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HomeLocal ResourcesHaddam Historical SocietyHaddam Historical Society Annual Meeting Features Author Erik Hesselberg May 18th

Haddam Historical Society Annual Meeting Features Author Erik Hesselberg May 18th

Submitted by Elizabeth Malloy, Executive Director, Haddam Historical Society

(April 26, 2023) — Haddam author and historian Erik Hesselberg will talk about his latest book, Night Boat to New York, “a portrait about vanished steamboat days” along the Connecticut River at the Haddam Historical Society’s Annual Meeting, to be held on May 18, 2023. The meeting will be held at Fire Station #1, 439 Saybrook Road in Higganum, with the business meeting at 6:30 p.m., followed by the program at 7:00 p.m. Free to HHS members; suggested $5 donation for non-members.

Night Boat to New York: Steamboats on the Connecticut, 1824-1931, is a portrait of the vanished steamboat days–when a procession of stately sidewheelers plied between Hartford and New York City, docking at Peck’s Slip on the East River in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge. At one time, Hartford could boast two thousand steamboat arrivals and departures in a year. Altogether, some thirty-five large steamboats were in service on the Connecticut River in these years, largely on the Hartford to New York City route.

These Long Island Sound steamers, unlike the tubby, wedding cake dowagers of Western waters, were long, sleek craft, with sharp prows cutting a neat wake as they cruised along. Departing each afternoon from State Street or Talcott Street wharf in Hartford, the “night boats” reached New York at daybreak, inaugurating a pattern of city commuting that continues to this day.

Steamboating not only brought people and goods—Colt’s firearms and Essex’s pianos—down river to New York for export to world markets, but also helped America’s inland “Spa Culture” transplant itself to the seashore, making steamboating not just convenient transportation, but also a social phenomenon noted by such writers as Charles Dickens and Mark Twain. No wonder crowds wept in the fall of 1931, when the last steamboats, made obsolete by the automobile, churned away from the dock and headed downriver—never to return.

Erik Hesselberg has been writing about the Connecticut River for twenty years, first as an environmental reporter for the Middletown Press, and then as executive editor of Shore Line Newspapers in Guilford, where he oversaw twenty weekly newspapers from Old Lyme to Stratford. He was president of the Middlesex County Historical Society and developed the award-winning exhibit “A Vanished Port” on the Connecticut River’s ties to the slave economy of the Caribbean islands. His writings have appeared in Wesleyan Magazine, the Hartford Courant, Estuary Magazine, and on his blog, Voicesontheriver.com. He lives in Haddam.

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