Bridgeport was inhabited by the
Paugussett Native American tribe during the start of
European colonization. The earliest European communal settlement was in the
historical Stratfield district, along US
Route 1, known in colonial times as the King's Highway. Close by,
Mount Grove Cemetery was laid out on what was a native village that extended past the 1650s. It is also an ancient
Paugussett burial ground. The burgeoning farming community grew and became a center of trade, shipbuilding, and whaling. The town was incorporated to subsidize the
Housatonic Railroad and rapidly industrialized following the rail line's connection to the
New York and New Haven railroad. The town was given its name because of the need for bridges over the
Pequonnock River that provided a navigable port at the mouth of the river. Manufacturing was the mainstay of the local economy until the 1970s.
Colonial history The first documented
European settlement within the present city limits of Bridgeport took place in 1644, centered at
Black Rock Harbor and along North Avenue between Park and Briarwood Avenues. The place was called
Pequonnock The Golden Hill Indians were granted a
reservation here by the
Colony of
Connecticut in 1639; it lasted until 1802. (One of the tribes acquired land for a small reservation in the late 19th century that was recognized by the state. It is retained in the Town of
Trumbull.) In 1639,
Roger Ludlow, deputy governor of the
English Connecticut Colony was ordered by the
colony's General Assembly in
Hartford to establish two plantations, one at Cupheg the mouth of the Housatonic River (today Stratford), and one at the harbor at the mouth of the
Pequonnock River, today's
Bridgeport Harbor. Ludlow disobeyed orders and instead established a settlement in Unconway (today's
Fairfield), probably due to fears of the large
Paugussett settlement at Golden Hill, which was a sacred site of theirs, so it is believed that they perhaps instead settled in sparsely populated land surrounding the village. In 1659, the general court in Hartford established the official borders of the Paugussett Reservation. Bridgeport's early years were marked by residents' reliance on
fishing and
farming. This was similar to the economy of the Paugussett, who had cultivated
corn, beans, and squash; and fished and gathered shellfish from both the river and sound. A village called
Newfield began to develop around the corner of State and Water Streets in the 1760s. The area officially became known as
Stratfield in 1695 In 1800, the village became the
Borough of Bridgeport, the first so
incorporated in the state. It was named for the Newfield or Lottery Bridge across the Pequonnock, connecting the wharves on its east and west banks. In 1821, a small community of remaining
Golden Hill Pauguasett Natives, along with
free blacks and runaway slaves was established in the South End along Main Street known as
Little Liberia, with its own churches, schools and hotels, and served as a stop in the underground railroad. Many remaining
Paugusset Indians also lived there. The West India trade died down around 1840, but by that time the Bridgeport
Steamship Company (1824) and Bridgeport
Whaling Company (1833) had been incorporated and the
Housatonic Railroad chartered (1836). The HRRC ran upstate along the
Housatonic Valley, connecting with
Massachusetts's
Berkshire Railroad at the state line. Bridgeport was chartered as Connecticut's
fifth city in 1836 The same year, the
New York and New Haven Railroad began operation, connecting Bridgeport to
New York and the other towns along the north shore of the
Long Island Sound. Now a major junction, the city began to industrialize. The city's first immigrants were Irish Catholics who settled in the
Sterling Hill section of the
Hollow. Having come to the US to escape the
famine, they arrived in town during the 1830s to build the railroad. They mostly lived in wooden four to six family
tenements, often subdivided homes. In 1842, showman P.T. Barnum spent a night in Bridgeport, and there met
Charles Stratton, a local
dwarf. He soon became part of Barnum's act and a star under the name "
General Tom Thumb". Barnum moved to Bridgeport and built four houses in the city over the course of his life, the first being
Iranistan. , the residence of
P. T. Barnum, in 1848 In 1852, Barnum began an endeavor with
William Noble to develop the land (inherited by Noble) on the other side of the
Pequonnock River, across the river from Bridgeport to be known as "
East Bridgeport" with Washington Park at the center. The new neighborhood had homes, commerce, and factories, centered around
East Main Street. The neighborhood eventually became the East Side of Bridgeport (occasionally spelled "Eastside"). In 1863, during the
Civil War, the
Bridgeport Standard ran a series of articles encouraging the creation of a public park in the city. This led wealthy residents
P.T. Barnum,
William Noble and
Nathaniel Wheeler to purchase the land on
Long Island Sound and donating the land to the city in 1864. The land on the shore became
Seaside Park. A second park was built near East Main Street, when in 1878, James Beardsley donated more than to the city along the
Pequonnock River under the condition that the land be "kept the same forever as a public park". Both parks were designed by
Frederick Law Olmsted, known for creating
Central Park. These two large public parks gave Bridgeport the nickname "The Park City". The
county's Catholic seat,
St. Augustine Cathedral was finished in 1869, built by the
Irish who had arrived 30 year earlier.
Saint James Church, predating the
Archdiocese of Hartford, was the first Catholic congregation in Fairfield County, starting with 250 members in 1842. The congregation gave rise to St Augustine's in
Sterling Hill, the seat of the
Diocese of Bridgeport. Following the
Civil War, the town held several
iron foundries and factories manufacturing
firearms,
metallic cartridges,
horse harnesses,
locks, and
blinds. In 1875,
P. T. Barnum was elected mayor of the town, which afterwards served as the winter headquarters of
Barnum and Bailey's Circus and
Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.
Harvey Hubbell founded
Hubbell Incorporated in Bridgeport in 1888. The Holmes & Edwards Silver Co. was founded in 1882, its wares sold nationally, and the company became part of the
International Silver Company in 1898. (The H&E brand continued well into the 1950s and was advertised in national magazines such as
LIFE and ''Ladies' Home Journal''.)
Hungarian immigrants began to arrive, which led to the Ráckόczi Hungarian Aid Association in Bridgeport in 1887 and the American Hungarian Immigrant Aid Society in 1892. They established themselves in the West End. In 1894, Bridgeport's Slavic immigrants played a major role in the development of the
Orthodox Christian faith in America when they met with Fr
Alexis Toth (now Saint Alexis) and founded Holy Ghost Russian Orthodox Church in the city's Eastside. This parish became the mother church of all
Orthodox Churches in New England.
20th century From 1870 to 1910, Bridgeport became the largest industrial center in Connecticut; its population rose from around 25,000 to over 100,000, including thousands of
Irish,
Slovaks,
Hungarians,
Germans,
English, and
Italian immigrants.
Jewish migration to the city began in the 1881, with an influx of
Polish,
Russian, and especially
Hungarian Jews calling Bridgeport home. Bridgeport Jew
Edwin Land grew up to invent the
Polaroid. In 1905, Bridgeport was already "the largest industrial center in the state, $49,381,348 was invested in
manufacturing and the products being valued at $44,586,519." The city was a
port of entry with its imports being valued at around $656,271 in 1908. The town was also the center of America's
corset production, responsible for 19.9% of the national total, Brideport's Italian immigrants settled in the "
Central End", today's Little Italy, and the city was the 3rd most Italian in the state by 1910. Their newspapers were the weekly
La Tribuna de Connecticut (1906–1908) and later
La Sentinella (1920–1948) The West End along Wordin Avenue, known as "Hunktown", grew into one of the largest
Hungarian communities in the US. Bridgeport had the largest factory in the world at the time, the new
Remington Arms plant on Boston Avenue (on the East Side). Built in 1915, it had 13 separate buildings, each of them 5 stories, connected by a long corridor half a mile long. The purpose of the building was to fulfil a company order from the
Russian tzar for a million rifles and 100 million rounds of ammunition. The construction site was protected by the
National Guard to prevent
Bolshevik arson. The factory by 1916 employed 16,000 people and led to the construction of "
Remington City" in the Mill Hill neighborhood, and "
Remington Village" in the East End, by
Remington Arms. Due to housing shortages in many US cities during World War I, the federal government created the
US Housing Corporation. This resulted in 7 USHC housing developments being built in Bridgeport, notably
Seaside Village in the South End and
Black Rock Gardens in
Black Rock. By this point,
Remington Arms was producing 50% of America's cartridges during the war, with 17,000 employees, and homes for new workers were needed. The factory became a
General Electric plant after the war. The
First World War had continued the city's expansion so that, on the eve of the
Great Depression, there were more than 500 factories in Bridgeport, including
Columbia Records' primary
pressing plant and a Singer Sewing Machine factory. The 1920s saw the city's population stabilize at 143,555 after the war. In 1920, the city parks commissioner began the process of creating a
zoo in Beardsley Park. Bridgeport a stop became for performances with around 20 theatres. 1922 was the year the elegantly designed
Majestic and Poli Palace theatres, were built downtown, along with the Savoy Hotel. The Poli Palace theatre (built by
Sylvester Poli) was the largest theatre in the state of Connecticut, with gilded hand-carved moldings and vaulted ceilings. The
Ritz Ballroom was opened in 1923. In 1928, the city bought an racetrack and landing field in
Lordship to construct
Bridgeport Airport. Spanish immigration in 1920 and 1921 brought hundreds of migrants from Spain, particularly from
Pedreguer,
Valencia, where "practically the entire town migrated" to Bridgeport. During the Great Depression the city elected
Socialist party candidate
Jasper McLevy as mayor in 1933. McLevy's election made headlines as a
New England city had a socialist mayor. Known for cutting costs, he would serve as mayor for 12 terms, finally losing in 1957. The
Great Migration led southern
African-Americans to Bridgeport around the 1930s (thanks to railroads) along with black foreigners (such as
Cape Verdean), On Park Avenue in 1962 the
Museum of Art, Science and Industry (MASI) was opened to the public, today's
Discovery Museum and Planetarium. Known for the newly developed approach of hands on-exhibits, the Museum became science oriented later on. attracted middle and upper-class residents, leaving the city with a higher proportion of poor. By the 1960s,
Puerto Ricans had begun to immigrate to settle to Bridgeport in large numbers, and by about 1970 had made up 10% of the city's population, or 15,000 people, the largest Puerto Rican population in Connecticut, and they would continue to grow. Groups such as the local
Young Lords branch organized themselves on
East Main Street, leading to activism to advance the Puerto Rican community with increased access to health care, better housing, food and an end to poverty and police brutality. As cities across the country were renovating their central business district after the war, Bridgeport attempted its own
urban renewal projects in its old
downtown in the early 1960s during the construction of the highways. Hunktown, with a population of 15,000 and the Irish neighborhood in the South End were demolished and replaced with highways and an industrial park. The
Trumbull Shopping Park was built just outside Bridgeport city limits in Trumbull in 1965, Connecticut's first fully enclosed shopping mall. Bridgeport under
Mayor Tedesco went under the State Street redevelopment project, demolishing 52 acres of State Street, clearing the land for development. Replaced with modern high-rise office buildings, parking, the Route 8/25 expressway towards
Waterbury and
Newtown, and a shopping mall at its core. Large parts of Main Street were demolished in what was called the Congress Street Renewal project, nothing was built on the land. Constructed with federal funding, on Lafayette Boulevard and Broad Street, the 450,000 acre, 2 story (with basement) Lafayette Shopping Plaza was erected, a downtown
shopping mall with a
Sears and a
Gimbels department store as anchors connected to it. Military contracts during the 1950s and 1960s enabled the Bridgeport-Lycoming division of
AVCO, founded 1951, to employ at times more than 12,000 people, building tanks, helicopters, and other military hardware. Decreased demand led to layoffs, and then closure in 1984. Other examples of urban development include two city landmarks, the 12-story 855 Main Street (People's Savings Bank building), and 18-floor
Park City Plaza, (State National Bank building) built 1972. The plan for three identical towers never materialized, due to the
Oil Crisis and corporate vacancies. Bridgeport was largely bypassed by the New York City companies fleeing Manhattan for suburban Fairfield County locations for various reasons; the city developed a reputation for having an industrial character thanks to the factories located right along both sides of Interstate 95, and the city's lack of urban amities and its reputation as a "blue collar" city simply wasn't the image these companies wanted to identify with in order to attract top executives, Bridgeport was being farther from New York City than
Stamford or
White Plains with no immediate benefits, and the trend of establishing headquarters outside of major cities in suburban campuses all played a factor. As such, most skyscraper construction models for downtown Bridgeport from the 70s were never built, unlike
Hartford (a city already home to major insurance companies) or
Stamford. Much of
north downtown Bridgeport would end up abandoned, neglected and boarded up as
department and
discount stores closed, leaving only federal and municipal buildings along now empty lots. Restructuring of heavy industry starting after the mid-20th century caused the loss of thousands of jobs and residents. Like other urban centers in Connecticut, Bridgeport suffered during the
deindustrialization of the United States in the 1970s and 1980s. Pleasure Beach was sold 5 years after a rollercoaster caught fire. A year later the park closed for good. The old Bridgeport station caught fire in 1978. In September 1978, Bridgeport teachers went on a 19-day strike due to deadlocked contract negotiations. A court order, as well as a state law that made strikes by public workers illegal in Connecticut, resulted in 274 teachers being arrested and jailed. In November 1978, a wave of arson passed through the city's
East side, with the fire chief calling it as a microcosm of "
the Bronx". The city suffered from overall mismanagement, for which several city officials were convicted, contributing to the economic and social decline. The once busy Lafayette Shopping Plaza began to lose customers after
Gimbel's closed in 1984. Replaced with a
Read's store, the mall was later bought by Hi-Ho Industries and renamed "Hi-Ho Mall", until it closed in 1993 and became
Housatonic Community College in 1997. Bridgeport remained the state's second city and as
Hartford's population continued to shrink, Bridgeport became the largest city in Connecticut in 1974, with a population of 142,546.A 1981
Times article read; "Bridgeport... for years has suffered an image problem when compared with Hartford because of that city's role as state capital and as the site of a number of large corporations." Mayor
Mandanici's response was "Hartford reported state sales taxes of $712.7 million, but Bridgeport yielded state sales taxes of $890.4 million. That's economic power, right?" In 1985, Bridgeport was still Connecticut's chief manufacturing center, its major industries including
General Electric, Remington Shaver,
Bryant Electric, and
Raybestos plants. A
New York Times in 1985 stated Bridgeport was the fifth largest banking center in New England, with five of the banks based Bridgeport having assets of more than $6 billion. In 1991, the city filed for
bankruptcy protection but was declared solvent by a federal court. Later that same year,
Mayor Mary C. Moran lost the election to
Joseph Ganim, at 33 years old, the youngest person to hold that office. and under him the city was able to begin redevelopment with the construction of the
Arena at Harbor Yard and the
Ballpark at Harbor Yard. Bridgeport made numerous efforts at revitalization. In a proposal in 1995,
Las Vegas developer
Steve Wynn was to build a large
casino, but that project failed due to traffic concerns. The project was opposed as rival
Donald Trump feared a Bridgeport casino would harm his
Atlantic City properties and proposed to build a theme park and potential casino on the same site. Bridgeport's
Mexican population grew gradually, from 24 people counted in 1970, 599 people in 1990, to 2,687 by the 2000 census, becoming at that point the second largest
Latino group in the city behind the city's
Puerto Ricans (31,117 people), surpassing the
Cuban population. Likewise, the population from other Central and South American nations continued to increase "There has been a big shift in ethnic groups. Just look at the restaurants that have opened in the last few years—Mexican, Brazilian, Chilean and Jamaican." an interviewee, local chamber of council president Paul Timpanelli stated in 2000 according to the
Connecticut Post. In 1999, city-owned
Sikorsky Memorial Airport ceased
its commercial regional flight offerings.
21st century In 2003, Mayor Ganim was involved in a corruption scandal after being investigated by the FBI as he received gifts from developers in exchange for being allowed to build in Bridgeport. He was sentenced to federal prison, and was replaced by
John Fabrizi. In the early 21st century, Bridgeport has taken steps toward redevelopment of its downtown and other neighborhoods. In 2004, artists' lofts were developed in the former
Read's Department Store on Broad Street. Several other rental conversions have been completed, including the 117-unit Citytrust bank building on Main Street. The
Great Recession halted, at least temporarily, two major mixed-use projects including a $1-billion waterfront development at Steel Point, but other redevelopment projects have proceeded, such as the condominium conversion project in Bijou Square. In 2009, the City Council under
Mayor Finch approved a new master plan for development, designed both to promote redevelopment in selected areas and to protect existing residential neighborhoods. The plan was updated in April 2019. In 2010, the Bridgeport Housing Authority and a local health center announced plans to build a $20 million medical and housing complex at Albion Street, making use of federal stimulus funds and designed to replace some of the housing lost with the demolition of
Father Panik Village. The Steel Point (or Steelpointe) project of Bridgeport's on the lower portion of the East Side finally led to the construction of a big box retailer in 2013, along with other stores, shops, and a lighthouse with a marina and oyster bar). The plan for high-end mixed use apartments is in place, although concerns about
gentrification have been raised. A hotel is also in the works. A
new proposed train station in
East Bridgeport, meant to be completed in 2021, was postponed in 2019. By 2013 the city and local business owners agreed that work needed to be done in the downtown area north of Fairfield Avenue, nicknamed
Downtown North, above. Made up of old empty brick buildings which were neglected for years, the city and developers began their rehabilitation starting in 2015, most of which are now converted apartments or retail. Bridgeport's downtown renovation has resulted in various restaurants, the renovation of the
Bishop Arcade Mall, a
comedy club, and theatres. A 2022 plan to renovate
McLevy Hall is in place. , Main Street, downtown In 2017,
MGM had announced plans to build a waterfront casino and shopping center in the city, awaiting approval by the state government. If built, the development would have created 2,000 permanent jobs and about 5,779 temporary jobs. After a legal battle with the
Mohegan and
Pequot tribes on the right to build a casino in Connecticut, the project "appears to be dead", and tenants such as Bridgeport Boatworks now occupy the proposed space. The construction of Honey Locust Square began on the East End, which when complete will house a supermarket (something the neighborhood lacks), a public library, a health center, and a retail building.
Notable speeches On March 10, 1860,
Abraham Lincoln spoke in the city's Washington Hall, an auditorium at the old
Bridgeport City Hall (now McLevy Hall), at the corner of State and Broad Streets. The largest room in the city was packed, and a crowd formed outside, as well. Lincoln received a standing ovation before taking the 9:07 pm train that night back to Manhattan. A plaque marks the site where Lincoln spoke; later that year, he was elected president. The Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. spoke three times at the Klein Auditorium during the 1960s, as well as at the
University of Bridgeport and the original Central High School (today Bridgeport City
Hall)., as well as in Bridgeport City Hall. Additionally, President
George W. Bush spoke before a small group of Connecticut business people and officials at the Playhouse on the Green in 2006. President
Barack Obama also spoke at the Harbor Yard arena in 2010 to gain support for the campaign of Democratic Governor
Dan Malloy.
Timeline of notable firsts and inventions • 1896 – The
chain socket was invented in Bridgeport • 1904 – The
AC plug outlet was also invented in Bridgeport by
Harvey Hubbell • 1877 – The world's first
telephone exchange was established in Bridgeport by the
District Telephone Company. The first commercial phone exchange was opened in nearby
New Haven two years later. • 1914 –
Caresse Crosby, the woman credited with inventing the modern bra, sold her patent to Bridgeport-based
Warnaco which mass-produced it for the first time. The alphabet
bra sizing system was invented, which we still use today, in 1937 by the Bridgeport company. • 1949 – The first
dental school was founded in the
University of Bridgeport • 1920 – The
Frisbie Pie Company was founded in Bridgeport in 1871. • 1981 –
People's Bank provided the first telephone banking service in the United States to its clients. == Geography ==