click-to-call from the web

Call   Toll   Free           (855) GET-JUDY

  

  Mobile /  SMS        

(203)  257 - 5892 

 

Search This Site

Real Estate Agents Directory - Find Homes for Sale 

RealEstateBe st.com 

 Add to Technorati Favorites

Top Real Estate blogs

Find the best blogs at Blogs.com.

The CT Realty Blog - Blogged Real Estate Blogs ReadABlog.com Blog Search Engine   Blog Directory & Search engine    Real Estate Blog DirectoryBusiness Directory for Fairfield, Connecticut Blog Directory Blogs lists and reviews

 

 

 

 

 

Wilton, Connecticut  Quick Facts: Land area is approximately 27.4 Square miles and the elevation is 250 feet. Incorporated in 1802, Wilton  currently  has about  18,079 residents in  6,155 households, 82% of which are owner occupied.  Approximately  19.5%  of the housing stock was built prior to 1950. The 2012-2013 Tax Rate is 21.05 mills.  The 2011-2012 property tax rate was 20.85

 Check out our 12 page detailed demographic report HERE. 


Wilton is another of the most affluent towns in Fairfield County, as well as in  the country, and is located in southwestern Connecticut-  bordered by Westport, Weston, New Canaan, Norwalk, and Lewisboro, New York.
In 2007,  Wilton was voted as one of CNN Money's "Best Places to Live" in the United States.

There is nearly  1,000 acres of open space dedicated for active and passive recreational use. Wilton affords its residents the utmost in  privacy as well as a pastoral setting, and with  limited land available for development, Wilton retains much of its open feeling and rural atmosphere. The especially scenic  Norwalk River winds through the valleys of Wilton, and much of  the town's charm lies within its winding back roads with woods,  trees, streams and ponds.

Take a Virtual Tour of Wilton Below


The first written records of the areas that are now known as Wilton date back to 1640, when Roger Ludlow (also see Fairfield)  and others purchased land  known then  as Norwalk from the Indians between the Norwalk and Saugatuck Rivers.


The " Proprietors" were the first settlers to arrive in Norwalk in 1651, and they owned approximately 50,000 acres in common. On the outskirts of Norwalk, the Proprietors held private ownership of land in a common planting field, but cattle, sheep, and hogs were grazed  elsewhere in a communal pasture area. The outer limit of this pasture is approximately Wilton's current southern boundary.


In the late 16th century, the Norwalk Proprietors began to sell off the northern lands for settlement. The first non-Indian settlements in Wilton were in the  Norwalk River valley, and on the ridges of Belden Hill, Chestnut Hill, and Ridgefield Road in land now known as Wilton.  In order to make the land suitable for farming,  the settlers cleared forests and removed hundreds of glacial rocks, which in turn, became the stone boundary walls that we treasure today.


By 1725 there were forty families living in Wilton who wanted their own meetinghouse. They began their own Congregational church and were allowed by Norwalk to hire a minister (Robert Sturgeon, who also became the town's first schoolmaster), open schools and build roads. In 1726, with the approval of both the Proprietors and the Wilton settlers, a petition to the General Court in Hartford created Wilton Parish, "a village enjoying parish privileges" but still part of the town of Norwalk. A copy of the petition is framed and can be seen in the Town Hall.


During the Revolutionary War, in 1777 the British used Wilton as an escape route after their successful raid on Danbury. Several homes were burned, but the town remained intact.

In 1802, the people of Wilton  were granted separate Town government status by an act of the Connecticut General Assembly. Industries such as shoemaking, shirt making, carriage building, and distilleries were plentiful , with various types of mills built along the streams, including the Gilbert and Bennett Manufacturing Co.


Parks and Recreation:
Comstock Community Center
Weir Farm National  Park  and 110 acre Preserve
Merwin Meadows Oark- Site of the Annual Pumpkin Festival
Schenck's Island Park  --(which is not really an island)-- is a 17 acre parcel in Wilton Center situated east of the Norwalk River and west of the railroad tracks.


Steeped with history, there are six designated Historical districts in town, and a plethora of historic sites to visit as well as both the Cannondale and Wilton Center Historic districts, both established in 1992.


The town has two railroad stations: Wilton and Cannondale (a sub-station where tickets are not sold), and both are part of the Danbury Line of Metro-North Railroad.


Famous residents include  Christopher Walken, Dave Brubeck, jazz musician, Chris Elliott, actor/comedian, Charles Grodin, actor,    =Chance Browne, cartoonist of syndicated comic strip Hi and Lois, and Ace Frehley, KISS rock guitarist, lived in Wilton in the early 1980s
   
TRIVIA:  

Bithplace of  Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy Dolls, created by Famous resident  Johnny Gruelle.

The  Weir Farm National Historic Site is Connecticut’s first and only National Park, and the only national park service site that preserves and interprets the life and work of an American painter.

During the years prior to the Civil War,  Wilton served as one of the stops on the Underground Railroad.

June Havoc, actress, who also renovated buildings to create the Cannon Crossing center of small shops. Her sister Gypsy Rose Lee frequently visited her.

Kristine Lilly, member of the US Olympic Soccer Team, holds the world record for most professional soccer match appearances in history.

Main   The CT Home Blog   Property Search   E-mail Judy