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With
20 stations sited at various landmarks throughout the city's downtown,
this historic walking tour provides the city's first permanent exploration
of Middletown's illustrious and diverse past. Colorful, highly illustrated
plaques reveal the city of yesteryear: the shipbuilding glory days,
clashes between Tories and Patriots, efforts by local Abolitionists
to end slavery, and how newly arrived immigrants build the majestic
churches that stand today. Along the way you will meet the wide
range of people who have called Middletown home, from American presidents
to newly freed slaves, Academy Award-winning composers to immigrant
stone masons, army privates and Civil War generals, even a scientist
who theorized that dinosaur footprints were the marks of a prehistoric
four-toed man.
The Heritage Trail can be explored on foot or bicycle either in
its entirety or one or two panels at a time. The trail's introduction
is located next to the Middletown Police Station at 222 Main Street,
where four large panels give an overview of the city's past.
Free descriptive brochures, which include a map of the trail, are
available at the police department, General Mansfield House at 151
Main Street, Russell Library at 123 Broad Street and the Middlesex
County Chamber of Commerce at 393 Main Street.
All stops, except #5 Riverside Cemetery and #11 Washington Green,
are wheelchair accessible.
The Middletown Heritage Trail is the project of the Middlesex County
Historical Society, with grants from the Connecticut Humanities
Council, Liberty Bank, and the Middlesex County Community Foundation.
Guided tours of the Heritage Trail for school groups and organizations
can be arranged by contacting the Middlesex County Historical Society.
A small fee is charged.

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