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Church of the Good Shepherd and Parish House

1867 establishments in ConnecticutChurches completed in 1867Churches in Hartford, ConnecticutChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in ConnecticutEdward Tuckerman Potter church buildings
Episcopal church buildings in ConnecticutGothic Revival church buildings in ConnecticutHistoric district contributing properties in ConnecticutNRHP infobox with nocatNational Register of Historic Places in Hartford, Connecticut
Church of the Good Shepherd Hartford CT
Church of the Good Shepherd Hartford CT

The Church of the Good Shepherd and Parish House is an Episcopal church at 155 Wyllys Street in Hartford, Connecticut. It was commissioned by Elizabeth Jarvis Colt, the widow of Samuel Colt, and completed in 1867. The church and its associated parish house were designed by Edward Tuckerman Potter, and serve as a memorial to Samuel Colt and members of his family. The church and parish house were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and became a contributing property to the Coltsville Historic District in 2008.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Church of the Good Shepherd and Parish House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Church of the Good Shepherd and Parish House
Wyllys Street, Hartford Downtown Hartford

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N 41.757222222222 ° E -72.669166666667 °
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Good Shepherd Church

Wyllys Street 155
06106 Hartford, Downtown Hartford
Connecticut, United States
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Church of the Good Shepherd Hartford CT
Church of the Good Shepherd Hartford CT
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Hartford Ball Club Grounds
Hartford Ball Club Grounds

Hartford Ball Club Grounds was a baseball grounds in Hartford, Connecticut. It was home to the Hartford Dark Blues from 1874 to 1876, two years in the National Association and one in the National League. The Hartford club remained in the League for 1877 but played its home games at Union Grounds in Brooklyn, New York, whose last professional tenant had gone out of business. Contemporary maps show that the ballpark was bounded by Wyllys Street to the northwest and Hendricxsen Avenue to the northeast, with trees and residences along the south sides of the field. The stands were situated along Wyllys, and the diamond was set up with home plate pointing northwest. Across Hendricxsen to the northeast was the Church of the Good Shepherd, bounded by Van Block Avenue on its northeast side. In modern times, Hendricxsen ends at Masseek Street, well to the southeast, but the driveway from Wyllys into the church parking lot approximates the old Hendricxsen. The former ballpark site is a large lawn across from the church and the parking lot. The Hartford Base Ball Grounds was marked with a memorial bronze plaque in July 2008. The effort was led by Ronald Bolin. In February 2009 the plaque was stolen. It was recovered in 2017 from a scrap yard in Massachusetts. No decision has been made on whether to place it back on the site.In June 2013, the bases were marked with commemorative granite slabs on their approximate original locations on the grounds field just in front of the Church of the Good Shepherd's Caldwell Colt Memorial. The tribute was created and financed made by The Friends of Vintage Base Ball.

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