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 06033Lyamn Homestead
Lyman Road, Middlefield, CT 06455Old 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 06234Shaker Village
Shaker Road, near Taylor Road, Enfield, CT 06082Smith-Cowles House
27 Main Street, Farmington, CT 06032Steven Peck House
32 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT 06371The Ovals
36 Seeley Road, Wilton, CT 06897Theodore Dwight Weld House
77 Parsonage Road, Hampton, CT 06247Theodore Dwight Weld (1803-1895) was born in this house and lived here until 1825. For 18 nights in February 1834, all students and some faculty of the Lane Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio held the first major public debates to answer the question: "Ought the people of the slaveholding states to abolish slavery immediately?" They concluded that slavery was a sin and that any course except immediate emancipation was therefore also a sin. Theodore Dwight Weld masterminded the idea of debates on slavery and was the key force behind the Lane Debates. His anti-slavery activities as an orator, writer and organizer put his contribution alongside William Lloyd Garrison and Wendell Phillips in the abolitionist movement.