
The name is older than the town. ‘Niantic’ comes from the Nehantic — the Western Nehantic people, an Algonquian shoreline tribe who summered along this bay for centuries — and means roughly ‘point of land on the water.’ English settlers spreading out from Lyme reached the shore in the mid-1600s and built farms and wharves; the little waterfront hamlet was once known simply as ‘The Bank.’ For a long time it was just one corner of Lyme, until the Town of East Lyme was carved out of Lyme and Waterford in 1839. Niantic has always been a village within that town — the beach side, the part everyone means when they say the name.
The bay is still the heart of it. Beyond the boardwalk, Niantic's white-sand beaches and nine beach communities swell the village to several times its winter size every July; the calm, shallow water and the easy shore make it a family town in season. Each September the village throws the Niantic Bay Oyster Festival on St. John's Green, a nod to the oyster beds that fed the place for generations. It is unhurried and unpretentious — a Connecticut beach town that has never tried to be anything fancier.
Why People Visit Niantic
Niantic offers straightforward coastal time for families. Visitors mix boardwalk walks with park picnics, beach days, and small museums, all on Long Island Sound. It is easygoing, scenic, and walkable, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. The vintage feel of a New England beach village is evergreen, and history and everyday shoreline life sit side by side here in a welcoming way.