In order to practice social distancing and slow the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), public access to our building, 165 Capitol Avenue, will be restricted. Although in-person interactions will be limited, our office staff will be available via email as normal. For the Business Services Division email CRD@ct.gov and for the Legislative & Elections Administration Division email LEAD@ct.gov. We apologize for the inconvenience and hope to return to normal business as soon as the immediate threat to public health has subsided.

 
MUSEUMS
 
BERLIN. Hungerford Nature Center, 191 Farmington Ave., Kensington 06037. Tel., (860) 827-9064. Website: www.newbritainyouthmuseum.org. Farm, pet, and exotic animals, exhibits, wildflower walk, picnicking, play scape, trails, pond, landscaped gardens, and changing exhibitions. Open 10:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; closed Sun. and Mon. Seasonal special events. Admission: $6.00; children under 2 and members, free.
 
BLOOMFIELD. 4-H Development Fund, Inc., d.b.a. 4-H Education Center at Auerfarm, 158 Auer Farm Rd., 06002. Tel., (860) 242-7144. Exec. Dir., Erica Fearn; Teachers for Academic Lessons, Preschool and Family Programs, Emily Baffaro, Lynn Bestor, Marcy Boyd, Margaret Jerram, Dana Kuhl, Joanna Marshall, Kim Read, Beth Rottblatt, Michelle Rozek, Isabel Volpe, Darlene Yule; Production and Facilities, Ben Carroll, Alison Grabarz, Frank Ravosa, Justin Whitehouse; Bd. members, Mary Eberle, Tammy Exum, Dave Kopp, Kevin Krebsbach, Joey Listro, Bob Lyle, Cynthia McGinty, Emily Mooney-Scott, Kevin Palache, Vikki Reski, Carol Rosales, Jeff Small, Mark Weisman, vacancy; Volunteers, vacancy. Website: www.auerfarm.org. E-mail: info@auerfarm.org. Science Education for Pre-K through High School, Inquiry Science Preschool, Agriculture, Natural Science, and Horticulture Education High School. The 4H Education Center at Auerfarm is on historical Auerbach Farm, complete with demonstration gardens, farm animals, nature trails, exhibits, pastures, fields, elementary and middle school programs, pre-school programs, public programs, summer science programs, volunteer and service-learning opportunities, special events, family celebrations, maple syrup, and apple cider making in season. Open to the public year-round, 7 days a week for self-guided tours. Office open 8:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Mon.-Fri.
 
BRIDGEPORT. Housatonic Museum of Art, Housatonic Community College, 900 Lafayette Blvd., 06604-4704. Tel., (203) 332-5052; FAX, (203) 332-5123. Dir., Robbin Zella. Website: www.housatonicmuseum.org. Founded in 1967, the diverse Permanent Collection, with an emphasis on contemporary art, is exhibited throughout the college campus. The Museum schedules up to six changing exhibitions per year, which may initiate from the Permanent Collection, showcase the work of established or emerging artists, or feature important traveling exhibitions. The Museum is both a community and an academic resource, open to the public without charge replete with free parking. Open 8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M., Mon.-Fri.; Thurs. evening until 7:00 P.M.; 9:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M., Sat.; call for summer and holiday hours (203) 332-5000; closed for all state and federal holidays.
 
BRIDGEPORT. The Barnum Museum, 820 Main St., 06604. Tel., (203) 331-1104; FAX, (203) 331-0079. Exec. Dir., Kathy Maher. Website: www.barnum-museum.org. Established by the Great American Showman, P.T. Barnum, The Barnum Museum opened in 1893 and serves a national audience with educational programming and exhibitions that focus on 19th century American history, arts, and sciences. Artifacts including Tom Thumb's miniature carriages to Barnum's FeJee Mermaid are on display and guided tours are available. The historic landmark building is under restoration. The Museum's modern wing, People's United Bank Gallery, is open free to the public on a limited schedule: 11:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M., Thurs. and Fri.; 11:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M., Sat. from June through Labor Day weekend, and at other times for programs and lectures. Admission fees apply for some programs. Handicapped accessible. Please visit our Website: www.barnum-museum.org for the most up-to-date information.
 
BRIDGEPORT. The Discovery Museum and Planetarium, 4450 Park Ave., 06604. One mile south of Merritt Parkway (Rte. 15), Exit 47. Tel., (203) 372-3521; FAX, (203) 374-1929. Exec. Dir., Bill Finch. Website: www.discoverymuseum.org. Discovery Museum is a family-friendly science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) museum. The Discovery Museum’s 32,000 square foot facility offers three floors of hands-on learning exhibits, including: energy, physics, nanotechnology, space, imaginative science-themed spaces for early childhood learners, a planetarium (for a small surcharge), an auditorium for live science demonstrations, Connecticut’s only Science on a Sphere (a large animated globe displaying hundreds of datasets about Earth, the Solar System, and our universe), and Connecticut’s only Challenger Center (an immersive mock space station and mission control simulation experience) STEM education programs/demos/learning labs. Traveling science comes to your venue. Weekly summer programs for kids in grades K-6. Scout science badges. Overnights, birthdays, events, and rentals. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sun.; plus Mon., Jul.-Aug. and select school holidays. Admission: $11.00 adults; $9.00 children (3-17), seniors, students with ID, teachers with ID; $8.00 special needs guests; children under 3 free.
 
BRISTOL. The American Clock and Watch Museum, Inc., 100 Maple St., 06010. Tel., (860) 583-6070; FAX, (860) 583-1862. Pres., Brendan Sullivan; Treas., Michael Nicastro; Exec. Dir., Patricia Philippon. Website: www.clockandwatchmuseum.org. E-mail: info@clockmuseum.org. Open Apr.-Nov., 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., daily; winter hours: Dec.-Mar., 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Fri., Sat., and Sun. only. Admission: $6.00 adults; $5.00 seniors; $3.00 children (8-17); please contact the museum for group rates.
 
BROOKFIELD. Brookfield Museum & Historical Society, 165 Whisconier Rd. (at the intersection of Rte. 25 and Rte. 133 in Brookfield), P.O. Box 5231, 06804. Website: www.brookfieldcthistory.org. E-mail: info@brookfieldcthistory.org. Local history museum and research library in the center of Brookfield's National Register Historic District, Civil War library, genealogy library, museum store. The museum building is Brookfield's 1876 former town hall. Historic formal colonial garden adjacent to museum. Exhibits open Noon-4:00 P.M. every Sat. and by special appointment by calling the museum at Tel., (203) 740-8140.
 
CANTERBURY. Prudence Crandall Museum, One So. Canterbury Rd., 06331; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 58, 06331. National Historical Landmark/State Archaeological Preserve/Connecticut Freedom Trail Site administered by the State Historic Preservation Office and Dept. of Economic and Community Development. Museum is site of the first academy for African-American young women in the Nation (1833-34), established by Prudence Crandall, State Heroine. The museum has period rooms, permanent and changing exhibits, in-house research library, and museum shop. The Museum is located on Route 169, a National Scenic Byway. For information on hours and admission fees, call Tel., (860) 546-7800 or (860) 500-2360, visit website: www.cultureandtourism.org or email at Crandall.museum@ct.gov.
 
CANTON. Roaring Brook Nature Center, 70 Gracey Rd., 06019 (off Rte. 44). Tel., (860) 693-0263. Website: www.roaringbrook.org. E-mail: rbnc@thechildrensmuseumct.org. Part of The Children's Museum of West Hartford, Roaring Brook Nature Center in Canton welcomes visitors to a unique interpretive center that feature exhibits and touchscreen information about Connecticut's woodlands and wetlands, its Native American history, and its wildlife, including birds of prey. The grounds include outdoor bird of prey enclosures and turtle ponds, a native plant and butterfly garden, a vernal pool observation deck, and over five miles of trails for hiking and winter cross-country skiing in the adjoining Werner's Woods, where visitors can explore the forest, streams, ponds, and fields. Programming throughout the year includes school and scout groups, birthday parties, after-school classes for children and adults, evening and weekend activities, school vacation programs and summer educational enrichment programs, special events, concerts, and rentals as well as extensive natural science outreach programs in schools. The store is stocked with nature-related items. Roaring Brook Nature Center is open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; 1:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M., Sun.; closed Mon., except during Jul. and Aug.; closed New Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Hiking trails open daily, dawn until dusk. Admission: $7.00 adults and youth (12+); $6.00 seniors (62+); $5.00 children (2-12); children under 2, free.
 
DANBURY. Danbury Museum and Historical Society Authority, 43 Main St., 06810. Tel., (203) 743-5200. Website: www.danburymuseum.org. E-mail: b.guertin@danbury-ct.gov. (History Museum, Historic Buildings, Reference Library, Exhibition Hall.) Museum offices, exhibit hall, gift shop and archival library are open 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat. Tours of historic buildings 10:00 A.M.- 4:00 P.M., Saturdays only. The Charles Ives Birthplace, 5 Mountainville Ave., open by appointment.
 
EAST GRANBY. Old New-Gate Prison and Copper Mine, 115 Newgate Rd., 06026; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 254, 06026-0254. National Historic Landmark/State Archaeological Preserve administered by the State Historic Preservation Office and Dept. of Economic and Community Development. Tunnels left behind by miners burrowing deep underground in search of copper ore became Connecticut's first prison in 1773. Political prisoners were confined here during the Revolutionary War and female prisoners were incarcerated starting in 1824. The prison closed in 1827. The museum is open during the summer season. For information call (860) 653-3563 or (860) 500-2460 or visit Website: www.cultureandtourism.org.
 
EAST HAVEN. Shore Line Trolley Museum, 17 River St., 06512-2519. Tel., (203) 467-6927; FAX, (203) 467-7635. Website: www.shorelinetrolley.org. E-mail: info@shorelinetrolley.org. Transportation museum: street, railway, and rapid transit cars in operation and on display; rides and guided tours; educational programs for children and adults; special events; artifact display at visitors' center; library and research materials available. The museum is enrolled on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Dept. of the Interior. Special features include: world's first electric freight locomotive, world's oldest rapid transit car, world's oldest horse drawn streetcar, and rare operational trolley parlor car. Open 11:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Sun., Memorial Day-Labor Day; weekends, April, May, Sept.-Dec. For special events Admission: $12.00 adults; $10.00 seniors (62+); $10.00 children (2-15); children under 2, free. Note: Higher fares may apply during certain special event days. Special rates for charters, parties, and groups.
 
EAST WINDSOR. Connecticut Fire Museum, P.O. Box 297, 58 North Rd., Rte. 140, I-91, Exit 45, 06088-0360. Website: www.ceraweb.org/visit/firemuseum.php. On the same grounds as the Connecticut Trolley Museum. The Connecticut Fire Museum, also known as the Trolley Museum Fire Dept., is dedicated to the preservation and appreciation of antique fire apparatus and associated equipment. A nonprofit and historical association, Connecticut Antique Fire Apparatus Association, Inc., the parent organization of the Connecticut Fire Museum, was organized in 1968, incorporated in 1971, and opened its current facilities to the public in 1975. Special events held throughout the year. Group tour reservations welcome. Restrooms, visitors' center. For further information and group tour rates, Tel., (860) 627-6540.
 
EAST WINDSOR. Connecticut Trolley Museum, P.O. Box 360, 58 North Rd., Rte. 140, I-91, Exit 45, 06088-0360. Website: www.ct-trolley.org. E-mail: office@ct-trolley.org. Transportation Museum. Visitors ride 3.0 miles round trip on antique trolley cars through the scenic Connecticut countryside. Major Events: Rails to the Dark Side, Pumpkin Patch for Kids, Winterfest/Tunnel of Lights. Displays: Trolley Visitors Center with some of our more than 50 vintage 1894 to 1949 trolley cars, Antique Fire Museum. Restrooms in Visitors Center. Group tour reservations welcome. For further information and group tour rates, Tel., (860) 627-6540.
 
ESSEX. Connecticut River Museum at Steamboat Dock, 67 Main St., 06426. Tel., (860) 767-8269; FAX, (860) 767-7028. Exec. Dir., Tom Wilcox. Website: www.ctrivermuseum.org. E-mail: crm@ctrivermuseum.org. Housed in an 1878 Steamboat Dock warehouse and located on the spectacular Essex waterfront, the Connecticut River Museum tells the river's story through interactive exhibitions, special programs, workshops, and events. Featured is a working reproduction of the American Turtle, America's first submarine. Open 7 days a week (Memorial Day-Labor Day), Tues.-Sun. (Sept.-May). Call for hours. Admission: $10.00 adults; $8.00 seniors and Military; $7.00 students; $6.00 children (age 6-12); children under 6 and members, free. The Connecticut River Museum also offers daytime and evening river cruises seasonally.
 
FARMINGTON. Hill-Stead Museum, 35 Mountain Rd., 06032-2304. Website: www.hillstead.org. Established as a museum in 1946 and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1991, this outstanding example of Colonial Revival domestic architecture is set on 152 acres of park-like fields and woodlands. The museum, accredited by the American Association of Museums in 2003, houses masterpieces by Monet, Degas, Manet, Cassatt, and Whistler exhibited with Japanese woodblock prints, original furnishings, and decorative arts from when the Pope and Riddle families were in residence. The 1901 house is complemented by walking trails, nine historic buildings, miles of stone walls, and a circa 1920 Beatrix Farrand-designed Sunken Garden, today the site of an acclaimed poetry and music festival. The museum is open 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Sun. for house tours. Grounds open 7:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M., daily. Closed New Year's Day, Easter Sunday, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Admission: $16.00 adults; $14.00 seniors; $12.00 students; $8.00 children ages 6-12; children under 6 and members, free. For more information, volunteer opportunities, or a calendar of events, call Tel., (860) 677-4787 or visit website.
 
FARMINGTON. Stanley-Whitman House, 37 High St., 06032. Tel., (860) 677-9222. Exec. Dir./Curator, Andres A. Verzosa. Website: www.stanleywhitman.org. Early New England frame house built by John Stanley in 1720, opened as a museum in 1935, and named a National Historic Landmark in 1961. Historic house features period furnishings and guided tours to represent the lives of Farmington families in the 18th century. The grounds reflect the utilitarian uses of a colonial dooryard with its culinary, medicinal, and herbal plantings. Historic house tours and museum hours: 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Sun. Closed major holidays. Group tours by appointment. Admission for house tours: $7.00 adults; $5.00 seniors (63+); $4.00 children (5-18), children under 6, free; $5.00 AAA members. Admission to rest of museum is free.
 
GREENWICH. National Audubon Society, 613 Riversville Rd., 06831. Tel., (203) 869-5272; FAX, (203) 869-4437. Exec. Dir., Ana Paula Tavares. Website: www.ct.audubon.org. E-mail: ct@audubon.org. Nature centers in Greenwich, Sharon, and Southbury, with interpretive buildings, and 4,662 acres of sanctuary land. Centers open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., daily; interpretive buildings are closed major holidays. Admission: $3.00 adults; $1.50 children and senior citizens; National Audubon Society members, free.
 
GREENWICH. Bruce Museum, One Museum Dr., 06830 (Exit 3 off 1-95). Tel., (203) 869-0376. Exec. Dir./CEO, Robert Wolterstorff. Website: www.brucemuseum.org. Museum of fine arts and science galleries offering related programs for all ages and all abilities. Permanent galleries include minerals, formation of Long Island Sound, a woodland diorama, and a marine tank that features animals of Long Island Sound. Educational programs at the museum and extension programs into area schools. The Bruce Museum is accessible to individuals with disabilities. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sun.; closed Mon. and major holidays. Admission: $10.00 adults; $8.00 senior citizens (65 and up) and students (5-22 with valid ID); children under 5 and museum members, free: EBT card holders, free; free admission for all on Tues. Museum shop open during museum hours. Free parking on grounds.
 
GROTON. Historic Ship Nautilus/Submarine Force Museum, One Crystal Lake Rd., 06340; Mailing Address: Naval Submarine Base New London, Groton 06349-5571. Tel., (860) 694-3174; Toll Free, 1-800-343-0079; FAX, (860) 694-4150. Museum Dir., Bradley Boyd. Website: www.ussnautilus.org. The museum documents the development of submarines, from David Bushnell's Turtle, constructed in 1776, to the Navy's modern submarines. It is the Navy's official submarine museum. Visitors can tour the Nautilus, the first nuclear-powered submarine. There is bus and RV parking and a picnic area that has seating for up to 50. The museum has a gift shop. Open winter--Oct. 1-Apr. 30, 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., daily; closed Tues. Open summer--May 1-Sept. 30, 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., daily; closed Tues. The museum is closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. The museum and historic ship Nautilus are closed biannually for routine upkeep for two weeks: For the spring upkeep, we close starting Mon. of the last week of Mar. through the first week of Apr. For the fall upkeep, we close starting Mon. of the first full week in Nov. Admission and parking are free. Reservations required for groups of 25 or more.
 
GUILFORD. Henry Whitfield State Museum (Old Stone House), 248 Old Whitfield St., 06437-3459. National Historic Landmark/State Archaeological Preserve administered by the State Historic Preservation Office and Dept. of Economic and Community Development. This rare medieval design building is the oldest house in Connecticut and the oldest stone dwelling in New England (1639). Opened as the State Historical Museum in 1899, it features 17th- to 19th-century furnishings, exhibits, and a visitor center with galleries, shop, and research library. It is located on the New England National Scenic Trail. For information on hours and admission fees, call Tel., (203) 453-2457, visit website: www.cultureandtourism.org or e-mail at whitfieldmuseum@ct.gov.
 
HARTFORD. Arts at Trinity, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., 06106-3100. Box Office Tel., (860) 297-2199. Website: www.trincoll.edu. Performing Visual Arts, and Film. Austin Arts Center: Goodwin Theater, Garmany Hall, Widener Gallery, Gruss Music Center. Also, the Performance Lab at Trinity Commons, Cinestudio, The Trinity College Chapel, and the Crescent Center for Arts and Neuroscience (CCAN).
 
HARTFORDThe Hartford Public High School Museum & Archive, 55 Forest St., 06105. Tel., (860) 695-1405 or visit website: https://hphs1638.wordpress.com. Managed by the HPHS Museum Advisory Committee. The museum is located in the school and contains two areas: the museum display room and the archive. Hartford Public High School traces its history back to 1638 when Thomas Hooker started a Latin school for boys; it is the second oldest secondary school in the United States. The museum preserves the history of the school and its unique relationship with the City of Hartford. Featured items on display are paintings, graphics, photographs, classbooks for 1896-2010, school furniture, plaster casts of classical and 18th-century sculptures, antique science apparati, memorabilia, and architectural fragments from the 1883-1897 building on the former Hopkins Street. The archive preserves manuscripts, school records, photographic collections, the Owlet newspaper (1919-1989), the Chronicle literary publication (1891-1992), correspondence, school records, antique books, and memorabilia. The Lewis Fox Library nearby displays six paintings of principals by renowned Hartford artists such as Charles Noel Flagg. The large Stuart Munro-Lenox replica George Washington (early 19th-Century) is on display above the fireplace from the 1883 building. The museum is open to the public, free of charge, by appointment only. Closed on school holidays and during July and August.
 
HARTFORD. Connecticut Historical Society Museum and Library, One Elizabeth St., 06105. Tel., (860) 236-5621. Website: www.chs.org. From programs for adults and kids to award-winning exhibits to a nationally significant research collection, the Connecticut Historical Society provides countless opportunities to actively explore Connecticut's diverse history. The permanent exhibit Making Connecticut displays over 500 historic objects, documents, and images spanning more than 400 years of our state's history and traces themes like immigration, social change, fashion, transportation, recreation, home life, and Connecticut at war. Hands-on activities throughout help kids of all ages connect to the big ideas. The CHS also features a permanent display of the nation's largest collection of early American inn and tavern signs and additional changing exhibits. The store offers Connecticut-made gifts, books, souvenirs, and refreshments. Museum and Research Center hours: Noon-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Thurs.; 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Fri. and Sat.; closed major holidays. Museum and Research Center admission: adults $12.00, seniors $10.00, students $8.00, and children 5 and under are free. Annual memberships start at $50.00. Group tours available for students and adults by reservation. Ample free parking. Check the website for directions, current exhibits, program listings, admission fees, and more information about the research center.
 
HARTFORD. Harriet Beecher Stowe Center, 77 Forest St., 06105-3243. Tel., (860) 522-9258, ext. 317. Website: harrietbeecherstowe.org. E-mail: info@stowecenter.org. A National Historic Landmark connecting Harriet Beecher Stowe's life and work to contemporary social justice issues. Stowe's best-selling anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, changed how many Americans viewed slavery and galvanized the abolition movement before the Civil War. The Stowe Center offers interactive and engaging tours, connecting the historic issues of Stowe's time to contemporary topics and inspires visitors to take-action on issues meaningful to them. The site includes the 19th-century Harriet Beecher Stowe House and the adjacent Katharine Seymour Day House as well as the surrounding Victorian gardens. Additional offerings include "The Family Tour," offered during school breaks or by appointment. Group tours and education programs for school groups and others are offered by advance reservation. In addition to the tour experience, the Stowe Center presents regularly scheduled public programs and events, including Salons at Stowe, a community dialogue focusing on contemporary issues, and a community celebration of Stowe's birthday. The museum store and the Stowe Visitor Center also welcome visitors. Open year round; 10:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon., Wed.-Sat., and Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun., Jan.-Mar., and Nov.-Dec.; 9:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat. and Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun., Apr.-Dec. Last tour steps off at 4:00 P.M.; closed Tues., Jan.-Mar. and Nov.-Dec., New Year's Day, Easter Sunday, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day; open M.L. King Day, Presidents' Day, Memorial Day, Labor Day, and Columbus Day, 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M. House tour admission: $16.00 adults (17-64); $14.00 seniors (65+) and students with ID; $10.00 children (5-16); children under 5, free. Check website for prices for specialty tours and for details on other programs.
 
HARTFORD. The Mark Twain House and Museum, 351 Farmington Ave., 06105-4498. Tel., (860) 247-0998. Exec. Dir., Pieter Roos. Website: www.MarkTwainHouse.org. National Historic Landmark. Guided tours take visitors through the 25-room Victorian home where Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain lived, wrote The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, among other classics, and raised his family between 1874 and 1891, his most productive period as an author. The house features one of only two domestic interiors designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany that is open to the public. The house was also named by National Geographic as one of the Ten Best Historic Homes in the World, with Mount Vernon and Monticello being the only other U.S. houses so designated. The tour includes the Clemens family's living quarters and also highlights the servants' wing with the kitchen, butler's pantry, and more. A 33,000-sq.-ft. museum center offers a permanent orientation exhibit, 1,000-sq.-ft. museum store, 176-seat lecture hall, 2,000-sq.-ft. exhibition gallery, 75-seat theater for viewing of introductory video by Ken Burns, two classrooms, and expanded visitor amenities. Open 9:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M. daily; closed Tues., Jan.-Feb.; closed New Year's Day, Easter Sunday, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, and Christmas. Visitors should allow a minimum of two hours for tour and museum center. Admission: $20.00 adults (17-64); $18.00 seniors (65+); $11.00 children (6-16); children under 6, free.
 
HARTFORD. Museum of Connecticut History, 231 Capitol Ave., 06106. Tel., (860) 757-6535; FAX, (860) 757-6521. Museum Admin., Dean Nelson. Website: http://museumofcthistory.org. State-owned museum operated by the Connecticut State Library. Memorial Hall features the official collection of Connecticut governors' portraits, the "Fundamental Orders" of 1638-39 (which made Connecticut the "Constitution State"), the Royal Charter of 1662, and the State Constitutions of 1818 and 1965. The exhibit "Liberties and Legends" highlights the enduring legacy of the Charter Oak. The world-famous Colt Firearms Collection is on permanent display; other exhibits explore various aspects of Connecticut's long political, industrial, and military heritage. Open to the public free of charge, 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Mon.-Fri.; 9:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M., Sat.; closed Sun., state holidays, state holiday weekends.
 
HARTFORDConnecticut's Old Statehouse, 800 Main St., 06103. Tel., (860) 522-6766; FAX, (860) 522-2812. Exec. Dir., Sally Whipple. Website: www.ctoldstatehouse.org. E-mail: OldStateHouseNews@cga.ct.gov. Facebook: www.facebook.com/CTOldStateHouse. Twitter: www.twitter.com/CTOldStateHouse. Instagram: http://instagram.com/ctoldstatehouse. YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/CTOldStateHouse. Operated by the Connecticut General Assembly. Begin your visit to Hartford with a guided or self-guided tour of this 1796 National Historic Landmark, one of the nation's oldest state houses. Hands-on and family-friendly activities can be found throughout the building. Explore the exciting 6,800-sq.-ft. multimedia exhibit, History Is All Around Us, in the Mortensen Gallery, which tells the story of Hartford and the importance of history in our lives. Also, check out oddities in our always-popular recreation of Joseph Steward's Museum of Curiosities, located on the second floor near the historically restored legislative chambers. The Old State House is open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. (with the last ticket sold at 4 P.M.), Tues.-Sat., Independence Day-Columbus Day (Summer Schedule); 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. (with the last ticket sold at 4 P.M.), Mon.-Fri., following Columbus Day weekend-July 3 (Regular Schedule). Admission (unless otherwise noted): $6.00 for adults; $3.00 for seniors, students, youths (6-17), and AAA members (with card); free for children (5 and under), U.S. Military Veterans (with VA card), and active military members (with military ID). Adult Group Admission available for $5 per person with minimum charge of $50 (must call ahead). Open year round. Building is closed on state holidays. The building is air conditioned/heated and handicapped accessible.
 
HARTFORD. Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, 600 Main St., 06103. Tel., (860) 278-2670. Website: www.TheWadsworth.org. E-mail: info@wadsworthatheneum.org. Discover a treasure-trove of art! The Wadsworth's Atheneum's collection of over 50,000 works of art spans 5,000 years of world history, from ancient works to installations by contemporary artists. Visit the country's oldest continuously operating public art museum to experience this engaging collection of American and European paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts. Temporary special exhibitions complement the permanent collection, making every visit to the museum an opportunity to view new masterpieces. Tours of the permanent collection at 1:00 P.M. daily and of a special exhibition at 2:30 P.M. on weekends. Café open until 3:30 P.M. See website for parking details and admission fees. Open 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Wed.-Fri.; 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Sat. and Sun.; closed Mon., Tues., New Year's Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Free daily 4:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M. and the second Saturday each month 10:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M. Admission includes access to The Amistad Center for Art & Culture. Additional charges apply to the annual fundraisers, "Fine Art & Flowers" (spring) and "Festival of Trees & Traditions" (early December).

KENT
The Eric Sloane Museum, 31 Kent-Cornwall Rd., 06757; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 917, 06757-0917. Administered by the State Historic Preservation Office and Dept. of Economic and Community Development. Museum showcases the collection of early American hand tools and implements assembled by artist and author Eric Sloane. Examples of his artwork and his re-created artist's studio are also on display. Ruins of Kent Iron Furnace (National Register of Historic Places and State Archaeological Preserve) on grounds. The museum is open seasonally. For information on hours and admission fees, call Tel., (860) 927-3849 or Tel., (860) 500-2360 or visit Website: www.cultureandtourism.org.
 
LEBANON. Jonathan Trumbull Jr. House Museum, 780 Trumbull Hwy. (Rte. 87), 06249. Website: www.lebanonct.gov/trumbulljuniormuseum.htm. Owned and operated by Lebanon Historical Society. Built circa 1769, this Georgian-style house features eight corner fireplaces and beautifully carved woodwork by Isaac Fitch. Jonathan Trumbull Jr. was military secretary to Gen. George Washington during the American Revolution and governor of Connecticut from 1797-1809. Gen. Washington spent the night here March 4, 1781. Reproduction period furnishings are usable by visitors. Hands-on house tours illustrate architectural, social, and cultural change over a 240-year period. Heritage gardens and ancient Ginkgo tree enhance the grounds. Located on mile-long historic Lebanon Green. Open Noon-4:00 P.M., Sat. and Sun., mid-May to mid-Oct., and year-round by appointment. For information, call Lebanon Historical Society Museum (860) 642-6579 weekdays, or e-mail: museum@historyoflebanon.org, or visit website: www.cultureandtourism.org.
 
LEBANON. Lebanon Historical Society Museum and Visitors' Center, 856 Trumbull Hwy., Rte. 87, 06249; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 151, 06249-0151. Tel., (860) 642-6579. Dir., Donna Baron. Website: www.historyoflebanon.org. E-mail: museum@historyoflebanon.org. Owned and operated by the Lebanon Historical Society, Inc. Explore Lebanon's rich history at this modern museum located on the historic Lebanon Green. The museum includes several rotating exhibits, a permanent exhibit on Lebanon’s diverse history, as well as a children’s hands-on exhibit focused on Lebanon in the American Revolution. In addition to visitor services, the museum offers a library/genealogical research center. The Beaumont House and the Pastor's Library, located on our campus, are opened seasonally for guided tours on most Saturdays. Public programs are offered on a regular basis. Open Noon-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Sat., year-round. The genealogical research center is open Noon-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Fri., and most Saturdays. Appointments appreciated. For information, contact the Lebanon Historical Society Museum.
 
LITCHFIELD. The Litchfield History Museum and Tapping Reeve House and Law School, 7 South St., 06759; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 385, 06759-0385. Tel., (860) 567-4501. Educator, Kate Zullo; Curator, Alexander DuBois; Archivist, Linda Hocking; Exec. Dir., Catherine Keene Fields. Website: www.litchfieldhistoricalsociety.org. E-mail: cfields@litchfieldhistoricalsociety.org. The Litchfield History Museum and Tapping Reeve House and Law School are open 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; 1:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M., Sun., mid-Apr.-Nov. The Ingraham Memorial Research Library is open 10:00 A.M.-Noon and 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Fri., year-round.
 
LITCHFIELD. White Memorial Conservation Center, 80 Whitehall Rd., P.O. Box 368, 06759-0368. Website: www.whitememorialcc.org. E-mail: info@whitememorialcc.org. Located on the grounds of the 4,000-acre White Memorial Foundation Wildlife Sanctuary. Natural history exhibits, gift shop, and educational activities. Trails for hiking, cross-country skiing, and horseback riding as well as a self-guiding nature trail and unique nature trail of the senses. Fishing, swimming, boating, and camping also available. Grounds open all year every day. Museum open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat.; Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun.; closed major holidays. Admission to grounds free. Museum membership open to public. Fee for non-members. For program information, call Tel., (860) 567-0857.
 
MANCHESTER. Lutz Children's Museum, 247 So. Main St., 06040. Tel., (860) 643-0949. Exec. Dir., Robert Eckert. Website: www.lutzmuseum.org. Live animals, hands-on exhibits, classes, collection of artifacts, trips, concerts, special events, and nature center. Open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Fri.; Noon-5:00 P.M., Sat. and Sun.; closed Mon. Admission: $7.00 adults and children (over one year old); members free. Group tours by appointment.
 
MANSFIELD. Connecticut State Museum of Natural History and Office of State Archaeology, The University of Connecticut Unit 3023, 75 N Eagleville Rd., Storrs 06269-3023. Tel., (860) 486-4460. Dir., Dr. Janine N. Caira; State Archaeologist, vacancy. Website: www.mnh.uconn.edu. E-mail: CSMNHinfo@uconn.edu. In its fundamental mission and work, the Museum actively advances the University of Connecticut’s core academic traditions—traditions built not only on creating and passing knowledge to future generations, but on sharing this knowledge to improve public understanding and appreciation of natural and cultural history, the living world, and our state’s archaeological heritage. Through unique events and activities, the Museum provides opportunities for people of all ages to interact with, and learn from, leading scholars while showcasing the teaching, research, and resources of the University, which include world class biological and archaeological collections. Through changing exhibits located in multiple campus buildings, the Museum enhances academic learning and student life at the University while it also creates new educational experiences for K-12 students, teachers, and adult learners in the broader community across the State.
 
MANSFIELD. The William Benton Museum of Art, Connecticut's State Art Museum. The University of Connecticut, 245 Glenbrook Rd., Unit 3140, Storrs 06269-3140. Tel., (860) 486-4520; FAX, (860) 486-0234. Exec. Dir., Nancy Stula, Ph.D. Website: www.benton.uconn.edu. E-mail: benton@uconn.edu. Located at the heart of the University of Connecticut campus at Storrs, the museum has a collection of over 6,500 works of art dating from the 15th through the 21st centuries in a variety of media. The museum also creates up to 10 special exhibitions per year drawn from the collection, from other museums or galleries, or loaned exhibitions. Special events include gallery talks, campus art walks, academic and non-academic discussions, musical performances, and family programs. The museum serves the students of the University of Connecticut and the people of the State of Connecticut. Exhibition galleries and Museum Store are open (during exhibit periods) 10:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M., Tues.-Fri.; 1:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M., Sat. and Sun. No admission charge; donations are appreciated.
 
MASHANTUCKET. Mashantucket Pequot Museum & Research Center, 110 Pequot Trail, P.O. Box 3180, CT 06338-3180. Tel., Toll Free, 1-800-411-9671. Website: www.pequotmuseum.org. The center houses 85,000 sq. ft. of permanent exhibits on the natural and Native history of Southern New England and beyond, including multi-sensory dioramas, films, videos, and 3D computer interactive programs. A walk through the 16th-century Pequot village features 13 wigwams and 51 lifelike figures posed in activities from daily life. Another highlight is the caribou hunt diorama, a scene depicting life in southeastern Connecticut 11,000 years ago. Historical artifacts and original Native artwork are also on display. The library, archives, and special collections serve as resources on the histories and cultures of all Native peoples of the United States and Canada. Restaurant and gift shop. On-site parking; regular shuttles from Foxwoods Resort Casino, one mile away. Take I-395, Exit 79A, or I-95, Exit 92, and follow signs to the Mashantucket Pequot Reservation and the museum. Open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. (last admission at 4:00 P.M.), Wed.-Sat.; Open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Tues.-Sat. in November. The Museum closes seasonally the Sunday after Thanksgiving and reopens in the spring the following year. Visit www.pequotmuseum.org for seasonal closure information. Admission: $20.00 adults; $15.00 seniors (65+) and college students; $12.00 youth (6-17); children under 6, free.
 
MIDDLETOWN. Wesleyan University, Davison Art Center, 301 High St., 06459. Tel., (860) 685-2500. Curator, Miya Tokumitsu. Website: www.wesleyan.edu/dac.
 
MYSTIC. Mystic Aquarium, 55 Coogan Blvd. (Exit 90, off I-95), 06355-1997. Tel., (860) 572-5955. Website: www.mysticaquarium.org. E-mail: info@mysticaquarium.org. Mystic Aquarium is counted among the nation's leading aquariums with more than 300 species and an extensive collection of marine mammals. Travel Mystic Aquarium’s indoor and outdoor exhibits to visit with beluga whales, African penguins, rescued seals, colorful fish and more. Roll up your sleeves and touch a shark, stingray or even an exotic reptile. Complimentary sea lion shows provide a truly unique opportunity to see these fascinating animals up-close and in action. As a pioneer in interactive guest experiences, Mystic Aquarium offers a variety of encounter programs with a range of marine animals for guests looking to enhance their Aquarium experience. Plus, a robust schedule of shows in our two theaters, seasonal events, activities and more make the Aquarium a year-round destination worth revisiting often! Discover your world and sea more at Mystic Aquarium.
 
With a mission to inspire people to care for and protect our ocean planet, Mystic Aquarium is proud of its conservation, education, and research efforts, as well as the work done through its Animal Rescue Program, which covers over 1,000 miles along the Northeastern coast. To learn more visit: www.mysticaquarium.org.
 
Mystic Aquarium is open daily, except for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Hours vary seasonally and are subject to change. Please visit website for current hours of operation. For group reservations, please call (860) 572-5955, ext. 520.
 
MYSTIC. Mystic Seaport Museum, 75 Greenmanville Ave., P.O. Box 6000, 06355-0990. Tel., (860) 572-0711. Website: www.mysticseaport.org. E-mail: info@mysticseaport.org. Nation's leading maritime museum featuring historic vessels and watercraft, a planetarium, exhibits, and educational programs focused on the stories of America and the sea. Also, a research library, an historic artifact collections center, and a working preservation shipyard. Operated by Mystic Seaport Museum, Inc. Tel., (860) 572-0711. Opening hours vary with season, please check the Museum's website. Admission: $28.95 adults; $26.95 seniors (65+), active duty military, and college students with ID; $24.95 youth (13-17); $18.95 children (3-12); children 2 and under, free.
 
NAUGATUCK. Naugatuck Historical Society Museum, 380 Church St., 06770. Tel., (203) 729-9039. Website: www.naugatuckhistory.org/museum.htm. The Naugatuck Historical Society is an organization keeping the stories of Naugatuck alive and accessible to the public through exhibits, research, and presentations.
 
NEW BRITAIN. New Britain Museum of American Art, 56 Lexington St., 06052. Tel., (860) 229-0257; FAX, (860) 229-3445. Website: www.nbmaa.org. E-mail: nbmaa@nbmaa.org. The first museum dedicated solely to collecting American art, the NBMAA is renowned for its preeminent collection spanning three centuries of American history. The award-winning 43,000 sq.-ft. Chase Family Building, which opened in 2006 to critical and public acclaim, and the newest addition, the 17,346 sq.-ft. Art & Education Building, feature 22 spacious galleries that showcase the permanent collection and upwards of 12 special exhibitions annually featuring American masters, emerging artists, and private collections. Education and community outreach programs for all ages include docent-led school and adult tours, teacher services, studio classes (in three new art studios) and vacation programs, gallery talks, lectures, symposia, concerts, film, First Friday jazz evenings, and quarterly Museum After Dark parties for young professionals. Enjoy Café on the Park for a light lunch prepared by Riverhouse Catering. Visit the Museum Shop for unique gifts. Drop by the "ArtLab" learning gallery with your little ones. Open year round, closed Mondays; 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Sun., Tues., Wed., Fri.; 11:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M., Thurs.; 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Sat.; closed New Year's Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, Day after Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day; closing at 2:00 p.m. on Christmas Eve (closed if holiday occurs on Monday). Tours for school and adult groups (ext. 235) are available by appointment and should be booked four weeks in advance. Admission: $15.00 adults; $12.00 senior citizens; $10.00 students; children under 12, free. Free admission from 10:00 A.M.-Noon on Sat.
 
NEW BRITAIN. New Britain Youth Museum, 30 High St., 06051. Tel., (860) 225-3020. Website: www.newbritainyouthmuseum.org. Changing exhibits of cultural and historic interest. Some exhibits lend themselves to participation. Open 10:30 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; closed Sun. and Mon. Summer hours: 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Mon.-Fri.; closed Sat. and Sun. Admission $2.00, under age 2 and members free.
 
NEW CANAAN. New Canaan Nature Center, 144 Oenoke Rdg., 06840. Tel., (203) 966-9577; FAX, (203) 966-6536. Pres., Bd. of Trustees, Linda Andros; Buildings and Grounds Mgr., Gianni DeScenza; Exec. Dir., Bill Flynn; Dir. of Finance and Human Resources, Chelsey Hobby; Dir. of Marketing and Special Events, Jennifer Rayher; Dir. Preschool, Marianne Kay; Development Dir., Katie Harris. Website: www.newcanaannature.org. Natural science and horticulture Education. Nature trails, exhibits, visitors' center, flight cages with several different birds of prey, greenhouse, gardens, arboretum, children's play garden and boxwood maze, school programs, public programs, preschool, summer camp, birthday parties, volunteer programs, Secret Gardens tour in June, Annual Lecture and Luncheon in May, beer festival and (separately) a traditional family Fall Fair in October, Winter Wonderland with extensive train exhibit and chance to visit with Santa in December; maple syrup and apple cider making in season. Buildings open 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat. Grounds open dawn-dusk daily.
 
NEW HAVEN. New Haven Museum, 114 Whitney Ave., 06510. Pres., Francis J. Broderick; Treas., Erin McAvoy; Exec. Dir., Margaret Anne Tockarshewsky. Website: www.newhavenmuseum.org. E-mail: dwardle@newhavenmuseum.org.
 
NEW HAVEN. Yale Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel St., P.O. Box 208280, 06520-8280. Tel., (203) 432-2800; Toll Free in U.S., 1-877-BRITART; FAX, (203) 432-4538. Dir., Courtney J. Martin; Senior Associate of Communications and Marketing, Ronnie Rysz. Website: www.britishart.yale.edu. E-mail: ycba.info@yale.edu. YCBA houses the largest collection of British art outside the United Kingdom, encompassing works in a range of media from the 15th century to the present day. Free and open to the public. Offers exhibitions and programs, including lectures, concerts, films, symposia, tours, and family events. Museum open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun. Museum Shop open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat.; Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun. Admission free.
 
NEW HAVEN. Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University, 170 Whitney Ave., P.O. Box 208118, 06520-8118. Tel., (203) 432-3738; Groups, Tel., (203) 432-3775. Dir., David Skelly; Public Relations, Melanie Brigockas. Website: www.peabody.yale.edu. E-mail: melanie.brigockas@yale.edu. The Yale Peabody Museum will close on June 30, 2020, for a major renovation and expansion. The Museum will reopen in late 2023 with 50% more exhibition space and more objects from the Museum’s renowned collections on display. The last day the Great Hall of Dinosaurs will be open to visitors is December 31, 2019. Brontosaurus, Stegosaurus, and other large fossils in the Great Hall will be disassembled and sent to Canada where they will be reconstructed according to the most current knowledge of dinosaur anatomy. During the closure, the Peabody will continue to host programs at locations within Yale and in surrounding communities. Also, throughout the closure, the Museum’s vast collections will continue to be available to researchers. These collections—13 million specimens and objects spanning 4.5 billion years of Earth history—are housed in ten curatorial divisions: Anthropology, including the Yale Babylonian Collection; Botany; Entomology; Invertebrate Paleontology; Invertebrate Zoology; History of Science and Technology; Meteoritics and Mineralogy; Paleobotany; Vertebrate Paleontology; and Vertebrate Zoology. The majority of the collections are stored in the Yale Environmental Center (ESC) on Sachem Street, New Haven, CT, and at Yale’s West Campus in Orange, CT. Objects previously stored at the Peabody have been moved to those locations.
 
NEW HAVEN. Yale University Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel St., P.O. Box 208271, 06520-8271. Website: artgallery.yale.edu. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Fri.; 10:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M., Thurs., Sept.-Jun.; 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Sat. and Sun.; closed Mon. and major holidays. Free admission. Information on exhibitions, programs, and directions, Tel., (203) 432-0600; group and school tours available by registration at artgallery.yale.edu/groups.
 
NEW LONDON. Connecticut College Arboretum, 270 Mohegan Ave., Connecticut College, 06320. Website: arboretum.conncoll.edu. Privately owned and open to the public. The 770 acres, which encompass all college property, include the college campus landscape, an extensive native tree and shrub collection, wildflower gardens, native azalea garden, naturalistic landscape demonstration areas, and two large natural areas for ecological research. Trails throughout the plant collections and natural areas. Open daily dawn-dusk. Free to public. See the website for current public education programs. Call Tel., (860) 439-5060 or E-mail: arbor@conncoll.edu for further information.
 
NEW LONDON. Lyman Allyn Art Museum, 625 Williams St., 06320. Tel., (860) 443-2545. Dir., D. Samuel Quigley. Website: www.lymanallyn.org. The Lyman Allyn houses a fascinating collection of over 17,000 objects from ancient times to the present; artworks from Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Europe, with particularly strong collections of American paintings, decorative arts, and Victorian toys and doll houses. The Museum recently installed a new permanent exhibition that explores the rich and varied work of artist, craftsman, and designer, Louis Comfort Tiffany. Outside, a sculpture trail is surrounded by 12 rolling acres of gardens and lawn. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat.; 1:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M., Sun.; closed Mon. and major holidays. Admission: $12.00 adults; $9.00 seniors; $5.00 students; children under 12, museum members, Connecticut College, and New London residents with ID, free. Facilities for the handicapped available.
 
NEW LONDON. Deshon-Allyn House, 613 Williams St., 06320. Tel., (860) 443-2545. Website: www.lymanallyn.org. Mailing Address: c/o Lyman Allyn Art Museum. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Deshon-Allyn House is a granite, federal-style house built in 1829 and shared by the families of two prominent, local whaling captains.
 
NORWALK. Stepping Stones Museum for Children, Mathews Park, 303 West Ave., 06850. Tel., (203) 899-0606; FAX, (203) 899-0530. CEO, Rhonda Kiest. Website: www.steppingstonesmuseum.org. E-mail: info@steppingstonesmuseum.org. Stepping Stones is an award-winning children's museum committed to broadening and enriching the lives of children. Open your world to amazing discoveries, learning and playing through hands-on exhibits, educational programs, and special events that complement efforts in schools, childcare centers, and homes. Renovated to LEED Gold Certification standards, Stepping Stones has five main exhibit areas, including a birth to toddlers-only gallery and a traveling exhibit gallery as well as a state-of-the-art multimedia gallery, open-air tented courtyard, and community gardens - all designed for children 10 and under. The museum also runs an ELLI Lab School for children ages 18 months to 5 to promote early language and literacy. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. daily during the summer and Tues.-Sun. during the school year. Admission: $15.00 children and adults; $10.00 seniors (65+); children under 1, free.
 
NORWICH. Leffingwell House Museum, 348 Washington St., 06360. Tel., (860) 889-9440. Pres., Dayne Rugh. Website: https://www.leffingwellhousemuseum.org. The Leffingwell House Historic Museum is owned and operated by the Society of the Founders of Norwich. Our mission is to educate the community on the history of the founders of Norwich by showcasing documents and artifacts from the period 1645-1865 preserved in the Leffingwell House museum vault. The house incorporates 17th- and 18th-century architecture, developing from a 17th-century pre-Revolutionary tavern to a mid-18th-century townhouse. Gen. George Washington visited Col. Christopher Leffingwell at the house during the Revolutionary War, seeking provisions and supplies for the Continental Army. Interpreters evoke the independent spirit and lifestyle of early Americana using displays of utensils, tools, furnishings, silver and china of the period. Open 11:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Sat., Apr.-Oct. and by appointment (contact: info@leffingwellhousemuseum.org). Admission: $5.00 adults; $4.00 seniors and children; members, free for regular tours.
 
NORWICH. Slater Memorial Museum and the adjacent Converse Art Gallery, located in the Slater Memorial Building on the campus of the Norwich Free Academy, 108 Crescent St., 06360. Tel., (860) 887-2506; FAX, (860) 885-0379. Dir., Vivian F. Zoë. Website: www.slatermuseum.org. Open year round 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Fri.; 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Sat. and Sun.; closed Mon. and most major holidays. Admission: $3.00 adults; $2.00 seniors; $1.00 students with ID; Friends of Slater Museum and children under 12, free; guided group tours available.
 
OLD LYME. Florence Griswold Museum, 96 Lyme St., 06371. Pres., David W. Dangremond; Vice Pres., John E. Noyes, Jane Rapport; Secy., Deborah Butler; Treas., Andy Baxter; Asst. Treas., Lee Pritchard; Counsel, James Carey; Dir., Rebekah Beaulieu. Website: www.florencegriswoldmuseum.org.
 
ROCKY HILL. Academy Hall Museum, 785 Old Main St., P.O. Box 185, 06067-0185. Tel., (860) 563-6704. Pres., Edward Chiucarello. Website: www.rhhistory.org. Open year round 10:00 A.M.-Noon, Tues.; or by appointment; 12:30 P.M.-3:00 P.M, Sat.
 
SCOTLAND. Huntington Homestead Museum, 36 Huntington Rd., Rte. 14, 06264. Governor Samuel Huntington Trust, Inc., Board of Directors Fiscal Year '17-'18. Pres., Kevin P. Ring; Vice Pres., David Goodrich; Secy., Jean Wierzbinski; Treas., Elizabeth Wilson; Dirs., Janet Lussier, Brian Sear, John H. Spencer, Georgia Stauffer, Karen Stevens. Website: www.huntingtonhomestead.org. Tour guides lead visitors through the circa 1723 birthplace of Samuel Huntington, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The museum is owned and operated by the Gov. Samuel Huntington Trust. Open 11:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M., the first and third Sat. of each month, May-Oct., or by appointment. Check our website for additional program dates. For more information, contact Kevin Ring. Tel., (860) 423-1547.
 
STAMFORD. The Stamford Museum & Nature Center, 39 Scofieldtown Rd., 06903. Tel., (203) 977-6521. Website: www.stamfordmuseum.org. Unique cultural, educational, and recreational resource with a 118-acre woodland site comprising a rich array of resources and facilities: a working farm; nature center; state-of-the-art observatory with research telescope; museum exhibition galleries; facilities for classes and workshops; retail store; playground; planetarium; and 80-acre hardwood forest with five hiking trails, including a universally accessible "Wheels in the Woods" trail. Founded in 1936, the Museum serves a broad audience and provides educational programs for children, special family festivals, adults programs and social activities, interactive exhibitions, and a variety of special events. Open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sun., Bendel Mansion and galleries open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat., and 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Sun.; closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. Admission fees and family festival fees.
 
STONINGTON. Mystic Seaport Museum, Inc., Mystic Seaport, 75 Greenmanville Ave., Mystic 06355. Chm. of Bd., J. Barclay Collins, II; Vice Chm., Richard W. Clary; Pres., Stephen C. White; Secy., Michael S. Hudner; Asst. Secy., Maureen Hennessey; Treas., Sharon E. Cohen; Asst. Treas., Marcy Withington. Website: www.mysticseaport.org. E-mail: administration@mysticseaport.org.
 
STRATFORD. Boothe Memorial Park and Museum, Main St. Putney (Exit 53 off Rte. 15), P.O. Box 902, 06615-0902. Tel., (203) 381-2046. A 32-acre former homestead of the Boothe family, 1663-1949, with picnic facilities, playgrounds, and museum buildings. A National Register of Historic Places site featuring carriage barn, an 1820 homestead, blacksmith shop, trolley station, Merritt Parkway Toll Booth Plaza, windmill, Clocktower museum, Rock and Mineral museum, and ice house. An award-winning wedding rose garden and sunken garden are open year-round. Park open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., daily; museum tours, 11:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M., Tues. and Fri.; 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Sun.; Jun. 1-Oct. 1, free and handicapped accessible.
 
STRATFORD. National Helicopter Museum, Inc., 2480 Main St., P.O. Box 775, 06615-0775. Tel., (203) 375-8857. Pres., Ken Pike; Vice Pres., Mark Whitacre; Treas., Michael Capasso. Website: www.nationalhelicoptermuseum.org. Location: Eastbound railroad station in Stratford. Open 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Sun., Memorial Day to the second week of Oct. Special tours can also be arranged, in advance. Free admission and free parking.
 
VERNON. The New England Civil War Museum, 14 Park Pl., 06066. Tel., (860) 870-3563. Exec. Dir., Matthew Reardon. Website: www.newenglandcivilwarmuseum.com. E-mail: necivilwarmuseum@gmail.com. Located in Rockville's historic Memorial Hall, the New England Civil War Museum has one of the most-identified collections of Civil War artifacts in the region. In addition, the museum contains a Civil War history library. The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Hall housing the museum remains in its late 1890s decor and is operated by Alden Skinner Camp #45, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War. Open Noon-3:00 P.M., every Sun., excluding holidays, and by appointment. E-mail for summer hours and openings by appointment. Admission: free; donations accepted. Handicapped accessible.
 
WASHINGTON. Gunn Historical Museum, affiliated with the Gunn Memorial Library, 5 Wykeham Rd., 06793. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1419, 06793-0273. Tel., (860) 868-7756; FAX, (860) 868-7247. Operation Mgr., Lisa Breese; Curator, Stephen Bartkus. Website: www.gunnlibrary.org. E-mail: curator@gunnhistoricalmuseum.org. The museum was founded in 1899 and is housed in a 1781 residence overlooking the historic Washington Green. Our mission is to collect, preserve, and share objects, documents, and stories that illuminate the lives of people who have lived in the town of Washington. There is a long-term Washington history exhibit and a research library with photographs, documents, and genealogical materials available to the public. Directions: Located at the intersection of Rte. 47 and Wykeham Rd. Open 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Thurs.-Sat. and by appointment. Free admission.
 
WASHINGTON. Institute for American Indian Studies, 38 Curtis Rd., 06793-1260. Tel., (860) 868-0518; FAX, (860) 868-1649. Dir., Christopher Combs. Website: www.iaismuseum.org. E-mail: general@iaismuseum.org. Museum, education, and research center. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Wed.-Sat.; Noon-5:00 P.M., Sun. (last admission at 4:30 P.M.). Admission: $10.00 adults; $8.00 senior citizens; $6.00 children (ages 3-12). 
 
WATERBURY. The Mattatuck Museum, 144 West Main St., 06702-1298. Tel., (203) 753-0381. Pres., Mary Rosengrant-Chiappalone; 1st Vice Pres., Charles Monagan; 2nd Vice Pres., Judith Godburn Secor; Secy., Pamela Baker; Treas., Bart R. Cutrali. Website: www.mattmuseum.org. E-mail: stephanie@mattmuseum.org.
 
WEST HARTFORD. The Children's Museum, 950 Trout Brook Dr., 06119 (Exit 43 off I-84). Tel., (860) 231-2824. website: www.thechildrensmuseumct.org. Serving over 140,000 children and families annually, The Children's Museum has been a place where learning and fun connect for generations. The Museum offers unique, high-quality, hands-on experiences for children and their caregivers, and has been inspiring lifelong learning since 1927. Visitors are greeted by "Conny," a full-size sperm whale replica that spurts water from his blowhole. The museum's digital, full-dome planetarium, the largest in Connecticut, offers astronomy programs and laser show presentations. The wildlife sanctuary is home to a wide variety of rescued animals, domestic and exotic, who otherwise would be without a home. Members and visitors enjoy interactive exhibits and demonstrations, live animal presentations, digital science dome movies and planetarium shows, vacation camps, birthday parties, scout activities, and special events. The on-site Children's Museum Preschool is a play-based and science-linked early childhood education center, offering 3- through 5-year-olds a unique environment to play and learn with both full-day and half-day enrollment options. The Children's Museum also provides extensive museum-based and outreach educational programs to schools, youth groups, community organizations, and home school families and cooperatives. The museum operates the Roaring Brook Nature Center in nearby Canton, which highlights exploration of the natural sciences. The Children's Museum is open 9:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Tues.-Sat., as well as Mon. during summer and school vacations; 11:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Sun.; closed Easter Sunday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Daily animal demonstrations. Admission (includes regular planetarium show): $14.75 adults; $13.75 children (2-12) and seniors (63+); children under 2, free. Additional charge for premium planetarium shows.
 
WESTPORT. Earthplace, The Nature Discovery and Environmental Learning Center, 10 Woodside Ln., 06880. Tel., (203) 557-4400. Exec. Dir., Tony McDowell. Website: www.earthplace.org. Earthplace is one of the premier venues for nature discovery and environmental learning in Fairfield County. Its mission is to build a passion in the community for nature and the environment through education, experience and action. Founded in 1958, it includes early childhood education programs, summer camp, teen and adult environmental learning opportunities, an indoor nature discovery area, and a locally renowned water quality research program called Harbor Watch. The nature sanctuary that surrounds Earthplace consists of 62 contiguous acres of open space supporting a variety of habitats and over 2 miles of walking trails, including a universal access trail suitable for wheelchairs and strollers. Earthplace is home to a live Birds of Prey exhibit and Animal Hall which includes over 50 animal species for public viewing. Earthplace is seen as a trusted local resource that promotes environmental understanding through the perspective of science and conservation, and it works towards its mission every day by providing a diverse continuum of hands-on, nature-based learning experiences for all ages and abilities. Open 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., Mon.-Sat.; 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Sun. Grounds open daily dawn to dusk. Admission: $7.00 adults and youths (12-17); $5.00 seniors (62+) and children (1-12); children under 1, free.
 
WETHERSFIELD. The Webb-Deane-Stevens Museum, 211 Main St., 06109. Tel., (860) 529-0612. Exec. Dir., Charles T. Lyle. Website: www.webb-deane-stevens.org. E-mail: info@webb-deane-stevens.org. Located in Connecticut's largest Historic District, the museum offers guided tours of four 18th-century houses that explore history and daily life from the early Colonial era to the Colonial Revival. The Webb and Deane houses are National Historic Landmarks and the Stevens House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The museum is also in charge of tours at the Buttolph-Williams House, a property of Connecticut Landmarks that is also a National Historic Landmark. The recreated Webb House Colonial Revival Garden, designed in 1921, is open to the public free of charge during regular museum hours. The museum offers special family programs, lectures, seasonally changing exhibits, group tours, and museum school programs throughout the year. Open 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Mon., except Sun., when hours are 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M, May-Oct.; Sat. and Sun., Apr. and Nov.; open daily in Dec. for holiday tours; closed Jan.-Mar. Check our website for more information. Admission: $12.00 adults; $10.00 seniors (60+), AAA members and active military; $6.00 students and children (5-18); $28.00 per family (2 adults and children). Group rate for 15 or more with a reservation, $10.00 per adult.
 
WILLIMANTIC. Connecticut Eastern Railroad Museum, 55 Bridge St., P.O. Box 665, 06226-0665. Tel., (860) 456-9999. Pres., vacancy; Vice Pres., Duke York; Secy., Jean Lambert; Treas., Mark Granville; NRHS Rep., Peter Wilkens. Website: www.cteastrrmuseum.org. E-mail: info@cteastrrmuseum.org. Preservation of railroad history with emphasis on eastern Connecticut. Located on site of former New Haven Railroad's "Columbia Junction." Restored roundhouse and turntable; buildings from Chaplin, Groton, Niantic, and Willimantic; locomotives, both steam and diesel; and rolling stock. Open 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M., Sat. and 12:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Sun., May-Oct. Admission: $7.00 adults; $3.00 children (8-12); members and children under 8, free.
 
WINDSOR LOCKS. New England Air Museum (owned and operated by the Connecticut Aeronautical Historical Assoc., Inc.), Bradley International Airport, 06096. Tel., (860) 623-3305; FAX, (860) 903-1151. Website: www.neam.org. Largest aviation museum in the northeastern United States. Three large exhibit hangars with more than 57 aircraft from all eras of aviation, many of which are one of a kind. Numerous exhibits on a variety of subjects including the history of Pratt & Whitney, the Tuskegee Airmen, and the 58th Bomb Wing of WWII. Numerous special events are held during the year and space is available for corporate and social functions. The museum's education department offers a variety of programs for school and non-school groups. Gift shop, free parking, facilities for handicap, free brochure on request. Open 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., daily; from Memorial Day through Labor Day; closed Monday during the winter; closed Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. Admission: $15.00 adults; $14.00 senior citizens; $10.00 youth (4-14); children ages 3 and under, free. Guided group tours and group rates available.
 
WINDSOR LOCKS. Noden-Reed House and Barn Museums, 58 West St., 06096. E-mail: windsorlockshistoricalsociety@gmail.com. Operated by the Windsor Locks Historical Society, Inc., since 1976. Victorian farmhouse with period room displays and an 1826 brick barn containing a farmer's tool collection, located in a 22-acre town park. Listed on National Register of Historical Places; considered site of Connecticut's first Christmas tree (1777) originally displayed by a Hessian soldier. Gov. Ella Grasso memorabilia added to the museum. The Windsor Locks Journal is available for research dating back to the 1800s. Open last Sun. of the month from 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., and for special events or by appointment. Excluding holiday weekends. See www.windsorlockshistorical.org for calendar and information.
 
WOODBURY. The Glebe House Museum and Gertrude Jekyll Garden, 49 Hollow Rd., 06798-3317; Mailing Address: P.O. Box 245, 06798-0245. Tel., (203) 263-2855. Dir., LoriAnn Witte. Website: www.glebehousemuseum.org. E-mail: office@glebehousemuseum.org. Set in the picturesque Litchfield Hills in historic Woodbury's village center, the Glebe House Museum offers the visitor a glimpse of Revolutionary War-era Connecticut. The simple but elegant 18th-century farmhouse is furnished as the home of the Reverend John Marshall, his wife, Sarah, and their nine children who lived in the "glebe" during the turmoil of the American War for Independence. The garden was designed in 1926 by Gertrude Jekyll, England's best-known garden designer. Today, the Glebe House Museum and Jekyll Garden is a nonprofit educational institution that seeks to make itself available to everyone as a unique historical and cultural landmark by preserving its heritage and providing programs and opportunities for education, research, and reflection. Open 1:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M., Wed.-Sun., May-mid/Oct.; Nov.-Apr. by appointment; group reservations by appointment. Admission: $7.00 adults; $2.00 children (ages 6-12); $2.00 (garden only).

 

PUBLIC LIBRARIES OF CONNECTICUT

 
 
Town
 
 
Name of Library
 
 
Director
 
 
Website
 
Andover
Andover Public
 
Amy Orlomoski
 
http://www.andoverconnecticut.org/home/andover-public-library/ 
Ansonia
Ansonia Library 
 
Jennifer
Lester
 
Ashford 
Babcock Library 
 
Carolann Mac Master
 
 
Avon 
 
Avon Free Public 
Glen Grube
Beacon Falls 
 
Beacon Falls Public 
 
Elizabeth Setaro
Berlin 
 
Berlin Free Library Assoc. 
 
Marcia Trotta
NO WEBSITE
Berlin 
 
Berlin-Peck Memorial 
 
Helen Malinka
Berlin 
 
East Berlin Library Assoc. 
 
 
Janice Jacobs
 
 
NO WEBSITE
 
Bethany 
Clark Memorial 
 
Melissa Canham-Clyne
 
 
Bethel 
 
Bethel Public 
Megan Dean
 
Bethlehem 
 
Bethlehem Public 
Anne Small
Bloomfield 
Prosser Public 
 
Elizabeth Lane
 
Bolton 
Bentley Memorial 
 
Elizabeth Thornton
 
Branford 
 
James Blackstone Memorial 
 
Karen Jensen
Branford  
 
Willoughby Wallace Memorial
 
Alice Pentz
Bridgeport 
Bridgeport Public 
 
Elaine Braithwaite (Interim)
 
Bridgewater 
Burnham Library 
 
Jean Kallay
 
Bristol 
Bristol Public 
 

Deborah Prozzo

 
Brookfield 
Brookfield Public 
 
Yvonne Cech
 
Brooklyn 
 
Brooklyn Town Library Assoc. 
 
Catherine Tucker
Burlington 
Burlington Public 
 
Marie Spratlin Hasskarl
 
Canaan 
 
David M. Hunt Library 
 
Erica Joncyk
Canterbury 
Canterbury Public 
 
Kelsey Casey
 
Canton 
Canton Public 
 
Sarah McCusker
 
www.cantonpubliclibrary.org
Chaplin  
Chaplin Public 
 
Sandra Horning
 
www.chaplinpubliclibrary.org  
Cheshire 
Cheshire Public 
 
Beth Crowley
 
 
Chester 
 
Chester Public 
Stephanie Romano
Clinton 
 
Henry Carter Hull Library
 
Maribeth Breen
Colchester 
Cragin Memorial 
 
Kate Byroade
 
www.colchesterct.gov/cragin-memorial-library  
Columbia 
 
Saxton B. Little Free 
 
Su Epstein
Cornwall 
 
Cornwall Library Assoc. 
 
Margaret Haske
Cornwall 
Hughes Memorial 
 
vacancy
 
Coventry 
Booth & Dimock Memorial
 
Margaret Khan
 
Cromwell 
 
Cromwell Belden Public 
 
Kara Canney
Danbury 
Danbury Public 
 
Katie Pearson
 
Danbury 
 
Long Ridge Library 
 
vacancy
 
 
 
Darien 
 
Darien Library 
Alan Kirk Gray
Deep River 
Deep River Public 
 
Susan J. Rooney
 
Derby  
 
Derby Neck Library 
 
Ian Parsells
Derby 
Derby Public 
 
Nicole Cignoli
 
Durham
Durham Public 
 
Christine Michaud
East Granby 
 
East Granby Public 
 
Doreen Jacius
East Haddam 
 
East Haddam Free Public 
 
Mike Gilroy
East Hampton
 
East Hampton Public
 
Ellen Paul
East Hampton
 
Middle Haddam Public 
 
vacancy
East Hartford
 
East Hartford Public 
 
Sarah Morgan
 
 
East Haven 
Hagaman Memorial
 
Bruce George
 
East Lyme 
East Lyme Public 
 
Lisabeth Timothy
 
East Windsor 
 
Broad Brook Library 
 
vacancy
NO WEBSITE
East Windsor 
 
Library Assoc. of Warehouse Point
 
 
Lois Hiller
Eastford 
Eastford Public 
 
Susan Shead
 
https://www.eastfordct.org/domain/1133  
Easton
Easton Public 
 
Lynn Zaffino
 
Ellington 
Hall Memorial 
 
Susan Phillips
 
Enfield
 
Enfield Public 
 
 
Jason Neely
 
Essex 
 
Essex Library Assoc. 
 
Deborah Smith
Essex 
 
Ivoryton Library Assoc. 
 
Elizabeth Alvord
Fairfield 
 
Fairfield Public
 
Helene Murtha 
Fairfield 
Pequot Library Assoc.  
 
Stephanie Coakley
 
Farmington
 
Farmington Libraries
 
Laura Horn
Franklin 

Janet Carlson Calvert Library 

Christine Schulz
Glastonbury 
 
East Glastonbury Public  
 
vacancy
Glastonbury
 
South Glastonbury Public 
 
vacancy
www.southglastonburylibrary.org  
Glastonbury 
 
Welles-Turner Memorial 
 
Barbara Bailey
Goshen 
Goshen Public 
 
Lynn Barker Steinmayer
 
Granby 
Granby Public 
 
Amy McCue
 
Greenwich 
Greenwich Library 
 
Barbara Ormerod-Glynn
 
Greenwich 
Perrot Memorial 
 
Kevin McCarthy
 
Griswold 
Slater Library
 
Rebecca Jusseaume
 
Groton 

Bill Memorial

 
Wendy Connal
 
Groton 
Groton Public 
 
Jennifer Miele
Groton
 
Mystic & Noank Library 
 
Karen Wall
Guilford 
Guilford Free
 
Rob McCoole
 
Haddam 
Brainerd Memorial 
 
Tom Piezzo
 
Hamden 
Hamden Public 
 
Marian Amodeo
 
Hampton 
Fletcher Memorial 
 
Deborah Andstrom
 
www.fletchermemoriallibrary.org
Hartford 
Hartford Public 
 
Bridget Quinn-Carey
 
 
Hartland 
 
Hartland Public 
vacancy
 
Harwinton
 
Harwinton Public
Alice Freiler
Hebron 
 
Douglas Library of Hebron 
 
Kevin Sullivan
Kent 
 
Kent Memorial Library
 
Sarah Marshall
Killingly 
Killingly Public  
 
Claudette Stockwell
www.killinglypl.org
Killingworth
 
Killingworth Library 
 
Laurie Prichard
Lebanon 
 
Jonathan Trumbull Library 
 
Matt Earls
Ledyard 
 
Ledyard Public Libraries 
 
Gale Bradbury
 
Litchfield
 
Gilbert Library 

vacancy

Litchfield 
 
Oliver Wolcott Library 
 
Ann Marie White
Lyme 
Lyme Public 
 
Theresa Conley
 
Madison 

E.C. Scranton

Memorial 

Sunnie Scarpa
Manchester 
 
Manchester Public  
 
Douglas McDonough
Mansfield 
Mansfield Public 
 
Leslie McDonough
 
Marlborough 
 
Richmond Memorial 
 
Nancy Wood
Meriden 
Meriden Public 
 
Melissa Fournier
 
Middlebury 
Middlebury Public 
 
Jo-Ann LoRusso
 
Middlefield 
 
Levi E. Coe Library  
 
Jessica Lobner
Middletown 
Russell Library
 
Ramona Burkey
 
Milford
 
Milford Public 
Chris Angeli
Monroe 
 
Edith Wheeler Memorial  
 
Lorna Rhyins
Montville
Raymond Library
 
Joanne Westkamper
 
Morris
Morris Public
 
Elena Granoth
 
 
Naugatuck
 

Howard Whittemore Memorial

Jessica Jahnke
New Britain
New Britain Public
 
Patricia Rutkowski
 
New Canaan
 
New Canaan Library
 
Lisa Oldham www.newcanaanlibrary.org
New Fairfield
 
New Fairfield Free Public
 
Linda Fox www.newfairfieldlibrary.org
New Hartford

 Bakerville Library, Inc.

Philip Armentrout www.bakervillelibrary.org
New Hartford
 
Licia & Mason Beekley Community Library
 
Dave MacHenry www.beekleylibrary.org
New Haven
 
New Haven Free Public
 
Martha Brogan www.nhfpl.org
New London
 
Public Library of New London
 
Madhu Gupta www.plnl.org
New Milford New Milford Public
 
Sally Tornow
 

www.newmilfordlibrary.org

Newington
 
Lucy Robbins Welles Library
 
Lisa Masten www.newingtonct.gov/library
Newtown
 
Cyrenius H. Booth Library
 
Douglas Lord www.chboothlibrary.org
Norfolk Norfolk Library
 
Ann Havemeyer
 
www.norfolklibrary.org
North Branford
 
North Branford Library Department
 
Lauren Davis https://nbranfordlibraries.org   
North Canaan Douglas Library
 
Norma DeMay
 
www.douglaslibrarycanaan.org
North Haven
 
North Haven Memorial
 
Pat LaTerza www.northhavenlibrary.net
 
North Stonington
 
Wheeler Library Amy Kennedy www.wheelerlibrary.org
Norwalk
 
East Norwalk Association Library
 
Sylvia Archibald www.eastnorwalklibrary.org
Norwalk Norwalk Public
 
Chris Bradley
 
www.norwalkpubliclibrary.org
Norwalk Rowayton Library
 
Christina Anzalone
 
www.rowayton.org
Norwich Otis Library
 
Robert Farwell
 
www.otislibrarynorwich.org
Old Lyme
 
Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library
 
Katie Huffman www.oldlyme.lioninc.org

Old Saybrook

Acton Public
 
Amanda Brouwer
 
www.actonlibrary.org
 
Orange
 
Case Memorial Kathy Giotsas http://orange.lioninc.org
Oxford Oxford Public
 
Robbi Costigan
 
www.oxfordlib.org
Plainfield Aldrich Free Public
 
Darla Pigeon
 
http://aldrichlibrary.org 
Plainville Plainville Public
 
Trish Tomlinson 
 
www.plainvillect.com/library
Plymouth
 
Plymouth Library Assoc.
 
vacancy
 
Plymouth
 
Terryville Public Gretchen DelCegno www.terryvillepl.info
Pomfret Abington Social
 
vacancy
 
www.pomfretct.gov/about-pomfret/pages/libraries
 
Pomfret
 
Pomfret Public Laurie Bell www.pomfretlibrary.org
 
Portland
 
Portland Public Janet Nocek www.portlandlibraryct.org
 
Preston
 
Preston Public Sue Brosnan www.prestonlibrary.org
 
Prospect
 
Prospect Public John Wiehn
Putnam Putnam Public
 
Priscilla Colwell
 
www.putnamlibrary.org
Redding Mark Twain Library
 
Beth Dominianni
 
www.marktwainlibrary.org
Ridgefield Ridgefield Library

Brenda McKinley

www.ridgefieldlibrary.org
Rocky Hill
 
Cora J. Belden Library
 
Mary Hogan www.rockyhillct.gov/library
Roxbury Minor Memorial
 
Teresa Roxburgh
 
www.minormemoriallibrary.org
Salem Salem Free Public
 
Vicky Coffin
 
www.salemct.gov/library
Salisbury Scoville Memorial
 
Claudia Cayne
 
www.scovillelibrary.org
Scotland Scotland Public
 
Mary Geragotelis
 
www.scotlandpubliclibrary.org
Seymour Seymour Public
 
Suzanne Garvey
 
www.seymourpubliclibrary.org
Sharon Hotchkiss Library of Sharon
 
Gretchen Hachmeister
 
www.hotchkisslibrary.org
Shelton Plumb Memorial
 
Joan Stokes
 
www.sheltonlibrarysystem.org
Sherman
 
Sherman Library Assoc.
 
Ashleigh Blake www.shermanlibrary.org
 
Simsbury
 
Simsbury Public Lisa Karim www.simsburylibrary.info
Somers Somers Public
 
Jessica Miller
 
www.somerspubliclibrary.org

South Windsor

South Windsor Public Mary Etter

www.southwindsorlibrary.org

South Windsor
 
Friends of Wood Memorial Library and Museum
 
vacancy www.woodmemoriallibrary.org
Southbury Southbury Public
 
Shirley Thorson
 
www.southburylibrary.org
Southington Southington Public
 
Kristin Sadowski
 
www.southingtonlibrary.org
Sprague Sprague Public
 
Elizabeth Bezanson
 
https://sites.google.com/view/spraguepubliclibrary/home
 
Stafford
 
Stafford Library Chris Frank www.staffordlibrary.org
 
Stamford
 
Ferguson Library Alice Knapp https://fergusonlibrary.org
Sterling Sterling Public
 
Rachel Vincent
 
www.sterlingct.us/departments/library
 
Stonington
 
Stonington Free Belinda de Kay www.stoningtonfreelibrary.org
Stratford
 
Stratford Library Assoc.
 
Sheri Szymanski www.stratfordlibrary.org
Suffield Kent Memorial
 
Jackie Hemond
 
www.suffield-library.org
Thomaston Thomaston Public
 
Debra Radosevich
 
www.thomastonlibrary.org
Thompson Thompson Public
 
Alison Boutaugh
 
www.thompsonpubliclibrary.org
Tolland Tolland Public
 
Barbara Pettijohn
 
www.tolland.org/library
Torrington Torrington Library
 
Jessica Gueniat
 
www.torringtonlibrary.org
Trumbull Trumbull Library
 
Stefan Lyhne-Nielsen
 
www.trumbullct-library.org
 
Union
 
Union Free Public Cailin Rae www.unionctfreepubliclibrary.org
Vernon
 
Rockville Public Library, Inc.
 
Jennifer Johnston www.rockvillepubliclibrary.org
 
Voluntown
 
Voluntown Public Emily Allard (Interim) www.voluntown.gov/library
 
Wallingford
 
Wallingford Public Jane Fisher www.wallingford.lioninc.org
Warren Warren Public
 
Louise Manteuffle
 
www.warrenctlibrary.org
 
Washington
 
Gunn Memorial Jean Chapin www.gunnlibrary.org
Waterbury
 
Silas Bronson Library
 
Raechel Guest
www.bronsonlibrary.org
Waterford Waterford Public
 
Roslyn Rubinstein
 
www.waterfordpubliclibrary.org
Watertown
 
Watertown Library Assoc.
 
Joan Rintelman
West Hartford
 
West Hartford Public
 
Martha Church www.westhartfordlibrary.org
West Haven
West Haven Public
 
Colleen Bailie
 
Westbrook
Westbrook Public
 
Lewis Daniels
 
www.westbrooklibrary.lioninc.org
Weston Weston Public
 
Karen Tatarka
 
www.westonpubliclibrary.org
 
Westport
 
Westport Library Bill Harmer www.westportlibrary.org
Wethersfield
 
Wethersfield Public
 
Brook Berry www.wethersfieldlibrary.org
Willington Willington Public
 
Kristine Donnelly
 
www.willingtonpubliclibrary.org
Wilton
 
Wilton Library Assoc.
 
Elaine Tai-Lauria www.wiltonlibrary.org
Winchester
 
Beardsley Library
 
Karin Taylor www.beardsleyandmemorial.org
Windham
 
Guilford Smith Memorial Library, Inc.
 
Andrea Holbrook https://guilfordsmith.blog
Windham Willimantic Public
 
Daniel Paquette
 
www.willimanticlibrary.org
Windham Windham Free
 
Carol Santa Lucia
 
www.windhamfreelibrary.org
 
Windsor
 
Windsor Public Gaye Rizzo www.windsorlibrary.com
 
Windsor Locks
 
Windsor Locks Public Gloria Malec www.windsorlockslibrary.org
Wolcott Wolcott Public
 
Susan Ouellette
 
www.wolcottlibrary.org
Woodbridge Woodbridge Town
 
Eric Werthmann
 
www.woodbridge.lioninc.org
Woodbury Woodbury Public
 
Susan Piel
 
www.woodburylibraryct.org
Woodstock
 
Howard W. Bracken Memorial
 
Deborah Sharpe
Woodstock May Memorial
 
Mary Weaver
 
NO WEBSITE 
Woodstock
 
North Woodstock Library
 
Dawn Hellwig NO WEBSITE
Woodstock
 
West Woodstock Library Assoc.
 
Susan Connor www.westwoodstocklibrary.org
 
BRANCH LIBRARIES
 
 
Town
 
Name of Branch
Website
 
Bloomfield
 
Wintonbury Branch www.prosserlibrary.info
 
Bridgeport
 
Black Rock Branch www.bportlibrary.org/blackrock/
 
Bridgeport
 
Newfield Branch www.bportlibrary.org/newfield/
 
Bridgeport
 
North Branch www.bportlibrary.org/north/
 
Bridgeport
 
Old Mill Green Branch www.bportlibrary.org/oldmill/
 
Bristol
 
F.N. Manross Memorial Library www.bristollib.com/manross/
 
East Haddam
 
Rathfun Free Memorial Library www.rathbunlibrary.blogspot.com/
 
East Hartford
 
Wickham Memorial Library
 
 
 
Enfield
 
Pearl Street Branch
 
Fairfield 
 
Fairfield Woods Branch www.fairfieldpubliclibrary.org
 
Farmington
 
Barney Library www.farmingtonlibraries.org/barney-branch/
Granby Frederick H. Cossitt Library

 

https://www.granby-ct.gov/granby-public-library-system

 

Greenwich Byram Shubert Branch
 
 
Greenwich Cos Cob Branch
 
 
 
Hamden
 
Community Branch www.hamdenlibrary.org/brundage
 
Hamden
 
Whitneyville Branch www.hamdenlibrary.org/whitneyville
 
Hartford 
 
Albany Avenue Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/albany
 
Hartford
 
Barbour Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/barbour
 
Hartford
 
Blue Hills Branch NO WEBSITE
 
Hartford 
 
Camp Field Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/camp-field
 
Hartford 
 
Dwight Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/dwight
 
Hartford
 
Goodwin Memorial Branch NO WEBSITE
 
Hartford
 
Mark Twain Branch NO WEBSITE
 
Hartford 
 
Park Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/park
 
Hartford
 
Ropkins Branch www.hplct.org/locations-hours/sand-ropkins
 
Ledyard
 
Gales Ferry Public Library www.ledyard.lioninc.org
 
Manchester
 
Whiton Memorial Library
 
 
New Britain
 
Thomas Jefferson Branch www.nbpl.info/jefferson.html
 
New Haven 
 
Fair Haven Branch http://nhfpl.org/locations-hours/fair-haven-library   
 
New Haven
 
Mitchell Branch https://nhfpl.org/locations-hours/mitchell-library  
 
New Haven
 
Stetson Branch https://nhfpl.org/locations-hours/stetson-library  
 
New Haven 
 
Wilson Branch https://nhfpl.org/locations-hours/wilson-library
 
North Branford 
 
Edward Smith Library https://nbranfordlibraries.org
 
Norwalk
 
SONO Branch www.norwalkpl.org/104/SoNo-Branch
 
Shelton 
 
Huntington Branch www.sheltonlibrarysystem.org/huntington-branch-library
Stamford Harry Bennett Library
 
Stamford 
 
South End Community Center Branch
 
www.fergusonlibrary.org
Stamford  Weed Memorial & Hollander Branch
 
 
 
Trumbull 
 
Fairchild-Nichols Library
 
 
 
Wallingford
 
Yalesville Branch www.wallingford.lioninc.org/?q=hours
 
Waterbury
 
Bunker Hill Branch www.bronsonlibrary.org/content/1517/1722/default.aspx
 
Watertown 
 
Oakville Branch www.watertownlibrary.org/contact.htm
 
West Hartford
 
Bishops Corner Branch www.westhartfordlibrary.org
 
West Hartford 
 
Faxon Branch www.westhartfordlibrary.org
 
West Haven
 
Louis Piantino Branch  http://whpl.lioninc.org/?page_id=5  
 
West Haven
 
Ora Mason Branch  http://whpl.lioninc.org/?page_id=5  
 
Windsor
 
Wilson Branch  www.windsorlibrary.com/wilson/
 
LIBRARIES WITH BOOKMOBILES
 
 
Town
 
Bookmobile
Website
 
Hartford
 
Hartford Public Library NO WEBSITE
 
Meriden
 
Meriden Public Library http://meridenlibrary.org/?page_id=233
 
New Haven
 
New Haven Free Public Library www.nhfpl.org/locations-hours/ives-main-library
Stamford Ferguson Library
 
 
 
West Haven 
 
West Haven Public Library  www.whpl.lioninc.org/?page_id=72

ASSOCIATION OF CONNECTICUT LIBRARY BOARDS. Connecticut State Library, 231 Capitol Ave., Hartford 06106. Tel., (860) 757-6665. Website: www.aclb.org. E-mail: info@aclb.org. Pres., Gail B. Richmond, Hebron; Vice Pres., Cynthia Sanders, Middletown; Secy., Wendy Berlind, Middletown; Treas., Susan Phillips, Stafford Springs.