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- This photograph, taken in the 1880s or 1890s, shows the City Hotel in Plainfield. The City Hotel was a four-story hotel with balconies that stood at the corner of Park Avenue and Second Street. It was known as the Mansion House in the 1870s and 1880s, and at other points in time, as the Hotel Iroquois and Daly’s City Hotel.
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Governor Lamont's Corona Virus Update
City in Plainfield on YP.com. See reviews, photos, directions, phone numbers and more for the best City, Village & Township Government in Plainfield, CT.
The Town Hall Pool is Closed until further notice..
There are open positions on Boards and Commissions that need to be filled as soon as possible. Interested parties shall email the First Selectman at kcunninghamselectman@plainfieldct.org
The Town of Plainfield is looking for a Representative from Plainfield for the Eastern Regional Tourism District board. For information contact Kevin M. Cunningham at 860-230-3001 or kcunninghamselectman@plainfieldct.org
Housing Authority has an opening for a Resident Commissioner Term ends 01/03/2022
Welcome To Plainfield!!
755 Norwich Road, Plainfield
755 Norwich Road, Plainfield
22 Putnam Road, Central Village
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The history of Plainfield officially began with its incorporation by an act of the General Court of Connecticut in May 1699. In the year it was accepted by the legislature as a township and in the five decades preceding it, the area where Plainfield is located was known to European settlers as the Quinebaug country, an English transcription of the Indian name for the tribe or band of Native Americans inhabiting the area, and for the river which flows through eastern Connecticut before joining the Shetucket River at Norwich.
Migrants to the lands along the Quinebaug River, whether Native American or European, were attracted by the same physical features and natural resources - fertile land consisting of meadows and upland, and abundant water from the area's springs, streams and rivers. The very name Plainfield, bestowed by Governor Fitz-John Winthrop in 1700, testifies to the importance placed on those fertile open fields along the Quinebaug which yielded heavy crops of Indian corn to the Quinebaug Indians as well as abundant harvests of wheat and rye to European farmers who first came to work the land in the late 1680s and 1690s.