
What's with Roton Point? On the point just west of the village, where the land runs out into Long Island Sound, there once stood one of the great shore resorts of the region. From the 1880s into the years around the Second World War, Roton Point drew summer crowds by steamboat and trolley to a beach, a carousel, a roller coaster, and a grand dance pavilion — a Coney Island of the Connecticut shore. Most of it is gone now, the grounds long since a private association, but in its day Roton Point is how the whole country first learned to spend a summer Sunday in Rowayton.
Rowayton has always governed itself a little differently. Though it sits inside the City of Norwalk, the village is its own Sixth Taxing District, running some of its own local services — its beach, its parks, its small-town affairs — with a town-meeting independence that long outlasted the farms. The steamboat-and-trolley era turned it into a summer place; the twentieth century turned it into a commuter village, with trains to New York and new neighborhoods on the old farm lots. Through all of it, the working waterfront and the village scale held, and Rowayton never quite stopped feeling like a town apart.
Why People Visit Rowayton
Rowayton offers the Connecticut shore at its most relaxed and characterful — sailing, art, and quiet beaches in a village that has kept its scale and its salt-water soul. Visitors come for the harbor and the shore parks and stay for the unhurried, distinctly New England feel. From the oyster sloops that once worked the Five Mile River to the regatta sails of today, the harbor still sets the village's rhythm. It is welcoming, walkable, and beautiful in every season on the Sound.