
What's with Savin Rock? For nearly a century it was the brightest place on Long Island Sound. Savin Rock was West Haven's seaside amusement park — ‘Connecticut's Coney Island,’ the ‘playground of New England’ — a waterfront packed with wooden roller coasters, a carousel, a midway, and a long lighted pier reaching out over the water. In its early-1900s heyday they called it the ‘White City’ for the thousands of electric bulbs that turned night into day, and at its peak more than a million people a year came to ride, to stroll the boardwalk, and to eat fried clams by the Sound. The rides are gone now — the park closed in 1966 — but the boardwalk still runs, and the name still carries the whole summer with it.
The Savin Rock story proper begins with the railroad and the trolley. A shore hotel opened at the rocky point as early as 1838, but it was George Kelsey, a Civil War veteran and trolley magnate, who made it a resort — extending the trolley lines and building a 1,500-foot pier out over the Sound in 1870. The crowds followed. By the turn of the century the point had filled with coasters, dance halls, shooting galleries, and shore-dinner houses, and the electric-lit ‘White City’ — inspired by Chicago's 1893 World's Fair — drew visitors from all over New York and New England. The shore dinner became its own institution; Jimmies of Savin Rock has been frying clams here since 1925.
Why People Visit West Haven
West Haven appeals with simple shoreline beauty and strong local pride. Visitors pair long beach and boardwalk walks with small museums, the historic Green, and the nostalgia of Savin Rock. It is relaxed, local, and close to the water, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. The vintage-summer feeling of the old amusement park is evergreen, and history and everyday shoreline life sit side by side in a welcoming way.