
Our Niantic logo carries Connecticut's oyster above ‘Connecticut — Est. 1636,’ the shared retro emblem of our Connecticut towns. The oyster is the state shellfish, a fitting nod to the beds that the Nehantic and the early settlers worked in this bay, and 1636 marks the founding of the Connecticut Colony; the emblem is the through-line that links Niantic to every other Connecticut town we make. It could hardly fit a place better — an oystering shore village — rendered in the black-and-white of an old crate label. What makes this one Niantic is the bay behind it: the boardwalk, the beaches, and the train.
Before it was a resort it was a working waterfront. Through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Niantic lived on oystering, fishing, and shipbuilding; at the head of the Niantic River a place called the Golden Spur — once ‘Head of the River’ — had a busy shipyard turning out coastal vessels. The bay gave up oysters and the Sound gave up fish, and the village kept the unfussy, salt-stained rhythm of a place that made its living off the water. That maritime working life is the bedrock under all the summer leisure that came later.
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.