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The Westbrook Town Center Historic District encompasses the historic town center of Westbrook, Connecticut. Roughly linear in shape, the district extends along the Boston Post Road (United States Route 1), with its focal center at the junction with Essex Road (Connecticut Route 153). The area has been a center of civic activity since the early ...
Westbrook High School is a part of the Westbrook Public Schools. The school competes athletically and academically (e.g. High School Quiz Bowl) with many other shoreline high schools, and is well known for its music and theatre programs. It is located on McVeagh Road in Westbrook next to the St. Mark's Catholic Church.
Westbrook Center is a census-designated place (CDP) comprising the primary village and adjacent residential land in the town of Westbrook, Middlesex County, Connecticut, United States. It is in the southern part of the town, along U.S. Route 1 and bordered to the south by Long Island Sound .
Map of Connecticut highlighting the Connecticut River Estuary region. The Lower Connecticut River Valley is a region of the state of Connecticut around the juncture where the Connecticut River meets Long Island Sound. It includes towns in Middlesex County and the western edge of New London County. It is located in the southeastern-central part ...
Route 9 / Route 153 south – Old Saybrook, Middletown, Westbrook: Northern terminus of Route 153; exit 3 on Route 9: 11.84: 19.05: Main Street (SR 602 west) / Westbrook Road (SR 604 south) 12.60: 20.28: Route 9 – Old Saybrook, Middletown: Exit 5 on Route 9: Deep River: 14.41: 23.19: Route 80 west – Killingworth: Eastern terminus of Route ...
Westbrook's public elementary school, the Daisy Ingraham Elementary School, was the recipient of a Blue Ribbon honor for excellence for 1998–1999. A new middle school, connected to the high school, Westbrook High School, opened in 2005. Oxford Academy, an all-boys boarding school, has been located in Westbrook since 1973.
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In 1959, it was extended as a tail north through Westbrook to the former Route 144 (now a town road called Bushy Hill Road) in Deep River. In 1942 or 1943, its northern end was relocated and extended northward to Route 80. In 1962, it was extended to its current northern terminus at Route 148 and the portion south of US 1 became town roads.