
Guilford grew as an agricultural hub, producing crops, timber, and livestock. Shipbuilding and quarrying expanded its economy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries — by the 1880s the Stony Creek granite quarries along the Guilford-Branford line were shipping pink-grey stone to major construction projects across the country, including the 1886 pedestal of the Statue of Liberty and the base of Grant's Tomb in New York. Faulkner's Light went up on the island three miles offshore in 1802. By the twentieth century, suburban growth reshaped Guilford, with neighborhoods and schools expanding in the 1950s and 1960s. The town maintained its historic character, preserving colonial homes and the town green. Its timeline reflects Connecticut's dual story: colonial heritage adapting to suburban growth. Guilford's mid-century decades highlighted pride in tradition while embracing suburban expansion, making it a community that balanced continuity and adaptation while maintaining resilience across centuries.
Guilford's lore includes myths of pirate treasure hidden offshore, Revolutionary War skirmishes, and stories of storms testing resilience. Families recall parades, clambakes, and fairs on the green in the 1950s, the Guilford Fair every late September since 1859, and the long-running family orchards on the inland slopes — Bishop's Orchards just north of the green has run continuously since 1871, five generations and counting, and the peach and apple seasons mark the late-summer rhythm of the town. Residents remembered the quarrying era when Guilford-shipped granite was rising in New York Harbor, and the suburban celebrations of the mid-twentieth century. Myths and memories together highlight Guilford's layered identity: colonial farming hub, maritime community, granite-shipping inland town, and modern shoreline village.
Why People Visit Guilford Connecticut
- Tour the Henry Whitfield House, the 1639 stone house Reverend Henry Whitfield built the year he founded the town — the oldest stone house in New England, the oldest house in Connecticut, and the first house museum in Connecticut, opened in 1899; operated today as the Henry Whitfield State Museum.
- Walk the Guilford Town Green, the twelve-acre village green laid out by the Twenty-Five Planters in 1639 and still surrounded by the white-clapboard houses of their descendants, with the 1830 Greek Revival First Congregational Church along one edge.
- Tour the Hyland House on Boston Street, the c.1660 First-Period saltbox preserved by the Guilford Keeping Society — one of the finest surviving 17th-century New England houses on its original site.
- Tour the Thomas Griswold House, the 1774 saltbox on the road to Madison, with period furnishings and a working blacksmith shop on the grounds.
- Walk past the Medad Stone Tavern (1803), the Federal-era tavern just north of the green that has been maintained as a museum since the 1960s.
- Look offshore for Faulkner's Light, the 1802 stone tower on Faulkner's Island three miles out in the Sound — the second-oldest active lighthouse in Connecticut, with seasonal Saturday boat tours run by the Faulkner's Light Brigade volunteer group.
- Walk the Westwoods Trails, the forty-mile network of forest trails through ledges, kettle holes, glacial erratics, and beaver wetlands inland from the Sound — the largest preserved hiking area on the central Connecticut shoreline.
- Relax at Jacobs Beach, the small Sound-front town beach with a sandy crescent, picnic groves, and views east to the Madison shoreline.
- Visit Lake Quonnipaug for the inland lake views, the picnic area, and the seasonal swimming and fishing.
- Drive to the Stony Creek quarry overlooks at the Guilford-Branford line — the source of the pink-grey granite that built the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty in 1886 and the base of Grant's Tomb.
- Visit Bishop's Orchards just north of the green for pick-your-own peaches in July and August and apples September through October — a continuous family-run orchard since 1871, five generations operating on the same land.
- Time a visit for the Guilford Fair, the September agricultural fair held on the fairgrounds every year since 1859 — one of the oldest continuous fairs in Connecticut.
- Stop at the Guilford Free Library on Park Street for the local-history room and the genealogy collection, the best public starting point for Guilford colonial research.