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Cromwell was settled in the 17th century, and remained predominantly agricultural in character well into the 19th century. It had a small but locally important port on the Connecticut River , which declined in the 19th century, and Main Street afterward became the principal economic and civic area of the town.
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Ranney was a prominent landowner and influential member of the community. Ranney is the only of the original settlers to be buried in the Old Burying Ground in Cromwell, CT. [5] Jenn McKinlay, author, had worked at the Cromwell Belden Public Library and mentions them in the novel, Books Can Be Deceiving [34]
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The original description page was here. All following user names refer to en.wikipedia. All following user names refer to en.wikipedia. 2008-12-31 18:39 Blubberboy92 187×60× (10266 bytes)
Suzanne Marie Mahoney was born in San Bruno, California, on October 16, 1946 [2] [3] as the third [4] of four children in a working-class Irish-American Catholic family. [5] Her mother, Marion Elizabeth (née Turner), was a medical secretary, and her father, Francis "Frank" Mahoney, loaded cases of beer onto boxcars, [6] was a laborer and gardener. [7]