Mahonri Young. The Appalachian National
Scenic Trail traverses the northwest corner of
the state.
State Parks and Forests
There are 91 state parks in Connecticut as well
as dozens of parks and historical sites maintained
by municipalities. While not all of the state’s
parks are developed, there are recreational facilities
in every region. Hammonasset Beach State Park
is the largest of the parks that border the shore
of Long Island Sound. On a clear day, a person
can see four states from Heublein Tower at Talcott
Mountain State Park in the heart of the Farmington
River Valley. Fort Griswold Battlefield State
Park preserves the site where in 1781 British
troops massacred American troops. A stair pathway
adjacent the Kent Falls makes this state park
a popular picnic site. Dinosaur tracks about
185 million years old are housed under a giant
geodesic dome at the Dinosaur State Park, in
Rocky Hill. Pine Knob Loop Trail at Housatonic
Meadows State Park joins the Appalachian National
Scenic Trail.
Most of the 30 state forests do not permit camping
but almost all are open for fishing, hiking,
and other daytime activities.
Museums
The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, in Hartford,
is considered one of the finest art museums in
the United States. Other art museums in Connecticut
are the Lyman Allyn Art Museum, in New London;
the Slater Museum, at the Norwich Free Academy
in Norwich; the Yale University Art Gallery,
in New Haven; and the New Britain Museum of American
Art, in New Britain. The Hill-Stead Museum, in
Farmington, has a major art collection, and there
are special historical art collections in Hartford,
Waterbury, and many other cities. Among the other
outstanding museums in Connecticut are Yale’s
Peabody Museum of Natural History and the Yale
Center for British Art. The Mashantucket Pequot
Museum and Research Center, opened in 1998 in
Mashantucket, includes innovative interpretive
displays and re-creations that depict the cultural
heritage of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation.
Other Places to Visit
Connecticut has many places of historical interest.
At Webb House, at the Webb-Deane-Stevens Museum
in Wethersfield, George Washington met with the
French General Jean Baptiste de Vimeur, comte
de Rochambeau during the American Revolution
to plan the strategy that led to the Yorktown
campaign. At Lebanon is the Revolutionary War
Office, where Governor Jonathan Trumbull conferred
with Washington, Benjamin Franklin, the Marquis
de Lafayette, and other leaders. The Fundamental
Orders and one of the two original copies of
the 1662 charter are on display at the Connecticut
State Library in Hartford. Mystic Seaport, a
re-created village, features a restored seaport
street of the early 19th century and the last
of the old-time whaling ships. Other places of
historic interest in Connecticut include Keeler
Tavern, in Ridgefield, where a British cannonball
fired during the revolution is embedded in the
wall; the Old State House in Hartford, where
Connecticut’s early legislature met; the
Tapping-Reeve House and Law School, in Litchfield,
where America’s first law school was founded
in 1773; and Old New-Gate Prison, a prison dating
from the revolution, in East Granby.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia
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