In 1636, 30 families settled in Pyaug, a tract of land belonging to
Wethersfield on the eastern bank of the
Connecticut River, purchased from the Native American
chief Sowheag for of trading cloth. In 1672, the General Court granted
Wethersfield and
Hartford permission to extend Pyaug's boundary line to the east. By 1690, Wethersfield had permitted Pyaug residents to form a separate town and the town of Glassenbury was created in 1693. The ties have not been completely broken: the
oldest continuously operating ferry in the United States still runs between South Glastonbury and Rocky Hill, also then part of Wethersfield, as it did as far back as 1655. One result of being split off from Wethersfield was that the town was built along a main road, rather than around the large green, that anchors most New England towns. After part of New London Turnpike was realigned to eliminate the rotary in the middle of town during the mid-20th century, a small green was established there. During the
American Revolutionary War, several homes in Glastonbury were used to hold classes from
Yale University.
Noah Webster was a student in these classes; later he taught at one of the town's one-room schoolhouses. Glassenbury freed its slaves in the 1780s, 60 years before Connecticut formally abolished slavery. The town organized its first library in 1803. It organized the first hospital shortly after the Revolution to combat and treat
smallpox. By the end of the Revolution, there were ten schools, formed one by one during the 18th century. During the
American Revolution,
George Stocking's gunpowder factory operated in the town. In 1785, the town residents renamed Glassenbury to Glastenbury. In the 18th and early 19th centuries, Glastenbury was a shipbuilding town. Located on the Connecticut River, it had reliable waterpower and nearby hardwood forests of oak. Sawmills, charcoal kilns, and foundries developed around the shipyards to process timber and other goods for their needs. As shipbuilding was ending, the early industrial beginning continued. The
J.B. Williams Soap Factory started in 1840 in James B. Williams's drugstore in Manchester, where he experimented with chemical formulas for shaving soap. When he had produced a formula that satisfied him, he moved his business to Glastenbury. Two years later, he was joined by his brother, William Stuart Williams. They formed what is believed to be the world's first commercial soap manufacturing business. Although shaving soap was their first product, they also made ink and shoe blacking. The J.B. Williams Company's products included Williams' Lectric Shave and
Aqua Velva. Over time, J.B. Williams expanded to
Montreal (around 1922),
England, and
Argentina. When the business was sold in 1957, ten former employees organized Glastonbury Toiletries and continued operation into the 1970s.
J. B. Williams Park, on Neipsic Road, is named for James B. Williams. Remaining parts of the industrial complex have been adapted for use as the Soap Factory Condominiums. Another portion was occupied by the Glastonbury Board of Education office and is now occupied by a translation company. In 1870, the town's name was changed from Glastenbury to Glastonbury, to match
Glastonbury,
England. During the World Wars, Glastonbury factories supplied leather and woolen goods to the militaries of
Belgium,
France,
Great Britain,
Italy, and the United States. In addition, Glastonbury has been a center for
feldspar mills, cotton mills, paper mills, and silver plate factories. It also had an airplane building industry. J.H. Hale Orchards began operations in 1866 in Glastonbury. John Howard Hale became known as the Peach King for developing a peach that could withstand New England winters and was disease-resistant, as well as for his operations' large, national scale. He also had land in
Georgia and was the first Glastonbury industry to establish a branch outside the state. A marketing pioneer, Hale shipped peaches to markets all over the country. The orchard that started with in 1866 grew to more than by 1900. Hale never went beyond grade-school, but he initiated the founding of Storrs Agricultural College, now the
University of Connecticut. He helped to organize the Glastonbury Grange and the State Grange. His home, at the intersection of Main Street and
Route 17, was adapted in the 20th century for use first as a restaurant and, more recently, for business offices. Henry Saglio began a pioneering effort to breed a white chicken, because black pinfeathers were difficult to pluck from a bird headed for the dinner table. In 1948, the Saglio Brothers formed Arbor Acres and produced a
broiler chicken that
A&P Food Stores awarded the title "Chicken of Tomorrow". By 1958, Arbor Acres was selling globally. Today the brand is owned by
Aviagen. In 1977, Henry Saglio was inducted into the Poultry Hall of Fame. Glastonbury was also a major grower of broad-leaf tobacco. This agricultural tradition is carried on by the orchards and berry farms on its hills. In 1993,
Billy Joel filmed part of the video for his song "
The River of Dreams" in a barn in South Glastonbury. The video also has a scene with the
Rocky Hill-Glastonbury Ferry. ==Geography==