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Bethany, Connecticut

1717 establishments in the Thirteen ColoniesBethany, ConnecticutPopulated places established in 1717Towns in ConnecticutTowns in New Haven County, Connecticut
Towns in South Central Connecticut Planning Region, ConnecticutTowns in the New York metropolitan areaUse mdy dates from July 2023Vague or ambiguous time from September 2023
Bethany Veterans Wall of Honor
Bethany Veterans Wall of Honor

Bethany is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. The town is part of the South Central Connecticut Planning Region. The population was 5,297 at the 2020 census.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bethany, Connecticut (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bethany, Connecticut
Amity Road,

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Wikipedia: Bethany, ConnecticutContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.425555555556 ° E -72.9925 °
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Address

Amity Road 534
06524
Connecticut, United States
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Bethany Veterans Wall of Honor
Bethany Veterans Wall of Honor
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Nearby Places

New England Cement Company Kiln and Quarry
New England Cement Company Kiln and Quarry

The New England Cement Company Kiln and Quarry are a historic archaeological industrial site in Woodbridge, Connecticut. Located on and near a ridge paralleling Litchfield Turnpike, the site includes two components: a stone kiln used for processing cement, and a hand-dug quarry from which limestone used in the cement manufacture was taken. The site has an industrial history dating to 1847; the kiln, which survives in deteriorated condition, dates to 1874.A modern account of the demise of this business states there is "evidence of a nineteenth century scam" in which investors lost money. According to a 2013 article in The New York Times,"The concept was simple, toss local rock into the large stone furnace and wait until it melts. Then out comes fine cement. In this case the local bedrock proved unusable and produced an inferior product. Speculation is that the first batch was hauled into New Haven and dumped into the harbor more than 100 years ago." However this is contradicted by a more contemporaneous account by U.S. Congressman Nehemiah D. Sperry as recounted in a local newspaper's coverage of his 1895 trip through this area where he grew up. Sperry said, "And here we are opposite the dam. Just over there on the hillside are the ruins of the old cement kiln, where twenty-five years ago they made cement from the rocks that are so abundant around it. It was good cement, but the business failed and was killed because cement was a cheap article and because it took off all the profits to cart the stuff to New Haven. Perhaps some day an electric road will come by here and then the business might be profitably worked."The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.