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New Haven is in eastern Macomb County, 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Mount Clemens, the county seat, and 26 miles (42 km) southwest of Port Huron.Highway M-19 passes through the east side of the village, leading south 1.5 miles (2.4 km) to Exit 247 on Interstate 94 and northeast 7 miles (11 km) to Richmond.
The New Haven Museum and Historical Society (originally known as the New Haven Colony Historical Society) was founded in 1862 in New Haven, Connecticut for the purposes of preserving and presenting the region’s history. The museum has a collection containing art, photography, furniture and other artifacts from throughout New Haven’s history ...
New Haven State Street station is a commuter rail station located on State Street in downtown New Haven, Connecticut.The secondary railroad station in the city, it is located 0.8 miles (1.3 km) northeast of the much larger New Haven Union Station and is intended to offer easier access to New Haven's downtown business district.
The University of New Haven is featured in the Princeton Review's 2024 "Best 389 Colleges" guidebook. [7] In 2015, the University of New Haven's College of Business received accreditation from AACSB International, and in 2020 that accreditation was renewed through the 2024-2025 academic year. [8]
Train over the Norwalk River (1914 postcard). The New Haven system was formed by the merger of two railroads that intersected in New Haven, Connecticut: the Hartford and New Haven Railroad, which began service between New Haven and Hartford in 1839 and reached Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1844, and the New York and New Haven Railroad, which opened in 1848 between its namesake cities. [3]
The 3rd district envelops the greater part of New Haven County, surrounding the city of New Haven, the district's population center, regional hub of southern Connecticut, and home to Yale University. The district is the most diverse region of Connecticut, with many Irish, Italian, Polish, Jewish, Greek, Asian, and African-American communities.
The electrification system continued to be controlled as a portion of the ex-New Haven system until the 1987 conversion to 60 Hz operation. When the New Haven main line was converted by Metro-North to 60 Hz operation, the Amtrak section of the Hell Gate Line was also converted, but as an isolated system powered from the Van Nest substation.
Read School was constructed about 1915 on a North Avenue located then was torn down to allow for Route 8/25 connector in 1968, new location is on Ezra Street named after David F. Read who served from 1890 to 1910 for the Bridgeport Board of Education