connecticut map

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2.950 documents for connecticut map
  • About 200 agricultural destinations -- including a bison farm -- are included on the Connecticut Farm Map, newly updated and reissued by the Department of Agriculture. Complementing the map is a new, interactive Web site. Visit www.CTGrown.gov and click on "CT Farm Map" under "Featured Links" at the right of the page. Users can search the site's database by type of product, county or name to access farms' contact information, addresses and descriptions. Users can get directions, satellite views and links to the farms' Web sites.

  • HARTFORD -- About 200 agricultural destinations -- including a bison farm -- are included on the Connecticut Farm Map, newly updated and reissued by the Department of Agriculture. Complementing the map is a new, interactive Web site. Visit www.CTGrown.gov and click on "CT Farm Map" under "Featured Links" at the right of the page. Users can search the site's database by type of product, county or name to access farms' contact information, addresses and descriptions. Users can get directions, satellite views and links to the farms' Web sites.

  • MYSTIC, Conn. - Artifacts of a battle between a Native American tribe and English settlers, a confrontation that helped shape early American history, have sat for years below manicured lawns and children's swing sets in a Connecticut neighborhood. A project to map the battlefields of the Pequot War is bringing those musket balls, gunflints and arrowheads into the sunlight for the first time in centuries. It's also giving researchers insight into the combatants and the land on which they fought, particularly the Mystic hilltop where at least 400 Pequot Indians died in a 1637 massacre by English settlers.

  • While not on the same scale as [Bill Gates], there is one Jamaican economist-turned-educator, Lyndon Pitter, who is applying the same principle at the Highville Mustard Seed School in Hamden, Connecticut. His success map focuses on the UN principle, and he, along with a group of other talented educated, idealistic set of Jamaicans, are making a difference in Connecticut, through the Highville Mustard Seed Development Corporation. Some of the team members include Wendy Clarke, treasurer, Highville Mustard Seed Development Corporation; Nadine Pitter, assistant executive director for the School, and Berita Rowe, president of the Mustard Seed school board, and receptly elected to the City Council, 3rd District, Hampden. The whole idea is to immerse the children in another culture, so that ...

  • From the moment I first got my hands on this year's Department of Agriculture Connecticut Farm Map, I have been eager (actually, driving Frank crazy) to make a road trip. Well, as we all know, summer weather didn't really arrive until, well, a couple of weeks ago, but it did arrive, so we made plans to spend our first day off that wasn't raining visiting farms. We headed out on Route 80, a beautiful, tree-lined drive that took us from East Haven, through North Branford and Guilford, then we turned onto Route 77 and continued into Durham and Middletown, then on to Route 17, just past Portland and right through to Glastonbury.

  • America's struggles to define marriage are all over the map. It's more than just differences from California to Connecticut and from Idaho to Iowa -- it's also how those definitions continue to be refined across the country.

  • One need only look at the fact Republicans did not run a single candidate for the New Haven Board of Aldermen in November to know that the party has given up seriously contesting elections in Connecticut's largest cities. As evidenced by the radical congressional reapportionment plan submitted by the Republican state legislative leaders, Rep. Lawrence Cafero and Sen. John McKinney, the GOP's urban electoral strategy is to lump together as many cities as possible in order to confine geographically the damage done by minorities and other city-dwellers to the party's electoral prospects. I doubt that the courts -- where the responsibility for redrawing Connecticut's congressional map is landing -- will look kindly on this strategy.

  • MYSTIC, Conn. - Artifacts of a battle between a Native American tribe and English settlers, a confrontation that helped shape early American history, have sat for years below manicured lawns and children's swing sets in a Connecticut neighborhood. A project to map the battlefields of the Pequot War is bringing those musket balls, gunflints and arrowheads into the sunlight for the first time in centuries. It's also giving researchers insight into the combatants and the land on which they fought, particularly the Mystic hilltop where at least 400 Pequot Indians died in a 1637 massacre by English settlers.

  • Tourism, which industry officials say has been woefully neglected by the state, will get a boost this summer from a private-public partnership. Under former Gov. M. Jodi Rell, the tourism budget kept getting cut until it was $1, which led to Connecticut being removed from the regional tourism map, and generated an outpouring of criticism from the industry.



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