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Southport Historic District (Fairfield, Connecticut)

Fairfield, ConnecticutFederal architecture in ConnecticutHistoric districts in Fairfield County, ConnecticutHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in ConnecticutNRHP infobox with nocat
National Register of Historic Places in Fairfield County, Connecticut
Southport Congregational Church, 1966
Southport Congregational Church, 1966

The Southport Historic District in the town of Fairfield, Connecticut is a 225-acre (91 ha) area historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. It preserves a portion of the modern neighborhood and former borough of Southport, Connecticut. Since the British burnt almost all of Southport's structures in 1779, there is only one home built prior to that date, the Meeker House at 824 Harbor Road, which survives.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Southport Historic District (Fairfield, Connecticut) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Southport Historic District (Fairfield, Connecticut)
Harbor Road,

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.131944444444 ° E -73.284444444444 °
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Address

Harbor Road 789
06890
Connecticut, United States
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Southport Congregational Church, 1966
Southport Congregational Church, 1966
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St. Anthony of Padua Parish (Fairfield, Connecticut)

St. Anthony of Padua Parish is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church in Fairfield, Connecticut, United States, in the Diocese of Bridgeport. The parish was established in 1927 as a national parish for Polish immigrants, one of a number of Polish-American Roman Catholic parishes in New England, and staffed by Conventual Franciscans. It was one of several ethnic congregations in Fairfield, others including St. Emery's, serving the Hungarian populace, and Holy Cross, the only Slovene church in New England.A new parish church designed by Anthony J. DePace of New York was built in 1970, but as demographics shifted, the parish lost parishioners as well as much of its Polish identity; its parochial school closed in 1973.Fr. John Baran arrived as pastor in 2002 from crosstown Our Lady of the Assumption Church. He ended a number of traditionalist practices and services, and set about improving the parish's outreach and community activity. As an homage to the Polish heritage, however, the parish picnic, held annually since 1978, does feature traditional Polish foods such as pierogies and stuffed cabbage.In December 2018, Bishop Frank Caggiano appointed Eleanor W. Sauers as Parish Life Coordinator, the first time a lay person had been appointed to head church administration in the diocese. Sauers had previously served as director of religious education, and had written her 2007 Ph.D. dissertation on the transformation of the parish.