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About Ridgefield, Connecticut (CT)
06877

  The Ridgefield School - 1909   Neumann Real Estate          Keeler Tavern

Ridgefield is a town located in Fairfield County, Connecticut.  Situated in the foothills of the Berkshire Mountains, the 300-year-old community is spread across 34 square miles.  The town has a Metro-North railroad station called "Branchville" located in the southeast corner of the town.

Other locales within the town include Titicus, on Route 116 just north of the village; Ridgebury, in the northern section of town; Scotland, which is south of Ridgebury; Farmingville, northeast and east of the village; Limestone, northeast of the village; Flat Rock, south of the village; and Florida, just north of Branchville.

Real Estate Links:
Community Information:
In Ridgefield:

Ridgefield has nine public schools and two private schools. The six public elementary schools are Veterans Park, Branchville, Farmingville, Scotland, Barlow Mountain, and Ridgebury. Scotts Ridge (Ridgefield's newest school) and East Ridge are the town's two middle schools. The high school is Ridgefield High School.

Ridgefield's Roman Catholic school, Saint Mary, serves kindergarten through eighth grade. A private school, Ridgefield Academy, teaches preschool through eighth grade and is situated on a former turn-of-the-20th-Century estate on West Mountain. There are also various preschools and a Montessori school.

The Danbury Hospital serves the health needs of the town for emergency services, primary care services, and risk reduction and wellness. The Hospital is readily accessible from most parts of town through route 7 to Interstate 84. The Ridgefield Visiting Nurse Association at 80 East Ridge offers (fee based) home health care, community wellness, and public health and safety programs.

Located in the southwestern corner of Connecticut and measuring approximately 35 square miles, Ridgefield is home to an estimated 24,000 people.

Our town history is long.  It began on September 30, 1708 when Chief Catoonah, a Ramapoo Indian, deeded twenty thousand acres to thirty-two colonists in exchange for one hundred pounds of Connecticut currency.  Ridgefield was officially “created” by the General Assembly one year later.

 

Voted Connecticut’s #1 town year after year, Ridgefield boasts a low crime rate, award winning schools and an exceptionally high quality of life.  With a Main Street that emulates a quintessential New England town and still offers a plethora of hip shops and restaurants, it's no wonder Ridgefield receives accolades again and again.  Whether out strolling, shopping or playing, on any given day you will see our town’s residents out enjoying all the wonderful things that Ridgefield has to offer.

 

RECREATION

 

A family oriented town, Ridgefield offers its youth a variety of sports and recreation options from which to choose.  Its team sports include Little League for boys and girls ages five to twelve years old, Babe Ruth baseball for ages 13-18, Girls’ Softball, Pop Warner Football and Cheerleading, Soccer, Basketball, Lacrosse and Hockey.  Our team sports are a proud and integral part of our community.

 

Our many recreational opportunities include: 

And, for our canine friends:

  • Bark Park – Our friends can run free, off-the-leash!

Please also be sure to visit Ridgefield's all-volunteer run animal welfare organization, "ROAR," Ridgefield Operation for Animal Rescue. Providing shelter for dogs and cats with nowhere else to go, the shelter is open to the public and works hard to provide loving homes to our four-legged friends in need.

  • ROAR - Ridgefield Operation for Animal Rescue

 

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

 

Ridgefield residents enjoy a full cultural lifestyle.  The town’s arts and entertainment venues include:

SCHOOLS

 

Ridgefield has one of the top school systems in the state. With a graduation rate of 97.5% and a student to teacher classroom ratio of 15:1 (for the 2005-2006 school year), the district is one of the most desirable in which to live and is often a key reason for buyer interest in Ridgefield.

 

For more detailed information, please reference the Connecticut Department of Education or the Ridgefield Public Schools' website.

 

Public Elementary Schools:

 

Public Middle Schools:

Public High School:

Ridgefield’s Private and Parochial Schools:

Nursery and Pre-Schools:

Please contact us and we will be more than happy to provide you with additional information.

If you require a broader search either in or outside of Ridgefield proper, our community and school database has a tremendous amount of information organized by zip code.  The database can provide a wealth of information enabling you to compare the cost of living in two different cities (Metropolitan Statistical Areas), or to compare the statistics of towns and cities with a population over 10,000.

History:

Ridgefield was first settled by English colonists in 1708 when a group of settlers purchased land from Chief Catoonah of the Ramapoo tribe. The town was incorporated under Royal Charter in 1709. The most notable 18th Century event was the Battle of Ridgefield. During this Revolutionary War skirmish a small colonial militia force led by, among others, General David Wooster, who died in the engagement, and Benedict Arnold whose horse was shot from under him. They faced a larger British force that had landed at Norwalk and was returning from a raid on the colonial supply depot in Danbury.  Today, the dead from both sides are buried together in a small cemetery....."...foes in arms, brothers in death...". The Keeler Tavern, a local inn and museum, features a British cannonball still lodged in the side of the building. There are many other landmarks from the Revolutionary War in the town, with most along Main Street.

In the summer of 1781, the French army, under the Comte de Rochambeau marched through Connecticut, encamping in the Ridgebury section of town, where the first Catholic Mass in Ridgefield was offered.

For much of its three centuries, Ridgefield was a farming community. Among the important families in the 19th Century were the Rockwells and Lounsburys, which intermarried. They produced two Connecticut governors, George and Phineas Lounsbury. The Ridgefield Veterans Memorial Community Center, also called the Lounsbury House, on Main Street was built by Gov. Phineas Chapman Lounsbury around 1896 as his home.

In the late 1800s, spurred by the new railroad connection to its lofty village and the fact that nearby countryside reaches 1,000 feet above sea level, Ridgefield began to be discovered by wealthy New York City residents, who assembled large estates and built huge "summer cottages" throughout the higher sections of town. Among the more noteworthy estates were Col. Louis D. Conley's "Outpost Farm", which at one point totalled nearly 2,000 acres, some now Bennett's Pond State Park; Seth Low Pierrepont's "Twixthills", more than 600 acres, much now Pierrepont State Park; Frederic E. Lewis's "Upagenstit", 100 acres that became Grey Court College in the 1940s, but now mostly subdivision; and Col. Edward M. Knox's "Downesbury Manor", whose 300 acres included a 45-room mansion that Mark Twain often visited.

These and dozens of other estates became unaffordable and unwieldy during and after the Great Depression, and most were broken up. Many mansions were razed. In their place came subdivisions of one- and two-acre lots that turned the town into a suburban, bedroom community in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. However, strong planning and zoning has maintained much of the 19th and early 20th Century charm of the town, especially along its famous mile-long Main Street.

Right after World War II, Ridgefield was one of the locations considered for the United Nations secretariate building.

*Some content provided by Wikipedia.