Hartford, CT's Lost Riverfront

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  • čas přidán 4. 11. 2021
  • This video is about an urban renewal project in Hartford's old East Side that coincided with the construction of the Bulkely Bridge in the first decade of the twentieth century. The old riverfront area was cleared to make way for the construction of the new Connecticut Boulevard. The demolished buildings included old houses, tenements, warehouses and businesses dating to a lively period along the city's waterfront. These changes took place almost a half century before the destruction that preceded the building of Constitution Plaza and the interstate highways.
    My Books (These are links to Amazon and as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases):
    A Guide to Historic Hartford, Connecticut: amzn.to/4bNbiAR
    Vanished Downtown Hartford: amzn.to/3IhK7Ao
    Crossing the Connecticut, a 1908 book about the building of the Bulkeley Bridge:
    www.google.com/books/edition/...
    A better photo of Asa Farwell's warehouse at the corner of Ferry and Commerce Streets:
    collections.ctdigitalarchive....
    *******
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Komentáře • 67

  • @CTeale1
    @CTeale1 Před rokem +8

    This presentation is exactly why I refuse to call myself a Hartford Historian. At best I am a history buff by comparison. Magnificent job!

  • @betteparris2984
    @betteparris2984 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I remember Front street was mostly Italian shops and restaurants. I think I had my first bowl of minnestroni (?) there. I loved Hartford and we came from Mansfield and Manchester. I thank you for the memories.

  • @treyhazard7318
    @treyhazard7318 Před 2 lety +20

    Wow, how funny that this was just posted yesterday right before the infrastructure bill passed! The state has been planning to reconstruct the interchanges and relocate the highways, potentially putting much of it underground (like our version of Boston’s “Big Dig”)! Now that we are receiving billions in federal funding I am hopeful this works out and Hartford is finally reconnected with the riverside :)

    • @ryanuncensored
      @ryanuncensored Před 26 dny +1

      I’m hopeful to be tall someday.

    • @markrichards6863
      @markrichards6863 Před 22 dny

      Because Hartford (A.K. A. FartHard, has no original ideas, nor does it have a clue on how to turn things around.

    • @Miketar2424
      @Miketar2424 Před 21 dnem +4

      @@markrichards6863 To be fair, no poor city in America has the ability to turn things around. Hartford is the 4th poorest city in the country because, like myself, people commute there to work for the corporate jobs, and then leave to their suburban homes, taking their wealth with them. No business investment is made for Hartford by Hartford citizens who live inside the city, and even if these corporations build there, they use people from their own contractors who may live in other states. It is the Amazonization of the country and the cities that will keep this city poor and a side note to the larger richer cities.

  • @edwardroberts2997
    @edwardroberts2997 Před rokem +10

    Hi Dan,
    I can remember the times when my Grandmother would take me. Shopping along the front street, all of the stores can still smell the cheeses and meats hanging on hooks in the windows I was twelve years old at that time Grandma would stop and get fresh bread and pasta, which we had for supper that same day boy those were the great times hanging by the river now I am 81 years old male in a wheelchair what I would go BACK to those days life was GREAT thank you so much for those videos,

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před rokem +1

      Thank you so much for sharing those memories! The smells of the food must have been great!

  • @bigdaddysantos
    @bigdaddysantos Před 2 lety +9

    Great Video of a section of the city lost to Urban renewal. I had family that lived on Front Street on the East Side (Big Mike's bicycle shop) and upended by the renewal effort. Interestingly enough, I now live in Newburyport Massachusetts which in the 60s and 70s fought a similar renewal effort and used the money to preserve the old buildings. Newburyport was also home to the Wheelwright Family - Edmund March Wheelwright (buried here) was an architect on the Bulkeley bridge (as well as the Longfellow "salt shaker" bridge in Boston). Great job!

  • @bill8985
    @bill8985 Před 20 dny +1

    I only had a brief interlude of my life in Hartford. Back then I could feel the bones and the ghosts of a once great city. While so sad to watch this, I am truly impressed at the detail of your presentation.

  • @johnnytoronto1066
    @johnnytoronto1066 Před měsícem +2

    Very well done. Thank you! I witnessed the "urban renewal" of Detroit. As in Hartford, it was a total crime.

  • @richjakowski1056
    @richjakowski1056 Před 2 lety +6

    A very scholarly discussion of Hartford history as are all your preceding videos. My dad was born in 1910 and grew up in this area of Hartford. His family lived in an 8 family apartment house on Portland St. This entire street and all the buildings on it was completely demolished in redevelopment of the 1950-60s. I was born in 1939 and lived further north on Elmer St. I'd love to see a discussion of the movie theaters of Hartford. There were eight I attended regularly in the early 50s, 10 all together if you counted the Crown and State, though the State only hosted band performances during that era as I recall.

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for watching! I'd like to do a video about movie theaters (I have a lot of material about them), but I'd have to secure the rights to all the photos I'd need to use.

  • @chizzy756
    @chizzy756 Před 2 lety +4

    Good vid my friend keep up the great work as a Hartford native I enjoy learning about the city before my time 💯❤️🤘🏾

  • @centralctbench6843
    @centralctbench6843 Před 2 lety +4

    So glad I found this channel. Love local history like this

  • @ABMP4D3
    @ABMP4D3 Před 2 lety +4

    Great documentary, the bridge across the CT River that burned in 1895, cost the life of several horses, and the Hose wagon for Engine Company 3 of the City of Hartford Fire Dept. The horses, and hose wagon went down when the bridge collapsed, and were never removed from the river. They were closer to the East Hartford side of the bridge.

    • @AidenSexsmith
      @AidenSexsmith Před 11 měsíci +1

      Knew about the fire, didn't know a hose wagon went down. When they made the bridge, a few islands disappeared from the River.

    • @ABMP4D3
      @ABMP4D3 Před 11 měsíci

      @@AidenSexsmith Company #3 was on Market St., The station was torn down in 1958 when Constitution Plaza and 91 were built.

  • @annastani7736
    @annastani7736 Před 2 lety +5

    Another great video Dan. I appreciate the work you put into this.

  • @KingBreeze07
    @KingBreeze07 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Ah man 👍🏾 great video. Hartford native I had no idea about an East side neighborhood. Wow do you have more videos on this neighborhood?

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před 10 měsíci +1

      I have more of them in this playlist: czcams.com/play/PLsggUe_EuYz0VGDrwTdApP6-nq05xpAkY.html

  • @TheJojo01902
    @TheJojo01902 Před 2 lety +1

    Totally fascinating. Once again, I commend you for the use of the ‘morphing red rectangle’ to zoom in on that part of the view being discussed!

  • @paulworthen9972
    @paulworthen9972 Před 2 lety +4

    Great video! What happened to all the shipping business hat was coming in to the waterfront? Did they dock elsewhere?

  • @onazram1
    @onazram1 Před měsícem +1

    Well done Dan..

  • @solmorales7449
    @solmorales7449 Před 2 lety +3

    I am fascinated by the whole history of Hartford and how the first Irish Italians lived in this city.

  • @jackd8602
    @jackd8602 Před rokem +1

    Great presentation!! Thanks again Dan.

  • @ELLIS1737
    @ELLIS1737 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you. A lot of work was involved in putting this together. This is the first of your videos I've seen. Looking forward to seeing others.

  • @dougchobey9335
    @dougchobey9335 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting! Never lived there, but you can picture it.

  • @theblackmanarmedwithacamera

    WOOOOWWWW! IT'S AMAZING TO SEE PLACES OF YESTERDAY'S PAST!! LOVE THE VIDEO. LOADS OF INFO. SUBBED!!!

  • @tonystrychard2529
    @tonystrychard2529 Před 9 měsíci +2

    and sady...the Constitution Plaza walkway and WFSB is no longer there...

  • @charlesburns3946
    @charlesburns3946 Před 2 lety +5

    This is great stuff. Perhaps one day you might document the old East Side's large leaf tobacco industry and cigar manufacturing history. In the early 20th-late 19th Century, Hartford was the second largest leaf tobacco exporter in America, surpassed in tonnage of exports only by Richmond, VA. Much of the leaf was shipped to cigar factories to New York by boat and to Tampa by rail. Especially dense was the area from State Street south to the Park River, east and west of Front Street. I could provide names of many companies. I have PDF copies of the Hartford Tobacco Journal, a weekly trade paper, from the 1910s. Every wave of new immigrants contained thousands of new workers getting their start in Hartford's cigar leaf industry. Though politically incorrect now, the Hartford tobacco industry long paid more in taxes to the city than the relatively "recent" insurance business. All trace of Hartford's tobacco industry is gone now yet many old warehouses are repurposed and still exist, notably on Windsor St, Woodland St, and other places near East Hartford center. A comprehensive book on the subject needs to be written but I am getting too old. Much company records are held at UCONN. I hope that by identifying the buildings of the old East Side that were tobacco buildings, some of this little known rich history can be preserved. If making such a video interests you i could at least send you the PDF files. You have a valuable, serious and dignified channel here, so if you like, contact me on Signal or Telegram or simply
    cfburns17@gmail.com

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před 2 lety +1

      Did you watch my video about State Street? I focus on the block between Market and Front. My next video will be about State Street east of Front Street to the Connecticut River. Thanks for watching!

    • @AidenSexsmith
      @AidenSexsmith Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@historywithdansterner263 I'd love to see the history of The great meadow in East Hartford, before the highways. Dad said that Italians used to be living there, too. Brainard Airport area with the Regional Market is another, I'm interested in.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před 8 dny

      My mother worked in the processing barn of one of the shade tobacco farms when she was young. She said that the men working in the fields used to wrap frogs and snakes and creepy crawlies inside the bundles of tobacco leaves as a practical joke before carrying them into the barns, so that when the girls unwrapped the tobacco bundles they would shriek and holler. Migrant workers from the South frequently worked those tobacco fields, including a very young Martin Luther King who wrote about it in his diary as being a seminal watershed moment for him, experiencing life in a State where although prejudice could of course be found it was more subtle, less overt, and unlikely to end in severe beatings or death.

  • @slimtimm1
    @slimtimm1 Před rokem +1

    Great work my friend

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! Please check out my other videos too. I have a lot more about Hartford's old East Side!

    • @slimtimm1
      @slimtimm1 Před rokem +2

      Been watching them ALL

  • @junkandthangs
    @junkandthangs Před 2 lety

    Thanks Dan

  • @LMyrski
    @LMyrski Před měsícem +2

    Really sad. Such arrogance. So much lost.

  • @glennwetherbee4495
    @glennwetherbee4495 Před 2 lety +1

    Good video

  • @johnlazlo1908
    @johnlazlo1908 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have a origonial print of the Colt Firearms. Very old has horse n carrige on the print found in my grandfathers basement.

  • @JarrettDorough
    @JarrettDorough Před 19 dny +1

    Hi Dan, not sure if it's covered in your library as I just discovered you but do you know what building used to be on the river at the ferry crossing in Rocky Hill? Where the large silos are?

    • @historywithdansterner263
      @historywithdansterner263  Před 19 dny

      I don't know the history of that building. Is it one that was demolished recently?

    • @JarrettDorough
      @JarrettDorough Před 19 dny +1

      @@historywithdansterner263 I'm not sure when it was taken down. I used to live here over 10 years ago but don't remember it there back then.

  • @mikegruber172
    @mikegruber172 Před rokem

    interesting, until about 1991? there was a random deli on the corner of Columbus and what is now Bob Steele road. I wonder if that was from long. It was torn down early 90s.

  • @NellaaaaJj
    @NellaaaaJj Před 7 dny +1

    Hartford has so many hidden facts

  • @AidenSexsmith
    @AidenSexsmith Před 11 měsíci +1

    Now if they put the highway underground, as proposed with Hartford 400, the area would be changed again. The railroad tracks are still there, correct?

  • @seamusmckeon9109
    @seamusmckeon9109 Před 2 lety +2

    Now home to Constipation Plaza!

  • @Alejandro-es3nj
    @Alejandro-es3nj Před 2 lety +1

    Tartarian

  • @josephconsuegra6420
    @josephconsuegra6420 Před 2 lety +1

    It’s pronounced “Buck” “Lee” Bridge.

    • @centralctbench6843
      @centralctbench6843 Před 2 lety

      I’ve always called it Bulkley

    • @josephconsuegra6420
      @josephconsuegra6420 Před 2 lety

      @@centralctbench6843 I grew up in CT in the ‘60’s. It was pronounced “”Buck” “Lee”. Maybe the influx of Puerto Ricans changed the pronunciation. Anyway Hartford has been the armpit of CT for a while. Left in early 80’s because it became a POS.

  • @JOZONER
    @JOZONER Před 9 měsíci

    EVERYTHING IS CORNY IN HTFD😂😂😂😂

  • @jaykoolis961
    @jaykoolis961 Před 2 měsíci

    First of all Hartford was cutoff from the Connecticut River by flood control dikes long before highways were built. Second the East Side and Front Street was a slum. The homes there contained cold water flats with inadequate sanitary facilities. We need to stop romanticizing it.

    • @frog-spit-182
      @frog-spit-182 Před 8 dny

      I'd take a slum over the suburban wasteland the Hartford metro is today. Parking lots and fat people in SUVs.

  • @louispeddiltton47
    @louispeddiltton47 Před měsícem

    move the city of hartford. thats the only way to make it look nice again. its been done before... dont be so lazy.

  • @scotts9760
    @scotts9760 Před rokem

    Interesting history, but eh Hartford is a dying city. Don’t throw good money after bad.