Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

Tri-Corner Real Estate - December 2025

Latest News

Turning Back the Pages - June 4, 2026

Turning Back the Pages - June 4, 2026

125 years ago — June 1901

A heavy storm that was a near approach to a cloudburst caused much damage at Norfolk Saturday night. The track of the C.N.E. railroad for a distance of a mile each side of the station was undermined in scores of places by the rush of swollen streams and two bad washouts occurred, delaying trains for hours. Two highway bridges were swept away, and roads were badly damaged, while even farms suffered serious injury, some entire gardens being ruined.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mudge Pond beach stickers available ahead of season opening
Alec Linden

SHARON – Access stickers for the Town Beach at Mudge Pond are now available at Sharon Town Hall, several weeks ahead of the planned June 19 season opening. The beach will officially open for the summer after Region One schools let out.

Mudge Pond, a seasonal destination for residents and visitors alike, offers docks, rafts and swimming lanes, along with a changing pavilion, picnic tables, grills, a playground and a sand beach.

Keep ReadingShow less
Historian brings Revolutionary War-era Canaan to life

Dressed as a colonial officer, local historian Tim Abbott discusses local Falls Village residents who served in the Revolutionary War during the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society's annual dinner meeting May 27.

Ruth Epstein

FALLS VILLAGE – As the nation prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary, local historian and war reenactor Tim Abbott used stories of soldiers, prisoners of war and ordinary residents to show how deeply the Revolutionary War touched the people of Canaan during the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society’s annual dinner meeting Wednesday, May 27.

Dressed as a colonial officer from Canaan, Abbott told attendees that 225 men associated with Canaan – which included present-day North Canaan and Falls Village before the towns split in 1858 – fought for independence from Great Britain, a figure he said represented roughly 25% of the town’s population at the time.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Tong, Horn rally Democratic supporters in Kent
“We have been in darkness before, and we’ll get beyond this period.”
Attorney General William Tong

KENT – Connecticut Attorney General William Tong, the latest Democratic politician to campaign in the Northwest Corner in recent weeks, joined State Rep. Maria Horn of the 64th District at a Democratic Town Committee fundraiser in Kent, where the leaders criticized actions by the Trump administration while urging supporters to remain focused on the future.

Speaking at 109 Cheese & Wine, Tong, who is running for his third term as attorney general, emphasized the role states can play in pushing back against federal actions they believe exceed constitutional limits.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kent approves $16.9M budget, increases mill rate by 2.78%
Kent Town Hall
Leila Hawken

KENT – More than 40 Kent residents turned out for the annual town budget meeting Friday, May 29, approving the 2026-27 spending plan by a vote of 34-11.

The approved budget will set the mill rate at 17.34, an increase of 2.78% from the current rate of 16.87. For a home assessed at $350,000, the increase is expected to raise annual property taxes by about $200.

Keep ReadingShow less
Water main break shuts down Off the Trail Café for days, discolors local water

Off the Trail Cafe reopened Friday, May 29, after an unexpected closure due to a water main break in Falls Village.

Aly Morrissey

FALLS VILLAGE – A broken water main caused Off the Trail Café to close early Tuesday, May 26, and remain shuttered through Friday morning, while some residents reported discolored water at their homes and were advised to boil it as a precaution.

According to a notice issued by Aquarion Water Company on Tuesday, residents and businesses between 33 and 84 Railroad St., 100 and 107 Main St,, and 35 Water St. and 12 Warren Turnpike, were advised to boil potentially contaminated water before drinking while repairs were underway.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.