Did you know ?

Farmington Bicentennial Quilt, 1976

The creation of the Farmington Quilt was an extraordinary community project involving 120 volunteers who donated their time and talent over a two-year period. Three quilts were made; two were ...

Read more...
Tunxis Monument

A brown sandstone monument, erected in 1840 at Riverside Cemetery, honors the Tunxis tribe.  Inscribed on it are the lines of Hartford poet Lydia Huntley Sigourney:

Chieftains of a vanished race,
In your ancient burial place,
By your father’s ashes blest,
Now in peace securely rest.

It is said that on moonlit nights a Tunxis Indian can still be seen walking through “Hooker’s Grove” with a deer slung over his shoulder. Some say that Hooker’s Grove is near Diamond Glen Road, while others place it near the Hooker gravestone in Riverside Cemetery.

CONTACT US

The Farmington Historical Society
P.O. Box 1645
Farmington, CT 06034
(860) 678 – 1645

info@fhs-ct.org