
The twentieth century brought the shoreline a new role. As railroads and then highways tied the coast to the cities, Clinton — like its neighbors — grew into a shoreline suburban community, a place to live and summer as much as to work the water. Schools, neighborhoods, and beach colonies filled in through the 1950s and '60s, yet the town kept its harbor, its beaches, and its maritime traditions intact. The oyster boats never entirely went away, and the Sound remained, as ever, the center of local life.
The town took its modern name in the nineteenth century. Incorporated and renamed Clinton in 1838 in honor of DeWitt Clinton — the New York governor whose Erie Canal had just remade American commerce — it carried its shipbuilding, fishing, and oystering trades through the 1800s, when the Connecticut shoreline was dotted with busy little maritime villages much like it. The town was hardly alone in the choice; the canal-builder's name was attached to towns across the young country in those years. Main Street filled in with shops, churches, and the comfortable houses of sea captains and tradesmen, and the rhythm of the harbor set the pace of the whole community, season after season.
Why People Visit Clinton
Clinton offers the Connecticut shoreline at its most relaxed — a real harbor town with beaches, marinas, and a colonial Main Street, plus the surprising distinction of being where Yale began. Visitors come for the water, the history, and the easy shoreline pace, and stay for the beaches, the harbor, and the small-town New England feel. From the Town Dock to the Town Green, it rewards an unhurried afternoon. It is briny, historic, and genuinely Connecticut.