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Water brought settlers to Winsted

WINSTED — Water was what drew settlers to Winchester, according to Winchester Historical Society President Milly Hudak, who gave a talk about the town’s history at the Winsted Community Bookstore on Sunday, Nov. 5.

Hudak has worked for the Historical Society for 20 years and has been its president for 15.

The very first resident in town was Caleb Beach, who settled in Winchester Center in 1750.

“He came out and he thought he was building his house in Goshen,” Hudak said, when in fact, “he was building it in Winchester.”

“Winchester in the beginning was owned by Hartford,” Hudak said. “Hartford was selling off the north lands. Depending on how much taxes you paid in Hartford, that denoted how much property you could buy in Winsted.”

Eventually the area was divided into tiers and Hartford held a lottery to determine ownership of properties. Winchester is a borough that includes the city of Winsted. 

“The lottery was held until all of the properties were owned by men from Hartford,” Hudak said. “Not one of those men or their families ever came out here to live. They eventually just sold their properties off. There were Indians here, but they sent a little posse of three to four men to warn them not to lay claim to any of their properties.”

Hudak said that people eventually moved here because of the abundant water supply from Highland Lake, Crystal Lake and the Mad River.

“It was water power that everyone needed, or else there would not be any manufacturing,” Hudak said. “We had plenty of water sources and that is power. People came in and they thought it was the place to be. It’s good farm land, there was great timber to build houses and water power. There were gentlemen buying up the properties owned by the gentlemen in Hartford.”

Hudak said the next step was for “the gentlemen from Hartford” to get forges in order to “do something with the iron, which was needed in all of the factories.”

“You needed irons to build hoists and machines,” she said. “People don’t realize we had a lot of machines in our factories. We had so much industry here, including two silk mills. The machines that ran all of those factories were made right here in Winsted.”

Hudak said many of the factories shut down as times changed and the products made here became obsolete.

“Our biggest manufacturers were Gilbert Clock and Winsted Hosiery,” she said. “Gilbert closed in 1961 or 1962 because other companies were making digital clocks. The hosiery never updated their machines to take on nylon and Dacron.”

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