
The city began at the water. Long before the English arrived, the Paugussett people lived along the Pequonnock River where it empties into the Sound, fishing the tidal flats and the oyster beds. English settlers put down farms and wharves at the river mouth around 1639, and for two centuries the place grew slowly on fishing, coastal trade, and a deep natural harbor. The harbor was the making of it. Bridgeport took its name from the drawbridge over the Pequonnock, and in 1836 — by then a busy port — it was chartered as a city.
What the city built in those years reads like a roll call of American industry. Singer made sewing machines here; the Bridgeport milling machine became a fixture of machine shops everywhere; Warner, Crane, Underwood, and others ran great plants along the water. Two smaller firsts left an outsized mark — the Frisbie Pie Company, whose empty tins students learned to sail through the air, gave the world the flying disc, and in 1965 the very first Subway sandwich shop opened on a Bridgeport corner. A city of machinists and inventors, Bridgeport had a knack for sending its ideas out into the world.
Why People Visit Bridgeport
Bridgeport balances big-city history with shoreline ease. Visitors pair the Barnum story and the downtown blocks with park afternoons, a morning at the zoo, and a ferry ride across the Sound. It is varied, historic, and coastal, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public waterfront. History and everyday culture sit side by side here in a welcoming way.