
The village that the shipwrights and fishing families built is remarkably intact. The Noank Historic District — listed on the National Register in 1979 — preserves a dense run of mid-to-late nineteenth-century cottages in Greek Revival, Gothic, and Stick-Eastlake styles, lining the winding lanes of the point with picturesque woodwork and iron fences. The Noank Baptist Church of 1867 still crowns the high ground, though its twin towers were lost in the great hurricane of 1938. And every year since 1876 the village has held one of the longest continuously running Memorial Day parades in the country.
The peninsula passed into colonial hands in 1712, acquired by James Morgan through a land lottery; the earliest surviving house, the Yeomans place on Palmer Cove, dates to about 1713. Growth was slow — there were still only a handful of houses by the 1820s — because the point was nearly an island, cut off to the northwest and open to the water everywhere else. It kept the isolated, end-of-the-road feeling that the village has never quite lost.
Why People Visit Noank
Noank rewards visitors who like their shoreline quiet and real — a working harbor instead of a boardwalk, a dense historic village instead of a strip. People come for the boatyards and the lobster shacks at the water's edge, for the walk through the cottage-lined historic district, and for the view out to the Sound from the end of the point. It is peaceful, photogenic, and unmistakably a Connecticut fishing village.