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    Recommended Reviews - Guilford Town Green

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    14 years ago

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    10 years ago

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    10 years ago

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    13 years ago

    Home of one of the best art festivals in all of Connecticut each year around the middle of July, check it out and you won't be disappointed.

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    11 years ago

    Such a cute area to just walk around and peek into small shops. Great place to take kids and animals!

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    Faulker's Light Brigade - Lots of yakkers come here

    Faulker's Light Brigade

    5.0(1 review)
    0.6 mi

    A great light but not…read moreso great flies and birds Faulkner's Island is one of the very coolest places in Long island Sound and the lighthouse is one of the most interesting. It's about 4 miles or so off the coast of Guilford, stands 40 feet tall and was completed in 1802. President Thomas Jefferson came out to the island to dedicated the light. The island is now only about 2.5 acres but at one time was almost 10 acres. Constant storms hammered the island until most of it was lost to the sea. Efforts have been tried to preserve what's left of the island with mixed results. It seems only a matter of time before the entire island is lost. About one mile to the South West, Goose Island was once several acres but now is virtually submerged at high tide. The island is extremely important because it is a nesting ground for several types of birds. In fact the scientists that are doing research on the island wear hard hats because the birds are so aggressive during nesting season and anyone coming even close to the island is open to attack. The island is strictly off limits during the breeding season, but during the months when the birds are gone small boats can land, although it is certainly not encouraged. One day a year, during September, the island does have a open house and people are allowed to explore the island. The flies are usually very nasty and but it is such a great place people hardly notice. Faulkner's has a long and fascinating history and on clear days the light can be seen from the coast of Connecticut. The area is frequently foggy and many ships have been lost to the treacherous reefs surrounding the light and island. If you look at my pictures you can see how thick the fog can get. Gps, a good compass bearing or just blind luck is sometimes needed to find the island at all. The people doing the work trying to save the light and island are to be commended but in the end the sea always wins. The Faulkner's Light Brigade can be reached at PO Box 199, Guilford, Ct 06437.

    Photos
    Faulker's Light Brigade - Steep cliffs

    Steep cliffs

    Faulker's Light Brigade - Birdwatcher screen

    Birdwatcher screen

    Faulker's Light Brigade - Where the $#&*@ is it.

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    Where the $#&*@ is it.

    Guilford Historical Marker

    Guilford Historical Marker

    3.0(1 review)
    0.0 mi

    Things I learned from the Guilford marker:…read more 1) Guilford dates to 1639, but that's only good for seventh place on the list of oldest Connecticut towns. 2) Guilford's settlers bought the land from a Squaw named Shaumpishuh. 3) During the American Revolution, British troops landed in Guilford and burned down two houses. Located on the huge Guilford Town Green is this 2-sided marker from the CT Historical Commission, in the familiar white lettering on a blue background. It has different inscriptions on both sides. The marker was dedicated in 1980 and although the blue background and white lettering are crisp with no signs of fading or peeling, unfortunately I did see some vandalism and graffiti on both sides. The full inscription reads: Guilford This town, the seventh oldest in Connecticut, was founded in 1639 by an oppressed but optimistic band of English Puritans. Henry Whitfield, a minister in Ockley, near London, was the moving spirit behind their emigration. About forty of his friends and sympathizers formed a joint stock company to sail across the Atlantic. They were mostly young and energetic men, farmers, well-educated, and all of them persons of high standing in their community. In a deed of sale dated September 29, 1639, the Whitfield Company purchased the lands between Stony Creek and East River from the Squaw Shaumpishuh, Sachem of the local Menunkatuck Indian tribe. Whitfield's stone house at first served as a fortress and meeting place. Guilford Green was inspired by the typical 17th century English common. In the fall of 1641 the settlers purchased from the Indians land beyond East River that included most of what became East Guilford. East Guilford, now Madison, was set off as a distinct church society in 1703, North Guilford in 1720, and North Bristol (North Madison) in 1753. Two good harbors and two tidal rivers assured success to Guilford in Connecticut - New York coastwise shipping and the West India trade during the 18th century. In the American Revolution British troops landed several times and burned two houses. The famous Sachem's Head Hotel (1832-1865) and Guilford Point House (1797-1897) made this town the center of society for many years. John Beattie's granite quarries at Leete's Island employed as many as three hundred workmen and supplied stone for the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. Famous sons of Guilford include William Leete, an early Governor of Connecticut; Fitz-Greene Halleck, one of the noted Knickerbocker Poets; and Abraham Baldwin, a signer of the United States Constitution and a Senator from Georgia. Erected by the Town of Guilford The Guilford Foundation The Guilford Keeping Society and the Connecticut Historical Commission 1980 158 CT towns done, 12 to go

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    Guilford Historical Marker
    Guilford Historical Marker
    Guilford Historical Marker

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    Amistad Memorial

    Amistad Memorial

    5.0(3 reviews)
    12.7 mi

    "Make Us Free" I…read morelearned about the Amistad story from Steven Spielberg's 1997 movie. In 1839, a Spanish slave ship called La Amistad was carrying African slaves to Cuba. Under the leadership of Joseph Cinque (the central figure of the Amistad story), there was a prison break on the ship and two of the Spanish crew were killed. The ship ended up in New Haven, CT where a Supreme Court trial took place to decide the destiny of the slaves. Were they Spanish property? Were they free men? Were they criminals? What exactly were they? You will find this powerful memorial in front of the New Haven City Hall. It's a striking three sided sculpture with a trio of sculpted panels depicting Sengbe Pieh, also known as Joseph Cinque. Each panel shows him at different stages in his life -as a free African, as a defendant in the Supreme Court trial, and as a free man ready to return to Africa. The gorgeous sculptures of Cinque are 9 feet tall, resting on a 2 foot granite base. The three-sided base contains a large inscription that tells the story. The full inscription reads: Make Us Free This monument is a memorial to the 1839 Amistad Revolt and its leader, Sengbe Pieh, also known as Joseph Cinque. Sengbe Pieh was one of the millions of Africans kidnapped from their homes and transported in bondage to the Americas. Sold into slavery in Cuba, he and forty-eight other men, and four children were bound aboard the schooner La Amistad. During a storm, Sengbe Pieh successfully freed himself and his fellows. The Africans seized the ship, but their offers to steer La Amistad homeward were thwarted. After futile weeks at sea, they were captured off Long Island by the U.S.S. Washington. On this site, the Amistad Africans were jailed awaiting trial for piracy and murder. To aid their struggle for freedom, the Amistad Committee formed, counting in its number ministers Simeon Jocelyn, Joshua Leavitt, and James Pennington; merchant Lewis Tappan; professor Josiah Gibbs; and lawyer Roger Baldwin. The Africans were tried twice prior to their ultimate triumph before the United States Supreme Court, where former President John Quincy Adams courageously defended them. Sengbe Pieh and his fellows were declared Free Persons. The Africans sought to return home. To raise funds for their voyage and to further the anti-slavery cause, they engaged in a series of speaking tours. In 1841, after a sojourn that profoundly influenced the abolitionist movement, they set sail, free at last. To commemorate the heroism of the Amistad Africans and those who shared in their quest for freedom, the 1989 Amistad Committee commissioned his sculpture by Ed Hamilton and dedicated it on September 26, 1992. Erected 1992 by the 1989 Amistad Committee One of the best movie courtroom scenes I have ever seen has the great Anthony Hopkins as an elderly John Quincy Adams arguing for the freedom of the slaves before the US Supreme Court. If this doesn't give you goose bumps, go check to see if you are breathing. Check this out.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZFr4VLPW9Q

    The Amistad memorial has been on my list for some time. It commemorates the fight to establish the…read morefreedom of those slaves who took control of the slave ship The Amistad. After two trials, it was announced that they were in fact Freemen and allowed to return to their homes in Africa. It is a cornerstone in the abolitionist movement, and crucial case to abolishment of slavery in the USA.

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    Amistad Memorial
    Amistad Memorial
    Amistad Memorial

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    Guilford Town Green - landmarks - Updated June 2026

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