Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The former Norwalk City Hall, located in South Norwalk was built in 1912. The building has since been added, on March 23, 1995, to the National Register of Historic Places . Norwalk's city hall is now located at 125 East Avenue.
August 23, 2002 (32 Main St. Newtown: Built c. 1763, a two-and-a-half-story house which hosted officers of French commander Rochambeau's troops in 1781 en route to the Siege of Yorktown, Virginia.
Norwalk City Hall and Concert Hall. Norwalk's municipal government is a weak-mayor form of a mayor-council government with the mayor of Norwalk elected by its voters. [58] The city's charter gives certain administrative powers exclusively to the council and others jointly to the Council and Mayor. The Common Council is the law-writing body of ...
Bridgeport City Hall; Deep River Town Hall; Enfield Town Meetinghouse; Greenwich Town Hall; Hartford Municipal Building; New Haven City Hall and County Courthouse; Norwalk City Hall; Old Town Hall (Stamford, Connecticut) Waterbury City Hall — part of Waterbury Municipal Center Complex; Town Hall (Westport, Connecticut) (former; moved ...
Former City Hall. Norwalk City Hall [22] Completed in 1912, when South Norwalk was an autonomous municipal entity, 41 North Main St. originally served as the South Norwalk Town Hall. The Norwalk Historical Society along with the Norwalk Historical Commission reopened the Norwalk Historical Society Museum at the Lockwood House at 141 East Avenue.
The former city hall was built in 1912. On May 19, 1921, the Connecticut General Assembly passed an act that split the city of Norwalk into six taxing districts with Rowayton formally joining the city as its sixth taxing district. [54] Palace Theater on Main Street in South Norwalk. The Palace Theater in South Norwalk was built by Samuel Roodner.
The city's Planning and Zoning Commission approved a site plan Sept. 25 for a proposed new Kwik Star convenience store and gas station at the southeast corner of Chatham Avenue and Highway 28.
Mill Hill Historic Park in Norwalk, Connecticut, is a living history museum composed of three buildings: the circa 1740 Governor Thomas Fitch IV "law office", the c. 1826 Downtown District Schoolhouse, and the 1835 Norwalk Town Hall; as well as a historic cemetery also called the Town House Hill Cemetery.