Enfield was originally inhabited by the
Podunk people, and contained their two villages of Scitico and Nameroke. Though land grants were first granted in 1674, no one attempted to settle what is known as Enfield until 1679 when the Pease Brothers of Robert and John II, settlers from
Salem, Massachusetts came in to settle the fertile lands. They dug a shelter into a hill and camped there for the winter until their families came to help them build houses. In 1675, a sawmill owned by William Pynchon II was burned in the wake of
King Phillip's War. The first town meeting was held on August 14, 1679, and a committee of five were appointed by men from
Springfield as it was the parent town at the time. Enfield was incorporated in Massachusetts on May 16, 1683, as the Freshwater Plantation, the same day as the town of
Stow, Massachusetts, making them the 52nd/53rd towns in the Colony. The namesake is the Freshwater Brook (Also known as the Asnuntuck Brook) that traverses the town. Five years later, on March 16, 1688, the townspeople purchased Enfield from a Podunk named Notatuck for 25 pounds Sterling. It is unclear what claim Notatuck actually had to the land, or whether he was selling the land or the rights to use it. Shortly around 1700, the town changed its name to Enfield after
Enfield in
Middlesex, and to go with the other "fields" in the area such as
Springfield,
Westfield, and
Suffield. In 1734, the eastern part of town separated into the town of
Somers. In 1749, following the settlement of a lawsuit in which it was determined that a surveyor's error placed a section of present-day Hartford County (including Enfield) within the boundaries of Massachusetts, the town
seceded and became part of Connecticut.
Jonathan Edwards preached his famous sermon, "
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God", in Enfield. It was part of the
Great Awakening revival that struck New England in the mid-18th century and spread throughout Western North American civilization. The modern town of Enfield was formed through the merging of Enfield,
Thompsonville, and
Hazardville, named for Colonel
Augustus George Hazard (1802–1868), whose company manufactured
gunpowder in the Powder Hollow area of the town from the 1830s to the 1910s. In the 1989 film
Glory, boxes of gunpowder can be seen with the words
Enfield, CT printed on the sides. In an episode in the 1970s police drama
Hawaii Five-O, Jack Lord's character Steve McGarrett traces explosives back to "The Hazard Gunpowder Company- Enfield, CT". The capacity of the mill at the time of the Civil War was per day. Over 60 people died in explosions in Powder Hollow during the years when gunpowder was manufactured there. The mill blew up several times, but was set up so that if one building blew up, the rest would not follow in a chain reaction. The ruins of these buildings and the dams are open to the public. Powder Hollow is now home to baseball fields and hiking trails. King's Island in the Connecticut River, previously known as Terry Island (or Terry's Island, or Great Island), was the location of pivotal meetings of
Adventist Christians in 1872 and 1873. In 1972,
Asnuntuck Community College was established in Enfield as the twelfth institution in the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities system (CSCU). Classes began in 1972 with an initial enrollment of 251, and 12 Associate in Science degrees and 20 Associate of Art degrees were awarded to the first graduating class in 1974. There are five sections of the town of Enfield: Enfield Village, Thompsonville, Hazardville, Scitico, and Sherwood Village.
Enfield Shaker village In 1793, a historic
Shaker village,
Enfield Shaker village, one of nineteen scattered from
Maine to
Kentucky, was established in the town. The
Utopian religious
sect practiced
celibate,
communal living, and is today renowned for its simple
architecture and
furniture. Membership eventually dwindled, however, and the village disbanded. The property has since been redeveloped by the Enfield Correctional Institution, still located on Shaker Road. ==Demographics==