Thank you to the Trumbull
ACE Foundation (Academic Challenge for Excellence) for graciously permitting
the inclusion of the following article on this website. This article, which extolls
some of Trumbull's many virtues, is excerpted from the Trumbull
ACE Foundation 2006/07 Town Calendar. Photo Credits at the conclusion of the
article. Trumbull: Pride in our Past, Faith in our
Future
Guided by its motto, Trumbull
is a vibrant community of more than 34,000 citizens that combines small-town New
England character and charm with extensive retail, commercial, and light manufacturing
activity.
Trumbull was originally
part of an area called Pequonnocke or Cupheag that is now known as Stratford,
which also encompassed present-day Monroe, Shelton, and a portion of Bridgeport.
The first land laid out and surveyed in Trumbull was to Richard Booth in about
1670, followed by Isaac Nichols in 1671 and Caleb Nichols in 1674. The first permanent
settlement was established by the Abraham Nichols family in about 1690 and, in
the following years, other families ventured into the "wilderness" to
establish mills, churches, and schools. In 1725, the settlement of thirty farmers
successfully petitioned the General Court for "village privileges,"
which allowed them to levy taxes to establish their own meetinghouse, school,
and church that, according to the Puritanical laws of the Connecticut colony,
was to be their government. Unity Parish started in 1730 with 38 members as it
constructed its meetinghouse near today's intersection of White Plains and Unity
Roads.
In
1728, John Edwards' and other families from the Stratfield section of Fairfield
migrated inland to the Chestnut Hill area that became part of Long Hill parish
in 1740. Together, the two villages petitioned the Connecticut General Assembly
"to annex the Long Hill parish with Unity" and they combined in 1744
to become the Society of North Stratford. After successfully conducting their
religious and educational affairs for some forty years, residents petitioned the
General Assembly for complete independence from Stratford.
Although
its efforts were blocked by its mother settlement for ten years, the community's
request was ultimately granted in 1797. The town was named after one of the most
respected families in Connecticut history, the Trumbulls of Lebanon. The family's
patriarch, Jonathan Trumbull, Sr., was the first of the state's four "Governor
Trumbulls."
"Brother
Jonathan," as he was called by his close friend George Washington, to whom
he was an advisor and aide throughout the revolutionary period, was the only colonial
governor to continue in office throughout the American Revolution, first appointed
by the British throne and later elected by the state's residents. In recognition
of his contributions to his state and country, a marble statue of Trumbull is
one of two that has represented Connecticut in the U.S. Capitol's Statuary Hall
since 1872. A bronze replica was constructed on the grounds of Trumbull Town Hall
and unveiled in a December 2002 ceremony.
Like
other towns in Connecticut, governance of Trumbull's town affairs has evolved
over the past two hundred years. In 1814 the Connecticut General Assembly granted
the church's petition to be incorporated as a church body only as it stepped away
from affairs of town government. As in many other New England communities, all
local questions were originally decided at open town meetings to which all were
expected to attend. As population increased to the point where fines assessed
against those who missed meetings were deemed uncollectible, this became unwieldy.
Accommodating this and other effects
of population growth, the state legislature enabled a shift from direct to representative
democracy by granting provisions for Representative Town Meetings and, ultimately
in 1957, passed the Home Rule Act that authorized towns to draft and adopt their
own charter and method of self-government. Trumbull is governed by a First Selectman,
elected every two years, in combination with a Town Council of twenty-one members
elected in seven voting districts as provided for by Trumbull's town charter,
which was most recently revised in 2003.
With
1,600 citizens in 1900, Trumbull's population had not grown very rapidly since
incorporation when the 1800 census recorded about 1,300 residents. During the
next century, however, Trumbull the community of farming and light industry was
transformed into the mostly-residential town of today. By 1930 less than half
of Trumbull's acreage was still in use as farm land. Situated near Bridgeport,
one of the cities that was a manufacturing powerhouse during World War II, Trumbull
grew from 5,300 residents to 8,600 during the decade of the 40's as workers new
to the area and returning veterans purchased homes in the town.
Most
of the town's transformation occurred during the next twenty years as the Baby
Boom and economic prosperity propelled families' desire for suburban homes. This
trend was also advanced by the greater affordability of automobiles as well as
the expanding road network that supported them. Providing mobility in addition
to the already-existing Merritt Parkway, the Interstate highway system was born
during the Eisenhower Administration, with the Connecticut section of I-95 - "America's
Main Street" - completed in 1957, the same year that Trumbull's new Town
Hall was built.
Trumbull's population
nearly quadrupled during these twenty years to more than 31,000 residents in 1970.
Although governance of the town's one- and two-room public schools was consolidated
to a nine-member Trumbull Town School Committee in 1895, this period of dramatic
growth posed unprecedented challenges as it necessitated rapid expansion of Trumbull's
educational infrastructure.
Red
brick-and-mortar schools built in the 1920's - Long Hill (today's Public Schools
Administration Building), Nichols (the present-day Senior Center), White Plains,
and Edison - to supplant the town's several small school buildings were, in turn,
replaced or supplemented by another wave of new buildings as most of today's schools
were built during this time: Middlebrook Junior High opened in 1953, Jane Ryan,
Booth Hill, and St. Teresa's elementary schools in 1955, Trumbull High School
on Madison Avenue in 1960, Daniels Farm and St. Stephen's elementary schools in
1962, St. Joseph's High School in 1963, St. Catherine's elementary school in 1965,
and Tashua elementary school and Hillcrest Junior High in 1967.
A
new Trumbull High School opened on Strobel Road in 1971, when the "old"
high school became Madison Junior High and Middlebrook became an elementary school.
Christian Heritage School opened in 1977. Trumbull's two junior high schools became
middle schools as they began housing grades 6 - 8 in 1987.
As
the town entered the twenty-first century with 9,700 families and a quarter of
its population younger than 18, three new schools were built: The Regional Agriscience
& Biotechnology Center opened in 2001, Frenchtown elementary school in 2003,
and the Trumbull Early Childhood Education Center in 2005.
Even
as Trumbull and its present-day School Board are focused on meeting new expansion
needs, the town's public schools are among the best in Connecticut as represented,
for example, by its students' standardized test scores and post-secondary school
pursuits at excellent colleges and universities.
Its
many high school sports teams excel in the highly-competitive Fairfield County
Interscholastic Athletic Conference (FCIAC) - for example, the football and girls
gymnastics and soccer teams are the reigning conference champions and the baseball
and softball teams both won the FCIAC championships in 2005, only the third time
in conference history that any school has done that in the same year. The school's
girls soccer and boys baseball, lacrosse, and volleyball teams have won state
championships in recent years and THS won the state large-school 2005 - 2006 Michaels
Cup, signifying the best overall sports program in Class LL, an award also won
in 1998 - 1999. Numerous THS athletes go on to compete at the collegiate level.
Similarly,
student music, arts, and academic groups regularly turn in outstanding performances
throughout Connecticut as well as nationally. Citing just two examples, the Golden
Eagle Marching Band consistently performs on the national stage and was honored
to represent the state by marching in the 2001 Presidential Inaugural Parade in
Washington. Also making its mark on the national level, the THS "We the People"
team has traveled to Washington as the Connecticut state champion fifteen of the
past nineteen years, taking "Top Ten" honors in two of the past four
years in this Congressionally-chartered program.
All
of these activities - and many more - are avidly supported by dedicated parents
who participate in very active Parent-Teachers Association groups and booster
clubs.
Devoted to the preservation
of its family-oriented atmosphere, Trumbull has long been blessed with a heterogeneous
array of vigorous civic, religious, and community organizations and a host of
active volunteers. A variety of town departments care for the full range of its
citizens' interests and needs, for example, ranging from a Library System with
active programming that operates out of two locations
to its Youth Department
and Teen Center
to its Senior Center and Stern Village elder housing. There
are nearly 30 houses of worship and a variety of affiliated elementary and secondary
schools, which strengthen the fabric of the community and add to its diversity.
Trumbull's
community has been enriched by a legacy of enthusiastic involvement by hundreds
of dedicated volunteers in a broad range of activities outside of the schools
as well. To cite just a few examples: The town's three volunteer fire companies
man seven firehouses to help protect Trumbull's citizens. The Nichols Improvement
Association preserves the quality of life in the town's oldest neighborhood, which
is listed as a Historical District on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Long Hill and Nichols Garden Clubs and Canoe Brook and Pinewood Lake Associations
promote the town's beauty. The Trumbull Historical Society members preserve and
educate others about the town's past. Countless coaches and other supporters of
many athletic organizations provide Trumbull's youth with opportunities to participate
in soccer, football/cheerleading, swimming, wrestling, baseball/softball, gymnastics,
lacrosse, BMX, and other sports. A group of resilient 11- and 12-year old boys
and their coaches provided one of the town's - and indeed the country's - proudest
moments when they beat Taiwan 5-2 to win the 1989 Little League World Series.
Other
civic organizations, such as the Rotary and Lions Clubs, the Knights of Columbus,
the Trumbull Community Women, and the Trumbull Women's Club are actively involved
in various activities that enrich the community. Political organizationsS promote
citizens' involvement in the democratic process, while numerous parents are involved
in Scouting for boys and girls and others are active in promoting the well-being
of Trumbull's pets. Performing arts groups provide opportunities for performers
of all ages by staging theatrical and musical productions, including weekly musical
performances at the Town Hall Gazebo during the summer. Many of these groups are
involved in annual events such as the Memorial Day Parade, Trumbull Day, and the
fall Arts Festival.
Trumbull's
quality of life - and venues for many of these organizations' activities - is
enhanced by the town's more than 1,400 acres of parkland that encompass a wide
variety of terrains, from the historic mineralogical Old Mine Park
to hiking
and bike trails through pristine Connecticut countryside
to myriad recreational
fields and athletic facilities. These include the 27-hole Tashua Knolls Golf Course,
three town swimming pools, the Unity Park baseball/softball complex, tennis and
volleyball courts, soccer fields, and others. Indian Ledge Park, with its amphitheater,
has become home to many events, including the annual Summer Concert Series that
has featured internationally-renowned groups, The Beach Boys, Credence Clearwater,
and Chicago.
Running
north-south through a significant portion of the town, The Pequonnock River Valley
State Park is Trumbull's most diverse and historically rich parkland. Now reverted
back to its natural state much as it was at the time of Trumbull's incorporation,
with its waterfalls, trickling brooks, and rich vegetation and wildlife, "The
Valley" holds many archaeological hints of the vigorous industrial activity
it hosted throughout the 19th century.
In
the mid to late 1800's, several major companies controlled the valley: The Housatonic
Railroad Company maintained a rail line, three train stations, cow tunnels, bridges,
and the Parlor Rock Amusement Park. The Bridgeport Hydraulic Company built a large
stone/dirt dam to create a 93-acre reservoir one mile north of Trumbull Center.
An Ice House was built between the railroad and the reservoir. Mill Pond was built
south of Parlor Rock where Radcliffe's Woolen Mill was located on the east side
and the Long Hill Saw Mill on the west side. Tungsten Mining & Milling Company
operated a full scale operation north of Parlor Rock.
In
the early 1900's, however, floods destroyed the mills along the river, fire destroyed
the Radcliffe Factory and the mining operations, Parlor Rock closed, the automobile
displaced the railroad, the reservoir was drained and the dam destroyed after
a boy drowned, and the refrigerator made blocks of ice obsolete.
Bordered
by Bridgeport, Fairfield, Easton, Monroe, Shelton, and Stratford, and only five
miles inland from the Long Island Sound, Trumbull covers 23.5 square miles in
the hilly country of eastern Fairfield County in southwestern Connecticut. It
is approximately 60 miles from both Hartford and New York City and about 20 miles
from New Haven and Stamford. Originally served by one of America's first controlled-access
divided roads built in the 1930's, the Merritt Parkway that traverses the town,
Trumbull's citizens have easy access to tremendous distant business and cultural
opportunities via key state routes (8, 25, 127, 111, and 15/Merritt Parkway) that
connect to Interstates 95, 91 and 84. Trumbull has a strong local character enhanced
by the diversity of the communities surrounding it.
Trumbull's
transportation network also contributes to its attractiveness for retail and commercial
activity. The town hosts a regionally-known Westfield commercial mall, which began
operations in 1963, as well as other notable shopping and entertainment destinations
like Target, Best Buy, and Kohl's at the Hawley Lane Mall and the Crown Marquis
Theaters. In addition, several large corporations such as Unilever, Oxford Health
Plans, NASDAQ, Sikorsky Aircraft, and Cadbury-Schweppes have units that call Trumbull
"home."
Trumbull's citizens
are very proud of their town's history, heritage, and accomplishments. Perhaps
more important, they have faith that the future for the people of Trumbull will
be even brighter than the past.


The
Trumbull Ace Foundation
offers their thanks for assistance from many groups and individuals, most
notably members of the Trumbull Historical Society who have researched and documented
aspects of the town's history, and Lois Levine in particular. Any attempt to authoritatively
sort out conflicting accounts of history is fraught with danger, but we have done
our utmost to get it "right" and we hope you enjoy this description
of our town's many facets.
Photo
Credits:
- Connecticut Historical
Commission Highway Marker - Dan Neumann
- Trumbull's
Town Seal - Dan Neumann
- Statue
of Jonathan Trumbull in U.S. Capitol (Washington, D.C.) - The Architect of the
U.S. Capitol
- Trumbull Public Schools
Administration Building Sign - Dan Neumann
- THS
Marching Band in the Inaugural Parade (Washington, D.C.) - The Associated Press/Connecticut
Post
- Trumbull Fire Truck - Rocco
Clericuzio
- Trumbull Wins the World
Series (Little League Museum, Williamsport, Pa.) - Erik Neumann
- Town
Hall Green on Memorial Day - Susan Berescik
- Chicago
in Concert - Morgan Kaolian/AEROPIX
- Trumbull's
Town Motto - Dan Neumann

The Trumbull ACE Foundation is a not-for-profit 501 (c)
(3) charitable organization
registered with the State of Connecticut and the
U.S. Internal Revenue Service,
EIN #35-2234667.