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New Haven's History

New Haven's history goes back to that of the Quinnipiacks who had built their villages around what is now New Haven harbor and who in 1638 sold much of the land to Puritan settlers, in part because of skirmishes they were having with neighboring Pequots and Mohawks. The town was built as the first planned community in North America with nine squares surrounding a central common area or green, which remains today. In 1701 the town, previously an independent colony, joined with the Connecticut Colony to form an entity roughly equal to what is the state of Connecticut today. New Haven and Hartford became "co-capitals" of this state, with the government traveling between the two up until 1873 when Hartford was made the sole capital. Yale University was originally founded in 1701 as the Collegiate School of Connecticut in the town of Old Saybrook but within 20 years had moved to New Haven and been renamed Yale after a donor of books and (a small amount of money), Elihu Yale. The trial of the Amistad slave rebels, now known as a Steven Spielberg motion picture, was held in New Haven in 1839. Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in New Haven and established an arms company that ultimately became the Winchester company. Samuel Colt also invented the automatic revolver at the Whitney Arms Factory. Charles Goodyear invented vulcanized rubber and George C. Coy invented the first telephone switchboard in New Haven; for many of us it is perhaps more notable that New Havener A.C. Gilbert introduced Erector Sets and Flexible Flyers. The corkscrew and the lollipop were also indisputably invented in New Haven. Notable items in New Haven lore include the invention of frisbee playing by Yale students tossing around Frisbee company pie plates, the invention of the hamburger at Louis' Lunch, and the invention of pizza by Frank Pepe. The medical school was begun in 1810. Among Yale graduates and faculty, there have been 9 recipients of the Nobel Prize in Medicine and an additional 6 in other scientific disciplines.

 

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Page last revised: April 30, 2007