
East Lyme is really two villages under one town hall. On the Sound sits Niantic, the coastal village named for the Nehantic — the Niantic people — who fished these waters and gathered along the shore for centuries before the English arrived. Inland sits Flanders, a farm district that took its name from the Belgian-style cottage textiles once spun along the old Post Road. The two have always pulled in different directions — one toward the water, one toward the land — and East Lyme is the town that holds them together.
The shoreline changed in 1851, when the railroad reached the coast and turned the old fishing landing into something new: a summer place. Families from New York and Hartford came down for the season, building beach cottages at Crescent Beach, Black Point, and Giants Neck, and Niantic settled into the double life it still leads — a quiet town of about eighteen thousand most of the year that nearly doubles when the porches open in June and the bay fills with sailboats and sportfishing skiffs. The named beach colonies — Crescent Beach, Black Point, Giants Neck, Attawan, Saunder's Point — still keep that cottage-summer rhythm today, porches opening to the Sound.
Why People Visit East Lyme
East Lyme rewards visitors who want the Connecticut shoreline at its most easygoing — a sandy state-park beach, a waterfront boardwalk, and a village built on the bay. People come for Rocky Neck and the Niantic Bay Boardwalk, for the colonial Thomas Lee House, and for a simple, scenic shoreline day where beach-cottage summers and quiet New England history sit a short walk apart.