
Our Old Saybrook retro logo uses Connecticut's clam shell motif, symbolizing shoreline abundance and resilience. The clam reflects maritime pride, while "1636" ties the design to Connecticut's colonial founding. Its black-and-white styling is retro, resembling oyster crate labels and coastal signage. The motif bridges Old Saybrook's dual identity: colonial heritage and suburban identity. On merchandise, it conveys authenticity and pride, retro vintage in tone. The clam shell emblem honors Old Saybrook's layered identity, making it a vintage symbol of Connecticut's shoreline pride. Retro in style, it reflects endurance, continuity, and authenticity across shoreline traditions.
At the mouth of the Connecticut River since 1635. The river that runs the length of New England — 410 miles from the Canadian border — ends here, at a quiet point of land where Long Island Sound finally takes it in. In the autumn of 1635, a 36-year-old English engineer named Lion Gardiner sailed up to that point with a commission from two English lords, William Fiennes (Lord Saye and Sele) and Robert Greville (Lord Brooke), to build a fortified settlement at the river's mouth. He built Saybrook Fort that winter — the town's name is a contraction of the two lords' titles — and the colony he founded became the first officially-chartered English settlement in Connecticut, predating Hartford by a year. Sixty-six years later, in 1701, ten Congregationalist ministers met at a Saybrook parsonage to charter a Collegiate School for the colony — the institution that would be renamed Yale College in 1718 and would hold its first commencements at Saybrook before moving to New Haven in 1716. David Bushnell was born in Saybrook in 1740 to a farming family. He entered Yale late, at thirty, graduated in July 1775 just as the Revolutionary War began, and went straight home to his brother Ezra's Saybrook farm to build a boat. By that fall he had finished the Turtle — a seven-foot oak-hulled, hand-cranked, screw-propelled, one-man submersible designed to attach a gunpowder mine to the keel of a British warship. He tested it that summer in the Connecticut River off what is now Ayer's Point. It was the world's first combat submarine. George Washington called Bushnell's work "an effort of genius." Lynde Point Lighthouse went up at the river's mouth in 1803 — the oldest in Connecticut, still standing on the same outcrop today. The Saybrook Breakwater Light followed in 1886, marking the navigable channel from offshore. The Fenwick borough — named for George Fenwick, Lion Gardiner's Saybrook Colony co-founder — became a quiet shoreline retreat in the late nineteenth century, the kind of small community where a single family could live in the same house for ninety years. The colony, the college, the submarine, the two lighthouses, the borough. One point of land. One mouth of one river. Almost four hundred years.
Why People Visit Old Saybrook Connecticut
- Relax at Harveys Beach, shallow waters and soft sand for easy family time on Long Island Sound.
- Walk Fort Saybrook Monument Park, interpretive signs marking the 1635 fort site near the marsh and the river mouth.
- Tour the General William Hart House (1767), a Federal-era home with period rooms and gardens reflecting eighteenth-century town life.
- Stroll Saybrook Point, boardwalks and marinas with views to Lynde Point Lighthouse (1803) at the river mouth.
- Visit the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center on Main Street, an intimate restored theater hosting year-round performances.
- Drive across the causeway to Fenwick borough, a quiet shoreline community of shingled houses on the peninsula between South Cove and the Sound.