Asa Seymour Curtis House
2016 Elm Street, Stratford, CT 06615Benjamin Douglas House
11 South Main Street, Middletown, CT 06457Cross Street A.M.E. Zion Church
160 Cross Street, Middletown, CT 06457David Ruggles Gravesite
Yantic Cemetery, Lafayette and Williams Streets, Norwich, CT 06360Elijah Lewis House
1 Mountain Spring Road, Farmington, CT 06032Francis Gillette House
545 Bloomfield Avenue, Bloomfield, CT 06002Friendship Valley
60 Pomfret Road, Brooklyn, CT 06234Greenmanville Historic District
Mystic Seaport, 75 Greenmanville Avenue, Stonington, CT 06355Harriet Beecher Stowe Center
77 Forest Street, Hartford, CT 06105Hart Porter House and Outbuilding
465 Porter Street, Manchester, CT 06040Isaiah Tuttle House
4040 Torringford Street, Torrington, CT 06790James Davis House
111 Goose Lane, Guilford, CT 06437John Brown Birthplace Site
John Brown Road (Route 4 west of 272, take University Drive one mile), Torrington, CT 06790John Randall House
41 Norwich-Westerly Road (Route 2), North Stonington, CT 06359Joshua Hempsted House
11 Hempstead Street, New London, CT 06320Kimberly Mansion
1625 Main Street, Glastonbury, CT 06033Old Windham County Courthouse (Brooklyn Town Hall)
4 Wolf Den Road, Brooklyn, CT 06234Samuel Deming House
66 Main Street, Farmington, CT 06032Samuel May House
73 Pomfret Road, Brooklyn, CT 06234This home, built around 1825, was owned by Reverend Samuel May (1798-1875), the first Unitarian minister of the Unitarian Meeting House on the Brooklyn Green. Reverend May was a prominent abolitionist and one of the first members of the National Anti-Slavery Society. When Prudence Crandall wanted to open a school for black girls in nearby Canterbury, Samuel May came to her aid. When Crandall was arrested in 1833 and brought to Brooklyn to be incarcerated after refusing to post bond, it was May and the abolitionist Benson family who were there to assist her and, the next day, secure her release. May was also a great supporter of Crandall through her trial at the Old Windham County Court House, now the Brooklyn Town Hall. This home is privately owned and not open to the public.
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