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Lebanon (/ ˈ l ɛ b ən ə n / LEB-ən-ən) is a town in New London County, Connecticut, United States. The town is part of the Southeastern Connecticut Planning Region . The population was 7,142 at the 2020 census . [ 1 ]
The town of Lebanon was incorporated in 1700, and the area that became the green was settled by Joseph Trumble in 1704. He raised cattle and operated a store, whose 1730 building became the War Office. The green's expanse of grassy meadows is a rare surviving example of an 18th-century town common in Connecticut.
The War Office is located facing Lebanon's elongated village green on the west side of West Town Street north of the Governor Jonathan Trumbull House, a National Historic Landmark. It is a 1-1/2 story wood frame structure, with a gambrel roof, central brick chimney, and clapboarded exterior.
New London County lost the towns of Voluntown, Pomfret, Killingly, Canterbury, Plainfield, and Lebanon to the newly formed county. In 1785, Middlesex County was constituted, consisting of towns along the lower Connecticut River Valley, taking away the towns of Killingworth and Saybrook from New London County.
Here it duplexes with Connecticut Route 85 for 0.07 miles, then continues northeasterly toward Lebanon, where it end at a junction with Route 207. The portion between Route 66 and Route 85 is known as the " Henry Champion Highway".
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Former city County Planning region Date chartered as city Date of disestablishment Disposition South Norwalk: Fairfield: Western Connecticut: 1871 1913 Consolidated with Town and City of Norwalk in 1913. Now a neighborhood and a taxing district. Rockville: Tolland: Capitol: 1889 1965 Consolidated with the Town of Vernon. Now a CDP. Willimantic ...
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