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Hartford County, Connecticut

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Profiles

  • Cleopatra Stedman (1802 - 1870)
  • https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/77180477/hannah-hart
    Hannah Hull (1680 - 1755)
    Hannah DeWolf Hart BIRTH Aug 1685, Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, USA DEATH 2 Nov 1760 (aged 75), Farmington, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA BURIAL Memento Mori Cemetery, Farmington, Ha...
  • Deacon George Langdon Porter (1837 - 1901)
    Source: Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1791-1963 MyHeritage.com [online database], MyHeritage Ltd. Record: Unknown Citation:
  • Chester Euclid Ingraham, Jr. (1914 - 1969)
    Chester E Ingraham , Jr, Census • United States Census, 1940 Chester E Ingraham, Jr's Spouses and Children Elizabeth M Ingraham Wife F 24 years New York Sarah L Ingraham Daughter F 0 days Connec...
  • Elizabeth Constantine Ingraham (1915 - 1984)
    Elizabeth Ingraham , In 1950 United States Federal Census Household Relation to head Name Age Head Jr Chester E Ingraham 35 Wife Elizabeth Ingraham 34 Daughter Sara Lane Ingraham 10 Son C...

This project is for those that were born, lived, and died in Hartford County, Connecticut.

Wikipedia

Hartford County is a county located in the north central part of the U.S. state of Connecticut. According to the 2020 census, the population was 899,498, making it the second-most populous county in Connecticut. Hartford County contains the city of Hartford, the state capital of Connecticut and the county's most populous city, with 121,054 residents at the 2020 census. Hartford County is included in the Hartford-East Hartford-Middletown metropolitan statistical area.


Interactive map of Hartford County, Connecticut

www.geni.com/media/proxy?media_id=6000000203422857821&size=large

Adjacent counties

Communities
See also: List of Hartford County Towns and Villages

In Connecticut, there is no county-level executive or legislative government; the counties determine probate, civil and criminal court boundaries, but little else. Each city or town is responsible for local services such as schools, snow removal, sewers, fire department and police departments. In Connecticut, cities and towns may agree to jointly provide services or establish a regional school system.

Cities

Towns

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Connecticut


History

Hartford County was one of four original counties in Connecticut established on May 10, 1666, by an act of the Connecticut General Court. The act establishing the county states:

  • This Court orders that the Townes on the River from yee
  • north bounds of Windsor wth Farmington to ye south end of
  • ye bounds of Thirty Miles Island shalbe & remaine to be one
  • County wch shalbe called the County of Hartford. And it
  • is ordered that the County Court shalbe kept at Hartford on
  • the 1st Thursday in March and on the first Thursday in September yearely.

As established in 1666, Hartford County consisted of the towns of Windsor, Wethersfield, Hartford, Farmington, and Middletown. The "Thirty Miles Island" referred to in the constituting Act was incorporated as the town of Haddam in 1668. In 1670, the town of Simsbury was established, extending Hartford County to the Massachusetts border. In the late 17th to early 18th centuries, several more towns were established and added to Hartford County: Waterbury in 1686 (transferred to New Haven County in 1728), Windham in 1694 (transferred to Windham County in 1726), Hebron in 1708 (transferred to Tolland County in 1785), Coventry in 1712 (transferred to Windham County in 1726), and Litchfield in 1722 (transferred to Litchfield County in 1751).

In 1714, all of the unincorporated territory north of the towns of Coventry and Windham in northeastern Connecticut to the Massachusetts border were placed under the jurisdiction of Hartford County. Windham County was constituted in 1726, resulting in Hartford County losing the towns of Windham, Coventry, Mansfield (incorporated in 1702), and Ashford (incorporated in 1714). Northwestern Connecticut, which was originally placed under the jurisdiction of New Haven County in 1722, was transferred to Hartford County by 1738. All of northwestern Connecticut was later constituted as the new Litchfield County in 1751. In 1785, two more counties were established in what was now the U.S. state of Connecticut: Tolland and Middlesex. This mostly resulted in the modern extent of Hartford County. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the establishment of several more towns resulted in minor adjustments in the bounds of the county. The final adjustment resulting in the modern limits occurred on May 8, 1806, when the town of Canton was established.