Featured Apartment:
Connecticut- New London - 1
bedroom - 1 bath - spacious, clean & sunny unit! - Brick Building - Hardwood
Floors - Modern Kitchen - Spacious Living Room - Large Bedroom w/ Double Sliding
Door Closet - Updated Bathroom - Off Street Parking - access to commuter rail,
bus, shops & restaurants, first and last months rent
View More Listings -->
About New London
New London is a seaport city and a port of entry on the northeast coast of
the United States. It is located at the mouth of the Thames River in
southeastern Connecticut.
The harbor at New London is the best on Long Island Sound. Connecticut College
and the United States Coast Guard Academy are located on the west bank. Naval
Submarine Base New London and the Electric Boat Corporation are located on the
east bank in neighboring Groton.
New London was founded in 1646. It was a base of American naval operations
during the Revolutionary War and was a major whaling port in the 19th century.
New London Harbor is home port to the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Chinook, the Coast
Guard's tall ship Eagle, and to seventeen nuclear-powered attack submarines of
the U.S. Navy.
The Norwich-New London metropolitan area includes twenty-one towns and 266,618
people. The population of the city of New London is 26,17.
New London hosts Connecticut College, Mitchell College, and the United States
Coast Guard Academy, as well as the small private secondary school The Williams
School. The Connecticut College Arboretum is a fine, 750 acre (3 km) arboretum
and botanical garden. The Lyman Allyn Art Museum is located on the Connecticut
College Campus. Housed in a handsome Neo-Classical building designed by Charles
A. Platt, the permanent collection of over 15,000 objects includes paintings,
sculpture, drawings, prints, furniture, decorative arts, and American art from
the 18th through 20th centuries.
Ye Antientist Burial Ground, circa 1652, is one of the earliest colonial
graveyards in New England. Here is a significant repository not only of the
first generation of settlers, but an open air museum of the early stonecutter's
art as well. Of all Connecticut burying grounds, this in New London may hold the
greatest variety of different carving schools. There is also a historical site
in the remains of Fort Griswold (located across the Thames River in Groton, CT),
dedicated to Americans that fell in the Battle of Groton Heights defending the
fort and the city against British invaders. New London is also home to Fort
Trumbull.
