National Register of Historic Places listings in New Haven, Connecticut
This is a list of National Register of Historic Places listings in New Haven, Connecticut.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in the city of New Haven, Connecticut, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.[1]
There are 270 properties and districts listed on the National Register in New Haven County. The city of New Haven is the location of 68 of these properties and districts, including 9 National Historic Landmarks; they are listed here, while the other properties and districts in the remaining parts of the county, including 1 National Historic Landmark, are covered in National Register of Historic Places listings in New Haven County, Connecticut. Three sites appear in both New Haven County lists.
Fairfield (city of Bridgeport) (town of Greenwich) (city of Stamford) | Hartford (city of Hartford) (town of Southington) (town of West Hartford) (town of Windsor) | Litchfield | Middlesex (city of Middletown) | New Haven (city of New Haven) | New London | Tolland | Windham |
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 22, 2024.[2]
Current listings
[edit][3] | Name on the Register[4] | Image | Date listed[5] | Location | Neighborhood | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ahavas Sholem Synagogue | May 11, 1995 (#95000559) |
30 White St. 41°17′54″N 72°56′25″W / 41.298333°N 72.940278°W | Hill | A former synagogue whose elaborate facade demonstrates "design effort directed, with considerable success, toward establishing a Jewish presence in the streetscape."[6] | |
2 | Armstrong Rubber Company Building | April 29, 2021 (#100006451) |
500 Sargent Dr. 41°17′48″N 72°55′07″W / 41.2967°N 72.9185°W | Long Wharf | Noted example of brutalism by architect Marcel Breuer | |
3 | M. Armstrong and Company Carriage Factory | August 31, 2011 (#11000612) |
433 Chapel St. 41°18′13″N 72°54′44″W / 41.303611°N 72.912222°W | Fair Haven | Historic 19th century carriage factory building | |
4 | Beaver Hills Historic District | July 31, 1986 (#86002108) |
Roughly bounded by Crescent St., Goffe Terrace, and Boulevard 41°19′28″N 72°56′39″W / 41.324444°N 72.944167°W | Beaver Hills | This neighborhood was developed in the early 1900s and was one of the first car-oriented neighborhoods in the region. It preserves Colonial Revival and other residential architecture.[7] | |
5 | Beth Israel Synagogue | May 11, 1995 (#95000578) |
232 Orchard St. 41°17′54″N 72°56′25″W / 41.298333°N 72.940278°W | West River | A Colonial Revival building from 1925, designed by architect Louis Abramowitz for the orthodox synagogue.[8] | |
6 | Elisha Blackman Building | December 20, 1978 (#78002863) |
176 York St. 41°18′29″N 72°55′57″W / 41.308056°N 72.9325°W | Downtown | Built in 1883 as an investment by a former carriage manufacturer, the building was the first commercial + rental building in a residential area with very fine design and workmanship.[9] | |
7 | Chapel Street Historic District | April 5, 1984 (#84001123) |
Roughly bounded by Park, Chapel, Temple, George, and Crown Sts. 41°18′20″N 72°55′47″W / 41.305556°N 72.929722°W | Downtown and Dwight | A historic district representing the commercial development of New Haven in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[10] | |
8 | Russell Henry Chittenden House | May 15, 1975 (#75001944) |
83 Trumbull St. 41°18′48″N 72°55′23″W / 41.313333°N 72.923056°W | Prospect Hill | Home of Russell Henry Chittenden, the "father of American biochemistry", from 1887 to 1943.[11] The irregularly shaped three story house with Queen Anne elements was built in 1887 of brick, frame and shingling with gabled roof sections, gabled dormers, interior chimneys with corbeled caps, a square corner tower and a round-arched first-floor window.[12] | |
9 | Christ Church New Haven | June 19, 2009 (#09000420) |
70 Broadway 41°18′44″N 72°55′56″W / 41.31225°N 72.932269°W | Dixwell (in Broadway district) |
Episcopal parish church, begun as an offshoot from New Haven's Trinity Church, the central Episcopal church on New Haven's town green. This Gothic building, completed in 1898, was designed by architect Henry Vaughan and includes a stone tower in the style of one at the University of Oxford.[13] | |
10 | Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station | October 15, 1966 (#66000805) |
123 Huntington St. 41°19′51″N 72°55′10″W / 41.330833°N 72.919444°W | Prospect Hill | Home of the first agricultural experiment station in the United States. It was started in 1875 in Middletown and moved to New Haven in 1877. Its Osborne Library, built during 1882-83, is oldest building of any such station. Located at top of Prospect Hill, the station was the center of early research on vitamins.[14] | |
11 | Connecticut Hall, Yale University | October 15, 1966 (#66000806) |
Bounded by High, Chapel, Elm, and College Sts. 41°18′29″N 72°55′46″W / 41.308056°N 72.929444°W | Downtown | Georgian-style building from 1752 that is the oldest Yale University building and only survivor of the original Old Brick Row. Funded originally in part from the sale of a French ship, it was gutted and rebuilt in the 1950s.[15] | |
12 | John Cook House | November 3, 1983 (#83003576) |
35 Elm St. 41°18′26″N 72°55′21″W / 41.307222°N 72.9225°W | Downtown | One of the oldest stone buildings in New Haven, the house has unusual sandstone quoining and a ballroom on the 3rd floor. Adjacent to the 1828 Caroline Nicoll House.[16] | |
13 | George W. Crawford House | April 8, 2015 (#15000113) |
84–96 Park St. 41°18′24″N 72°56′07″W / 41.3066°N 72.9354°W | Dwight | Brutalist apartment house designed by Paul Rudolph | |
14 | Dixwell Avenue Congregational United Church of Christ | November 29, 2018 (#100003148) |
217 Dixwell Ave. 41°19′08″N 72°56′02″W / 41.3190°N 72.9339°W | Dixwell | Brutalist structure designed by John M. Johansen and home to historic African American congregation | |
15 | James Dwight Dana House | October 15, 1966 (#66000874) |
24 Hillhouse Ave. 41°18′47″N 72°55′30″W / 41.313056°N 72.925°W | Downtown | Home of Yale geologist, James Dwight Dana; designed by Henry Austin | |
16 | Dwight Street Historic District | September 8, 1983 (#83001281) |
Roughly bounded by Park, N. Frontage, Scranton, Sherman, and Elm Sts. 41°18′38″N 72°56′23″W / 41.310556°N 72.939722°W | Dwight and West River | Historic district with well-preserved 19th and early 20th century residential architecture | |
17 | East Rock Park | April 15, 1997 (#97000299) |
Roughly bounded by State, Davis, and Livingston Sts., Park and Mitchell Drs., and Whitney Ave. 41°19′41″N 72°54′21″W / 41.328056°N 72.905833°W | East Rock and Hamden | Designed by the Olmsted Brothers, this park includes East Rock Ridge and the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument. | |
18 | Edgerton | September 19, 1988 (#88001469) |
840 Whitney Ave. 41°20′04″N 72°54′52″W / 41.334361°N 72.914333°W | Prospect Hill | This 20-acre (8.1 ha) historic district is a public park, the site of the estate of Frederick F. Brewster, the industrialist. The 1909 mansion was demolished in 1964 leaving the gatehouse, carriage house, greenhouses, other structures, and landscaped grounds.[17]: 4, 6 Extends into Hamden, elsewhere in New Haven County | |
19 | Edgewood Park Historic District | September 9, 1986 (#86001991) |
Roughly bounded by Whalley Ave. and Elm St., Sherman Ave. and Boulevard, Edgewood and Derby, and Yale Aves. 41°18′55″N 72°57′16″W / 41.315278°N 72.954444°W | Edgewood, Westville, and West River[18] | Historic residential neighborhood with late 19th century Queen Anne and colonial revival structures. | |
20 | Farmington Canal-New Haven and Northampton Canal | September 12, 1985 (#85002664) |
Roughly from Suffield in Hartford County to New Haven in New Haven County 41°19′26″N 72°55′51″W / 41.323889°N 72.930778°W | Newhallville, Dixwell, and Downtown | Extends northward through Hamden and Cheshire (other towns in New Haven County) to Hartford County. Built as a canal, later became a railroad line, and now a multi-use trail. | |
21 | Five Mile Point Lighthouse | August 1, 1990 (#90001108) |
Lighthouse Point Park 41°14′56″N 72°54′14″W / 41.248889°N 72.903889°W | East Shore | Octagonal lighthouse built in 1847. | |
22 | Fort Nathan Hale | October 28, 1970 (#70000711) |
Southern end of Woodward Ave. 41°16′12″N 72°53′55″W / 41.27°N 72.898611°W | East Shore | Site of forts dating from the colonial era through the Civil War. | |
23 | Goffe Street Special School for Colored Children | August 17, 1979 (#79002643) |
106 Goffe St. 41°18′56″N 72°56′06″W / 41.315556°N 72.935°W | Dixwell | Permanent school that grew out of a meeting of New Haven citizens in 1864. New Haven architect Henry Austin donated the design. Used as a school until 1874 when African-American children began attending previously all white public schools. The building was then used by African-American community organizations.[19] | |
24 | Grove Street Cemetery | August 8, 1997 (#97000830) |
200 Grove St. 41°18′49″N 72°55′39″W / 41.313611°N 72.9275°W | Downtown | Final resting place of many Yale and New Haven notables including Roger Sherman, Noah Webster and Eli Whitney. | |
25 | Hall-Benedict Drug Company Building | June 5, 1986 (#86001205) |
763–767 Orange St. 41°19′16″N 72°54′45″W / 41.321111°N 72.9125°W | East Rock | Well-preserved commercial building from 1909. | |
26 | Hillhouse Avenue Historic District | September 13, 1985 (#85002507) |
Bounded by Sachem, Temple, Trumbull, and Prospect Sts., Whitney and Hillhouse Aves., and railroad tracks 41°18′50″N 72°55′23″W / 41.313889°N 72.923056°W | Prospect Hill and Downtown[20] | Historic street with landmark nineteenth century mansions. | |
27 | Elizabeth R. Hooker House | May 27, 2010 (#09000695) |
123 Edgehill Rd. 41°19′58″N 72°55′00″W / 41.332697°N 72.916717°W | Prospect Hill | English style Arts and Crafts suburban villa designed by Delano & Aldrich and built in 1914 for the progressive activist, Elizabeth R. Hooker. | |
28 | Howard Avenue Historic District | September 12, 1985 (#85002308) |
Properties along Howard Ave. between Interstate 95 and Washington St. 41°17′31″N 72°55′59″W / 41.291944°N 72.933056°W | Hill (including City Point) |
Well-preserved late 19th century vernacular architecture. | |
29 | Imperial Granum-Joseph Parker Buildings | March 6, 1986 (#86000409) |
47 and 49–51 Elm St. 41°18′27″N 72°55′23″W / 41.3075°N 72.923056°W | Downtown | Fine pair of commercial buildings from the office of Henry Austin. | |
30 | Lighthouse Point Carousel | December 15, 1983 (#83003578) |
Lighthouse Point Park, Lighthouse Ave. 41°14′54″N 72°54′12″W / 41.248333°N 72.903333°W | East Shore | Early 20th century historic carousel in renaissance revival building. | |
31 | Lincoln Theatre | March 1, 1984 (#84001134) |
1 Lincoln St. 41°18′43″N 72°55′12″W / 41.311944°N 72.92°W | Downtown | 1925 theatre with English free style facade | |
32 | Othniel C. Marsh House | October 15, 1966 (#66000875) |
360 Prospect St. 41°19′19″N 72°55′30″W / 41.321944°N 72.925°W | Prospect Hill | Home of Yale paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh; now part of the Yale School of Forestry. | |
33 | Lafayette B. Mendel House | January 7, 1976 (#76002138) |
18 Trumbull St. 41°18′39″N 72°55′07″W / 41.310833°N 72.918611°W | Downtown | Home of Yale biochemist Lafayette Mendel; designed by Henry Austin | |
34 | Dr. Mary B. Moody House | May 1, 2017 (#100000930) |
154 E. Grand Ave. 41°18′23″N 72°52′55″W / 41.306525°N 72.881821°W | Fair Haven Heights | Home of physician Mary Blair Moody | |
35 | Morris Cove Historic District | April 19, 2018 (#100002320) |
Between Dean & Myron Sts., Morris Causeway & Townsend Ave. 41°15′52″N 72°53′41″W / 41.264315°N 72.894725°W | East Shore | Seasonal resort and streetcar suburb with early 20th century residential architecture. | |
36 | Morris House | December 4, 1972 (#72001341) |
325 Lighthouse Rd. 41°15′17″N 72°53′46″W / 41.2548°N 72.8960°W | East Shore | One of New Haven's oldest surviving buildings | |
37 | Mory's | January 25, 2005 (#04001552) |
306 York St. 41°18′41″N 72°55′54″W / 41.311389°N 72.931667°W | Dixwell (in Broadway district) |
Storied private club adjacent to Yale University. | |
38 | New Haven City Hall | September 9, 1975 (#75001940) |
161 Church St. 41°18′26″N 72°55′29″W / 41.307222°N 72.924722°W | Downtown | Victorian Gothic structure designed by Henry Austin | |
39 | New Haven Armory | May 19, 2021 (#100006556) |
270 Goffe St. 41°19′07″N 72°56′21″W / 41.3187°N 72.9391°W | Dixwell | Massive Romanesque revival built from 1928 to 1930. | |
39 | New Haven Clock Company Factory | March 20, 2017 (#100000761) |
133 Hamilton St. 41°18′26″N 72°54′45″W / 41.307085°N 72.912472°W | Wooster Square | Originally a 14-building complex built in the 19th century.[21] | |
40 | New Haven County Courthouse | May 16, 2003 (#03000404) |
121 Elm St. 41°18′38″N 72°55′27″W / 41.310556°N 72.924167°W | Downtown | Beaux Arts building from 1917, facing on New Haven Green, and containing "several of the city's grandest interior spaces". Site of Griswold v. Connecticut, a historic trial involving women's right to birth control, and the New Haven Black Panther trials.[22] | |
41 | New Haven Green Historic District | December 30, 1970 (#70000838) |
Bounded by Chapel, College, Elm, and Church Sts. 41°18′27″N 72°55′37″W / 41.3075°N 72.926944°W | Downtown | Large town green includes three historic churches. | |
42 | New Haven Jewish Home for the Aged | June 19, 1979 (#79002641) |
169 Davenport Ave. 41°18′09″N 72°56′23″W / 41.3025°N 72.939722°W | Hill | Historic nursing home with Beaux Arts styling. | |
43 | New Haven Lawn Club | May 1, 2003 (#03000309) |
193 Whitney Ave. 41°18′57″N 72°55′10″W / 41.315833°N 72.919444°W | East Rock | The clubhouse, designed by Douglas Orr, combines elements of Colonial Revival and Art Moderne styles. | |
44 | New Haven Railroad Station | September 3, 1975 (#75001941) |
Union Ave. 41°17′51″N 72°55′37″W / 41.2975°N 72.926944°W | Long Wharf | Beaux-arts station designed by Cass Gilbert | |
45 | Caroline Nicoll House | January 14, 1983 (#83001283) |
27 Elm St. 41°18′27″N 72°55′19″W / 41.3075°N 72.921861°W | Downtown | 1828 Federal/Greek Revival townhouse; adjacent to the John Cook House. | |
46 | Ninth Square Historic District | May 3, 1984 (#84001135) |
Roughly bounded by Church, State, George, and Court Sts. 41°18′17″N 72°55′28″W / 41.304722°N 72.924444°W | Downtown | Historic commercial district with 19th and early 20th century buildings. | |
47 | Orange Street Historic District | September 12, 1985 (#85002314) |
Roughly bounded by Whitney Ave., State, Eagle, and Trumbull Sts.; also portions of Anderson, Canner, Cottage, Eagle, Foster, Nash, Nicoll, North Bank & Willow Sts. 41°18′56″N 72°54′55″W / 41.315556°N 72.915278°W | East Rock | Well-preserved 19th century residential buildings; the second set of addresses represent a boundary increase approved July 24, 2017. | |
48 | Oyster Point Historic District | August 10, 1989 (#89001085) |
Roughly bounded by Interstate 95, S. Water St., Howard Ave., Sea St., and Greenwich Ave. 41°16′59″N 72°55′47″W / 41.283056°N 72.929722°W | Hill (City Point section) |
Oystering district (until 1925) with distinctive oystermen's houses. | |
49 | William Pinto House | September 12, 1985 (#85002316) |
275 Orange St. 41°18′29″N 72°55′21″W / 41.308056°N 72.9225°W | Downtown | 1810 Gablefront federal house; home to Eli Whitney. | |
50 | Plymouth Congregational Church | July 28, 1983 (#83001250) |
1469 Chapel St. 41°18′41″N 72°56′40″W / 41.311389°N 72.944444°W | Dwight | Late 19th century brownstone Romanesque Revival former church. After damage, the building was gutted and rebuilt for offices. | |
51 | Prospect Hill Historic District | November 2, 1979 (#79002670) |
Area between Whitney Avenue and Winchester Avenue north of Edwards Street/Munson Street 41°19′30″N 72°55′15″W / 41.325°N 72.920833°W | Prospect Hill and Dixwell[23] | Area of historic mansions and some institutional buildings | |
52 | Quinnipiac Brewery | July 15, 1983 (#83001285) |
19-23 River St. 41°18′14″N 72°53′37″W / 41.303889°N 72.893611°W | Fair Haven | Factory complex dominated by six story Romanesque revival main building. | |
53 | Quinnipiac River Historic District | June 28, 1984 (#84001139) |
Roughly bounded by Quinnipiac Ave., Lexington, Chapel, Ferry, Pine, Front, and Lombard Sts. 41°18′35″N 72°52′59″W / 41.309722°N 72.883056°W | Fair Haven and Fair Haven Heights | Historic maritime village dating from the 18th century. | |
54 | Raynham | July 11, 1980 (#80004062) |
709 Townsend Ave. 41°16′34″N 72°53′42″W / 41.276111°N 72.895°W | East Shore | Gothic revival mansion and surrounding estate. | |
55 | River Street Historic District | January 26, 1989 (#88003213) |
Roughly bounded by Chapel St., Blatchley Ave., New Haven Harbor, and James St. 41°18′08″N 72°54′04″W / 41.302222°N 72.901111°W | Fair Haven | Industrial district with a historic focus on metalworking businesses. | |
56 | Southern New England Telephone Company Administrative Building | November 24, 1997 (#97001447) |
227 Church St. 41°18′33″N 72°55′25″W / 41.309167°N 72.923611°W | Downtown | Art Deco building designed by Douglas Orr | |
57 | Southwest Ledge Lighthouse | May 29, 1990 (#89001475) |
Southwestern end of the east breakwater at the entrance to New Haven Harbor 41°13′53″N 72°55′25″W / 41.231389°N 72.923611°W | New Haven Harbor | Completed in 1877, this lighthouse with Second Empire style architecture above, was the first or one of the first built on a cylindrical iron foundation, an innovation to address shifting ice that is regarded as very important in lighthouse design. | |
58 | St. Luke's Episcopal Church | November 21, 2003 (#03001170) |
111-113 Whalley Ave. 41°18′51″N 72°56′09″W / 41.314167°N 72.935833°W | Dixwell | 1905 Gothic revival structure built for an African American congregation founded in 1844. | |
59 | Strouse, Adler Company Corset Factory | August 22, 2002 (#02000864) |
78-84 Olive St. 41°18′20″N 72°55′11″W / 41.305556°N 72.919722°W | Wooster Square | Historic factory complex built between 1876 and 1923. | |
60 | Trowbridge Square Historic District | September 12, 1985 (#85002311) |
Roughly bounded by Columbus and Howard Aves. 41°17′47″N 72°55′55″W / 41.296389°N 72.931944°W | Hill | Well-preserved 19th century working-class neighborhood. | |
61 | United States Post Office and Court House | September 14, 2015 (#15000586) |
145 Church St. 41°18′24″N 72°55′30″W / 41.3066°N 72.9249°W | Downtown | Monumental 1919 classical revival courthouse clad in Tennessee marble. | |
62 | Upper State Street Historic District | September 7, 1984 (#84001143) |
Roughly State St. from Bradley St. to Mill River St. 41°18′53″N 72°54′41″W / 41.314722°N 72.911389°W | East Rock | Historic late-19th century commercial district. | |
63 | Welch Training School | April 21, 1983 (#83001286) |
495 Congress Ave. 41°18′04″N 72°56′15″W / 41.301111°N 72.9375°W | Hill | Queen Anne style school designed by Leoni W. Robinson | |
64 | Westville Village Historic District | January 23, 2003 (#02001727) |
Roughly along Blake St. and Whalley Ave.; also 827 Whalley Ave. 41°19′38″N 72°57′32″W / 41.327222°N 72.958889°W | Westville and West Rock[24] | Area of commercial buildings and more. 827 Whalley represents a boundary increase of October 25, 2006 | |
65 | Whitney Avenue Historic District | February 2, 1989 (#88003209) |
Roughly bounded by Burns St., Livingston St., Cold Spring St., Orange St., Bradley St., and Whitney Ave. 41°19′23″N 72°54′53″W / 41.323056°N 72.914722°W | East Rock and Prospect Hill[25] | A middle- and upper-class residential neighborhood that showcases Queen Anne style architecture in the United States, Shingle, Colonial Revival, Tudor Revival, and other architecture. | |
66 | Winchester Repeating Arms Company Historic District | January 28, 1988 (#87002552) |
Roughly bounded by Hamden town line, Mansfield, Hazel & Division Sts., Winchester Ave., and Sherman Parkway 41°19′16″N 72°55′55″W / 41.321111°N 72.931944°W | Newhallville and Dixwell | Historic district including Leoni W. Robinson-designed buildings of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company and surrounding areas of single- and multi-family workers' houses. | |
67 | Wooster Square Historic District | August 5, 1971 (#71000914) |
Roughly bounded by Columbus, Wooster Sq., Chapel St., and Court St. 41°18′16″N 72°55′05″W / 41.304444°N 72.918056°W | Wooster Square | 19th century residential neighborhood centered around Wooster Square Park restored and preserved starting in the late 1950s. | |
68 | Yale Bowl | February 27, 1987 (#87000756) |
Southwest of the intersection of Chapel St. and Yale Ave. 41°18′46″N 72°57′39″W / 41.312778°N 72.960833°W | Westville | Bowl stadium, model for the Rose Bowl and others. Home of Yale Bulldogs football and The Game. |
Former building
[edit][3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | Neighborhood | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | First Telephone Exchange | October 15, 1966 (#66000961) | May 7, 1973 | 733 Chapel Street 41°18′16″N 72°55′17″W / 41.3045°N 72.9215°W | Downtown | Former National Historic Landmark. Location of the First Telephone Exchange in the United States. Demolished in 1973 to make way for a parking garage.[26] |
See also
[edit]- List of National Historic Landmarks in Connecticut
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Connecticut
References
[edit]- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 22, 2024.
- ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ David F. Ransom (August 26, 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Listing, Historic Synagogues of Connecticut: Ahavas Sholem Synagogue / Thomas Chapel of the Church of Christ". National Park Service. (pages 86-92 omitting page 89) and Accompanying two photos (apparently from 1994?)
- ^ J. Paul Loether; John Herzan (January 14, 1986). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Beaver Hills Historic District". National Park Service. and Accompanying 27 photos, from 1984, 1986
- ^ David F. Ransom (August 26, 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Listing, Historic Synagogues of Connecticut: Beth Israel". National Park Service. (pages 72-85) and Accompanying four photos, exterior and interior
- ^ David F. Ransom (June 19, 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Elisha Blackman Building / York-Chapel Building". National Park Service. and Accompanying eight photos from 1978, exterior and interior, and a historic postcard view
- ^ Kate Ohno; John Herzan (May 1983). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Chapel Street Historic District". National Park Service. and Accompanying 21 photos, exterior, from circa 1910, circa 1936, 1982, 1983 and other
- ^ James Sheire (March 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Russell Henry Chittenden House / John C. Flanagan Law Office". National Park Service. and Accompanying one photo, exterior, from 1975
- ^ National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, Russell Henry Chittenden House, New Haven, Connecticut, National Register #75001944.
- ^ "Christ Church, New Haven: Our history". Christ Church.
- ^ S. Sydney Bradford; Blanche Higgins Schroer (January 2, 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station". National Park Service. and Accompanying four photos, exterior, from 1963 and 1974
- ^ Blanche Higgins Schroer; Charles W. Snell; S. Sydney Bradford (December 6, 1974). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Connecticut Hall, Yale University". National Park Service. and Accompanying photo from 1974 and etching from 1807/1910
- ^ Jack A. Gold; Susan E. Ryan (March 1983). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: John Cook House". National Park Service. and Accompanying 9 photos, exterior and interior, from 1980
- ^ Janice L. Elliott; Marian Staye (March 10, 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Edgerton". National Park Service. and Accompanying 17 photos from 1988, and 2 of mansion in 1960 and 1964 (captions on page 10 of text document)
- ^ The portion of Edgewood Park west of the West River is officially included in the Westville neighborhood planning area. The West River Wildlife Sanctuary is officially part of the West River neighborhood planning area.
- ^ Charles W. Brilvitch (November 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Goffe Street Special School for Colored Children / Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Masons". National Park Service. and Accompanying four photos, exterior, from 1978
- ^ Only one property is in the official Downtown neighborhood
- ^ "Clock Factory Site is Under Debate". The New York Times. January 23, 2000.
- ^ Heather L. McGrath; William G. Foulks (July 9, 2002). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: New Haven County Courthouse (including 20 photo copies)". National Park Service. and Accompanying 13 photos, exterior and interior, from 2002
- ^ Thirteen properties south of Hillside Place fronting Prospect street but on the west side are in the official Dixwell neighborhood
- ^ Only one property is in the official West Rock neighborhood
- ^ Properties along west side of Whitney Avenue are in the official Prospect Hill neighborhood
- ^ "Site of the First Telephone Exchange - National Historic Landmarks (U.S. National Park Service)".