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Centerbrook, Connecticut

Essex, ConnecticutPopulated places in Middlesex County, ConnecticutUse mdy dates from July 2023Villages in Connecticut
Postcard1910CenterbrookCTMainSt
Postcard1910CenterbrookCTMainSt

Centerbrook is a hamlet located in the town of Essex, Connecticut. The village is home to numerous businesses, the Essex Steam Train, a post office, and Essex Elementary School. It has many houses but it is generally considered the more commercial part of Essex.The village consists of the area immediately west of the Route 9 expressway, extending southwest along Route 153 to Tiffany Brook, west along Main Street to Earl Street, and north along Route 154 to Route 9.

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

Centerbrook, Connecticut
Main Street,

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Wikipedia: Centerbrook, ConnecticutContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.3515 ° E -72.4159 °
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Address

Main Street 70
06409
Connecticut, United States
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Postcard1910CenterbrookCTMainSt
Postcard1910CenterbrookCTMainSt
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Hill's Academy
Hill's Academy

Hill's Academy is a historic school building at 22 Prospect Street in Essex, Connecticut. It is now the home of the Essex Historical Society, and was also historically known as the Red Men's Hall because it served as an Improved Order of Red Men lodge. It is a two-story Greek Revival building that was built in 1832, and was used as a school until 1910. It was used by the Improved Order of Red Men between 1915 and 1954. The town then established the Essex Historical Society to receive the property and to preserve local history. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.The academy building occupies a prominent location overlooking Essex's Main Street area, facing east on the west side of Prospect Street just south of the Congregational and Baptist churches. It is a two-story brick building, with a gabled roof capped by a squat single-stage belfry. The front facade is three bays wide, articulated by brick pilasters painted white, which rise to an entablature and fully pedimented gable. Pilasters are also found at the corners of the wood-framed belfry, which has rectangular louvered openings. The main entrance is in the central bay, while the flanking bays are blank. The interior has an entrance vestibule, from which narrow stairs wind to the second floor on the right. Each floor has a single large chamber, which functioned as classrooms during the building's academy phase. Original finishes include wood flooring and staircase trim.The academy was founded in 1831 through the efforts of John Hill, a local businessman, and this building was completed the following year. It was one of the first secondary schools in southern Connecticut, providing the equivalent of a junior high school education to students from as far away as the states in the American South. By 1892, the town had an established public high school, and the academy was dissolved in 1902, its building turned over to the town.