
Our Clinton logo carries Connecticut's oyster, above "Est. 1636," the founding era of the Connecticut Colony — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Connecticut shoreline place. Printed in a worn black-and-white that recalls an old oyster-crate label, the oyster is the shoreline in shorthand: briny, durable, and tied to the working water. The oyster is the through-line that links Clinton to every other Connecticut town we make. What makes this one Clinton is everything around it — the harbor, the Indian River, and the birthplace of Yale.
Clinton's story starts on the water. Indigenous people lived and fished along this stretch of the Connecticut shoreline for generations, drawing on the abundance of Long Island Sound and the rivers that empty into it. When English colonists arrived in the seventeenth century, they settled the same sheltered harbor for the same reason — the fish, the oysters, and the safe anchorage. Founded in 1663 as part of the Saybrook Colony, the settlement grew up around its harbor, its identity tied from the very beginning to the working water at its doorstep.
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.