Finding John Brown’s Birthplace, Right Here in Torrington, Conn.

Most of us associate abolitionist John Brown with Harpers Ferry, Va., where he led the famous raid on a federal armory in October 1859. The complex of buildings had 100,000 guns that Brown planned to use to help Black slaves to escape and find freedom.

He was hung that year in December for this and other crimes related to his lifetime dedication to ending slavery.

Brown is also famous for his raids and abolitionist activities in Kansas.

Brown traveled widely across the United States during his lifetime, but he was a native of New England and mostly lived in Connecticut and New York state. 

Anyone with even  modest interest in local history knows that Brown was born in Torrington, Conn. The home where he spent the first five years of his life was adjacent to the site of the University of Connecticut’s Torrington branch (which is now owned by the Five Points Gallery).

In 2002, state archaeologist Nick Bellantoni and a team of volunteers began an excavation of the site where the Brown family home had once been. 

A description of what they found and a history of Brown’s life is now available in PDF form and in a short video from the Torrington Historical Society. To find them and other articles of interest about this part of Litchfield County, go to www.torringtonhistoricalsociety.org.

A PDF and video from the Torrington Historical Society explains the life and work of abolitionist John Brown, and his connection to Litchfield County, where he was born and spent the first few years of his life. Image from the John Brown birthplace

Image from the John Brown birthplace

Image from the John Brown birthplace

A PDF and video from the Torrington Historical Society explains the life and work of abolitionist John Brown, and his connection to Litchfield County, where he was born and spent the first few years of his life. Image from the John Brown birthplace

Latest News

Shelea Lynn Hurley

WASSAIC — Shelea Lynn “Shalay” Hurley, 51, a longtime area resident, died peacefully on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, at Vassar Brothers Medical Center in Poughkeepsie, following a lengthy illness. Her husband, Michael, was at her bedside when Shalay was called home to be with God.

Born April 19, 1973, in Poughkeepsie, she was the daughter of the late Roy Cullen, Sr. and Joann (Miles) Antoniadis of Amsterdam, New York. Shalay was a graduate of Poughkeepsie High School class of 1991. On July 21, 2018 in Dover Plains, New York she married Michael P. Hurley. Michael survives at home in Wassaic.

Keep ReadingShow less
'A Complete Unknown' — a talkback at The Triplex

Seth Rogovoy at the screening of “A Complete Unknown” at The Triplex.

Natalia Zukerman

When Seth Rogovoy, acclaimed author, critic, and cultural commentator of “The Rogovoy Report” on WAMC Northeast Public Radio, was asked to lead a talkback at The Triplex in Great Barrington following a screening of the Bob Dylan biopic “A Complete Unknown,” he took on the task with a thoughtful and measured approach.

“I really try to foster a conversation and keep my opinions about the film to myself,” said Rogovoy before the event on Sunday, Jan. 5. “I want to let people talk about how they felt about it and then I ask follow-up questions, or people ask me questions. I don’t reveal a lot about my feelings until the end.”

Keep ReadingShow less
On planting a Yellowwood tree

The author planted this Yellowwood tree a few years ago on some of his open space.

Fritz Mueller

As an inveterate collector of all possibly winter hardy East coast native shrubs and trees, I take a rather expansive view of the term “native”; anything goes as long as it grows along the East coast. After I killed those impenetrable thickets of Asiatic invasive shrubs and vines which surrounded our property, I suddenly found myself with plenty of open planting space.

That’s when, a few years ago, I also planted a Yellowwood tree, (Cladastris kentukea). It is a rare, medium-sized tree in the legume family—spectacular when in bloom and golden yellow in fall. In the wild, it has a very disjointed distribution in southeastern states, yet a large specimen, obviously once part of a long-gone garden, has now become part of the woods bordering Route 4 on its highest point between Sharon and Cornwall.

Keep ReadingShow less