Natural Setting
and Town Origins
Ridgefield has a commanding position in southwestern
Connecticut. From its ridges and hills along the Connecticut-New
York border, the Town's terrain descends westerly toward
the Hudson Valley, northerly toward the lowland basin
of Danbury and the Still River Valley, and easterly
and southerly over lower ridges toward Long Island Sound.
"Caudatowa", the Algonquian Indian name for
Ridgefield, means "high ground". This pattern
gives Ridgefield significant
water supply resources.
About
a decade and a half after the frontier settlement at
Danbury, ten petitioners asked the General Court of
the Connecticut Colony to authorize a settlement of
land lying at the northerly bounds of the Norwalk grants.
In 1708, the General Assembly approved a purchase to
be made from the native inhabitants of approximately
20,000 acres, for one hundred pounds sterling.
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A deed
was formally concluded in September of that year with nine
sachems of the local Ramapo and Titicus Indian villages, although
seven additional purchases were required from local Indians
over the following 31 years to complete the Town's area.
Until 1731, Ridgefield's area extended about 1 miles further
westward into territory now part of Lewisboro and North Salem,
N.Y. The uncertain boundary between the two colonies was resolved
that year, however, in an accord which established the present
New York-Connecticut border. Ridgefield's loss of territory
was partially redressed at the time by action of the General
Assembly in granting to Ridgefield an area of hitherto unclaimed
territory in the Ridgebury section.
The 22,439 acres of land which now comprise Ridgefield form
a diverse terrain of high ridges, small stream valleys, mountains,
lakes and broad wetlands. An elongated belt of gentle ridges
averaging 700 to 800 feet above sea level extends through
the middle of the Town, from south to north, including East
Ridge and the ridge on which the town center is situated.
West of the central village rises the rugged terrain of West
Mountain and Scott's Ridge, with many peaks at 900 to 950
feet above sea level.
East of the center, from Branchville north, lies a rough and
ledgy hill country which includes Nod Hill, Florida Hill,
Cedar Mountain and Cain's Hill. In the northwest, north of
the Titicus Valley, is the gently rolling upland of Ridgebury
and in the northeast is the true mountainous terrain which
includes Barlow, Ridgebury, Ned and Pine Mountains. A number
of peaks between 900 and 1,000 feet in elevation occur throughout
the latter area which is heavily forested with many sharp
slopes and ledges.
Lowlands, shaped by the great continental glacier as it melted
10,000 to 16,000 years ago, contain many small lakes and wetlands
(see
glacial deposits map). (See also early
research on glaciers and drainage development in Greater Danbury).
The largest body of water, nearly a mile in length, is Mamanasco
Lake which lies between Scott's Ridge and Ridgebury Mountain.
Three other sizeable lakes, Naraneka, Wataba, and Fox Hill
Lakes lie in close proximity to each other in north central
Ridgefield and there are about two dozen smaller lakes and
large ponds throughout the Town.
Large wetlands and extensive swamps occur in many sections,
notably the Great Swamp just east of the village, Pumping
Station Swamp along the Ridgefield-Lewisboro (N.Y.) border,
and extensive wetlands along Silver Spring Brook, the Titicus
River and Bennett Ponds Brook.
Upper reaches of the southward flowing Norwalk River lie in
a winding, steep-sided valley along the east side of the Town,
draining with various tributary brooks much of central and
eastern Ridgefield. Southern and southwestern upland areas
contain the headwaters of the Silvermine and Rippowam Rivers,
both water supply streams which drain southerly to Long Island
Sound.
Northwest Ridgefield is the headwaters area of the westward
flowing Titicus River, a tributary of the Croton River and
water supply reservoirs in New York State. The mountainous
northeastern area drains southerly to the Saugatuck River,
another water supply stream, and also northerly to the Still
River Basin, a major tributary of the Housatonic.

TOPOGRAPHIC
OVERVIEW OF RIDGEFIELD, CT
The highest elevation in Ridgefield is about
980 feet in the west central part of
the Town. Then
the low point of just under 340 feet is found along the Norwalk
River in the southeastern corner of the Town. See the full
context for
Ridgefield's terrain on the regional
topographic map.
The mountains, lakes, ledges, streams and ridges of Ridgefield
blend into an attractive landscape which has made the Town
a choice residential area for much of its history.
 
Ridgefield Development:
Beginning to 1950
Settlers flocked to the area almost immediately
after the first lots were assigned by lottery in Norwalk in
November 1708. By 1710, a trading post had been established
and a few years later a meeting house and a number of permanent
dwellings had been erected in the little village. Within a
decade additional land divisions outside the village had been
made, a mill had been erected at the outlet of Lake Mamanasco
and a committee was at work laying out roads in several directions
from the central village.
By 1723,
more than twenty five town highways had been laid out, including
a road south to Norwalk via Bald Hill and a road west to Bedford
via West Mountain. Some of these roads followed established
Indian trails and others crossed virgin land, but all were
primitive cart paths or horse trails for many years after.
The land filled up quickly, for families were large and each
household depended on a farm for its basic sustenance. By
the 1750's all of the common land had been divided and farms
were well established in every section with fields cleared
of stumps and stones. Substantial dwelling houses had been
built both in the village and in outlying sections.
The Ridgefield
Historical Society is the guardian of the Town's
early resources. Also of interest is the Keeler
Tavern Museum. See How
Mapmakers Viewed Ridgefield by Jack Sanders.
Saw mills and grist mills operated by water power were established
on many of the more reliable streams within the first half
of the century of settlement, and there were also a tread
mill operated by oxen and a wind mill. One of the main stagecoach
roads from Boston to New York in the latter eighteenth century
followed a course west from Danbury to Ridgebury,
then south through the village of Ridgefield and westward
via West Lane to Westchester County. Despite gradual improvements
to roads, overland travel remained difficult and the community
remained rural and self-sufficient throughout the century.
Population continued to increase, nonetheless, as the last
vestiges of the original forest were cut down and virtually
all of the land, steep mountain and deep swamp areas being
the two principal exceptions, was cleared for farmland. The
colonial census showed 1,708 inhabitants in 1774, and the
first federal census reported a further increase to 1,947
persons in 1790. Ridgefield saw considerable
action during the Revolutionary War.
The Town's fortunes revived with the growing economy of the
new nation in the 1790's and early 1800's. By 1808, almost
92% of the Town's area was in agricultural production; 20,590
acres, of which more than half, 11,575 acres, was good "plough
land" or upland mowing and pasture.
The Town's growing prosperity was a direct result of improvements
in roads leading to such tidewater ports as Westport and Norwalk
during the 1790's and early 1800's. During this period a large
number of turnpike companies were being chartered by the General
Assembly and several of these companies built turnpike roads
through Ridgefield and vicinity.
The turnpikes were very superior to the old cart paths, generally
having straighter alignments, lesser grades, bridges instead
of fords, and graveled surfaces. At least four stagecoach
lines were in operation over these roads in the early nineteenth
century, with scheduled stops in Ridgefield: the New York
to Boston, the Danbury to New York, the Ridgebury to Norwalk,
and the Ridgefield to Stamford lines.
By the mid-nineteenth century, the Town had reached its peak
of agricultural and industrial prosperity. The Census of 1840
counted 2,474 inhabitants. Virtually all arable land was in
agricultural use and an extensive network of roads reached
every section of the community.
Many scions of the early families had become quite affluent
and very substantial homes had replaced the simple colonial
houses in the village and outlying areas. Small hamlets had
also developed around mills and neighborhood churches at Titicus
and Ridgebury. The town had 5 or 6 post offices in various
localities and 14 neighborhood one-room schools. The landscape
was by now refined with clear meadows, drained swamps, miles
of stone walls, and well-graded town roads.
But this was also the period of the nations's rapid westward
expansion and the burgeoning growth of cities and towns located
along ports and rail lines. Ridgefield began a gradual population
decline over several decades as youth found opportunities
elsewhere and the Civil War stimulated industrial growth in
larger towns. A 22% population decline since 1840 was documented
by the 1870 Census.
Even as the number of its inhabitants declined, however, the
scenic countryside and healthful atmosphere of Ridgefield
was being discovered by city dwellers from New York and other
centers. In 1852, the railroad
line from Norwalk to Danbury was completed along
Ridgefield's eastern border, and from 1853 onward vacationing
artists began to graphically portray the Town's bucolic charm.
Summer residents started arriving in the 1850's, often times
purchasing and remodeling old farmhouses or boarding with
local families as "guests".
A stagecoach line from Ridgefield to Branchville operated
from 1852 to 1870 to serve visitors and summer residents and
in July of 1870, the Ridgefield
Branch Railroad was completed to the village
from Branchville.
The arrival of the railroad was instrumental over the next
several decades in transforming the community into a summer
and weekend resort for wealthy and socially prominent families
from New York who erected elaborate "cottages" and
estates on some of the town's choicest acreage. Palatial homes
were built late in the century on High Ridge, Ivy Hill, Peaceable
Street, West Lane and in outlying locations through the first
decades of the twentieth century.
A water supply for the village was created in 1900 by pipe
from springs on West Mountain, but shortly proved inadequate.
In 1902, the water company was acquired by a new owner and
Round Pond was added to the supply. Sanitation in the village
was also a concern; in 1901, following a petition from twelve
summer residents, work began on a central sewer system which
was completed in 1902. At this period another private company
introduced gas lighting to the center, along Bailey Avenue,
Main Street and West Lane.
The Town's first major speculative real estate venture was
launched early in the twentieth century. Shortly after 1900,
an affluent local entrepreneur assembled about 1,750 acres
of land on West Mountain along the New York State line, one-third
of which lay in Ridgefield. Plans were made to develop the
tract into a millionaire's resort similar to New York's Tuxedo
Park.
Ten miles of private roads and an opulent inn, "The Port
of Missing Men", were completed by 1907. During its first
several years, the inn which commanded spectacular views from
its site on Titicus Mountain, recorded over 20,000 visitors
from every state and several foreign countries. Near the entrance
to this private part a private preparatory school, the Ridgefield
School for Boys, was constructed about 1915 on a tract of
115 acres.
Ridgefield's growing affluence was mirrored in a gradually
increasing population as employment in services and trades
expanded. From a low point of 1,919 townspeople in 1870, early
in the resort era, population grew steadily over the next
four decades, reaching 3,118 persons in 1910. In addition
to the new mansions at various locations throughout the community,
more modest homes and business establishments were built around
the village and in Branchville.
The general prosperity of this era somewhat obscured the decline
of the "old Ridgefield" of 1850. In the later half
of the century many of the early trades and industries disappeared
and much farmland was abandoned or absorbed into the new estates.
Many sections became wooded and quite a few of the older farm
buildings disintegrated or were taken down.
Farms remained in every section by the early twentieth century,
dispersed among the large estates and country homes, but forest
was becoming the dominant feature of the rural landscape.
One key area preserved is the 57 acre Weir
Farm on the Ridgefield-Wilton line, celebrating
American art and the only national park in Connecticut.
The decade from 1910 to 1920 signaled the end of the large
estate era. Enactment of the federal income tax began an erosion
of many of the great fortunes which underlay the wealthy landed
domains of Ridgefield. A severe labor shortage during the
World War I years caused wages and estate maintenance costs
to soar, and many younger inhabitants drifted away to good
jobs in the industries prospering from war material orders.
With agriculture and local enterprise at a standstill, the
town's population declined over the decade from 3,118 to 2,707
persons. The Acorn Press offers an early twentieth century
post
card collection from this era.
By 1918, however, the State of Connecticut undertook a major
program of construction of improved roads, financed in part
by matching funds from the Federal Aid Road Act of 1916. A
network of hard-surfaced two-lane highways was planned, designed
to reach every town in the state and provide access from farms
to markets.
Work began almost immediately on two routes in the Ridgefield
area designated Route 3 (now Rt. 35) and Route 7 (a US Highway).
As the twenties began, Ridgefield, now listed in guidebooks
as "The Gateway to New England", was linked to Danbury,
Norwalk and the New York metropolitan area by well constructed
paved roads.
As the decade of the twenties progressed, three more State
and "State -aid" roads were built in town, Route
143 (now Rte.116 to North Salem), 304 (now Rte 33 to Wilton),
and 329 (now Rte 102 to Branchville), and the Town began a
program of paving local roads. By decade's end virtually every
household in Ridgefield owned an automobile.
One of the casualties of the extensive automobile ownership
of the twenties was rail service on the Ridgefield Branch;
the train made its last run in August 1925 and the tracks
were taken up some years later. Electric service and telephone
lines also reached every part of the community during this
period.
With greatly increased accessibility and the general prosperity
of the 1920's, new permanent residents were quickly attracted
to Ridgefield's beautiful countryside. Many of the newcomers
were artists, executives and professional people from New
York who could manage an occasional long trip to the city
by shoreline train, or retired couples.
The Town's
population rebounded during the decade, registering a 32%
gain to 3,580 persons in 1930. A table of census
population by decade for Ridgefield in this period
is available. Many of the new homes built during this decade,
generally dispersed throughout the community, rivaled the
elegance if not the scale of those constructed in earlier
periods.
Again the Town faced the problem of a growing population.
In 1925-26 a new high school was constructed on the Town's
East Ridge property and the nearby elementary school, now
serving the entire Town after retirement of the 14 "district
schools", was remodeled and enlarged. Growth of another
sort was also beginning along Route 7, now named Ethan Allen
Highway, as gasoline stations, antique shops and other individual
business enterprises sprang up to capitalize on the stream
of New England bound and through traffic.
What
did Ridgefield's neighborhoods look like in 1934? Check them
out on this highly
detailed aerial photograph. You will see a lot
of farm land, for according to the U. Conn Dept. of Agriculture
in 1935 there were 172 agricultural businesses in Ridgefield
occupying 53% of the Town's total area.
The Great
Depression of the 1930's slowed but did not stop Ridgefield's
growth. The serene beauty of the Town continued to attract
families of above average means and the steady growth enabled
many local businesses to survive, and a few new ones such
as plant nurseries and country restaurants to become established.
Population increased by 9% to 3,900 persons in 1940. Both
commercial and residential growth occurred in the village
and around Branchville, but the majority of new homes built
continued to be widely dispersed throughout the Town.
Growth ceased during the war years from 1941 through 1945,
but resumed with a rush in the early postwar years as a prosperous
economy, high family formation rate and low-interest veterans'
mortgages combined to create a boom in housing demand. Although
Ridgefield was still some distance from major job centers,
its attractive living conditions and availability of land
brought the residential construction boom to its doorstep.
Anticipating an avalanche of development, the Town established
a zoning commission and adopted its first zoning regulations
effective October 4, 1946. Minimum lot sizes for single family
homes were designated for all sections of the Town and carefully
limited commercial districts were specified in Branchville,
in the Village and along Route 35 north of Main Street, and
along Route 7 near the Route 35 intersection.
As the first half of the twentieth century drew to a close,
Ridgefield's population had reached 4,356 persons and was
growing rapidly. Fortunately some of Ridgefield's
scenic road character from this early era has
been formally preserved for the future.
 
Ridgefield Development:
1950 to 2000
At the dawn of the post World War II period, Ridgefield retained
much of the rural, estate and small-town quality which had
characterized it for more than half a century. Gradual growth
had created the Main Street business center, the surrounding
village of residential streets, the small center at Branchville
and random business enterprises along Ethan Allen Highway
and Danbury Road. Maps of the forties show Ridgefield's countryside
as rural land with widely spaced homes and still-large estates
along the original meandering road network.
There
were no outlying subdivisions, except around Wataba Lake.
By then the countryside was predominantly forested, although
open estate and farm lands still crowned many of the hills.
Dirt roads and narrow country lanes still existed in many
sections. By mid-century 1950, only 8% of the town's land
area, 1,850 acres, had been developed, mostly in residential
use.
The postwar exodus of jobs and housing to the suburbs quickly
impacted Ridgefield. In 1946, an electronics laboratory, Electro-Mechanical
Research Inc., located in Town and was followed two years
later by the research center of Schlumberger Well Surveying
Corporation. The New England Institute for Medical Research,
a non-profit research center founded by university faculty
members, located in Ridgefield in 1954.
CGS Laboratories, an electronics and communications research
firm, was established in the late 1940's and expanded rapidly
at its Ridgefield site through the following decade. The Town's
quite surroundings, residential beauty and proximity to New
York and various universities created an ideal atmosphere
for research and technology industry.
Whereas in pre-war Ridgefield, hardly any residential subdivisions
could be found outside the center or Branchville, by 1951
nearly two dozen new residential streets had been built at
various locations throughout the Town. Land prices were rising
and Ridgefield was becoming a community of choice for hundreds
of families attracted to the area by the new corporate offices
and research laboratories being built in Westchester and lower
Fairfield County.

For an
overview of the extent of land development in Ridgefield,
CT near 1950, a review of 1946-51
USGS Topographic Maps for Ridgefield will
be of interest (sample above)
An onslaught of a different nature, quite unexpected, occurred
in October 1955. After the passage of a tropical storm
a devastating
flood on the Norwalk River caused extensive property
damage there. The Town endorsed a proposed Norwalk River flood
control project which, however, was never fully implemented.
Builders were rushing to fill the housing demand, the Town's
population soared upward. Dozens of subdivisions claimed former
farmland and estates as over a thousand new homes were constructed
during the fifties. A substantial number of the new homes
rose in subdivisions around several of the lakes.
By 1960, the Town's population reached 8,165 persons, an 87%
increase in only a decade. School enrollment exploded, more
than doubling in the decade from 1947 to 1957. Facing over-
crowded conditions at the East Ridge School, the Town constructed
a new elementary school nearby at Veterans' Park in 1952 and
enlarged it with an addition in 1957. Despite the new classroom
space and the opening of St. Mary's Parochial Elementary School
in 1956, enrollment growth continued to outstrip the growth
of facilities and town schools were on double sessions by
1960.
Responding to the unprecedented growth, the Town established
a planning commission in 1958 and then reconstituted it as
the Ridgefield Planning and Zoning Commission in 1963. Subdivision
regulations were adopted in 1959 and work began on a town
plan with the aid of a consultant. The Town Plan was adopted
in 1961.
Simultaneously and over the next several years, zoning was
overhauled to create new lower-density residential zones,
define business zones, and provide zones for light industry.
As recommended in the Plan, a three acre per dwelling (residential
RAAA) zone was created to protect the Round Pond watershed,
source of the village water supply.
Much of the remainder of the Town, outside the environs of
the village and the several lake communities, was rezoned
for two-acre lots (residential RAA). One-acre residential
zoning was retained in developed areas around Fox Hill, Wataba
and Mamanasco Lakes, in Branchville and in an area south of
the village. Smaller lot zones, and several small apartment
zones, were mapped out for the village where water and sewer
services were available.
The Town's foresight in adopting a comprehensive plan and
stronger land use regulations did little to deter the growth
boom in the 1960's. As subdivisions became rampant throughout
the Town, thousands of new homes rose in former fields and
woodlands. The 1960 Town Plan had projected a ten year population
growth to 13,500, but when the decade was concluded, Ridgefield's
1970 population had reached 18,800 persons, an astonishing
123% increase for the decade.
The sudden influx of 10,000 new residents produced a massive
strain on Town services and the Town raced to build new schools
and expand other facilities. Ridgebury, Farmingville, Scotland,
Barlow Mountain and Branchville Elementary Schools and the
East Ridge Junior High School were all constructed within
about a dozen years after 1960, followed in the 1970's by
a new Ridgefield High School on North Salem Road.
It had always been intuitive to shape Ridgefield's
development to natural features of the underlying landscape.
These are "constraints on development" due to soil,
slope and flood plain.
But as planning and zoning modernized, consideration of these
limiting natural features became more formalized in local
land use regulations, this trend due in part to newly available
federal and state natural resource maps.

See
the four basic categories above
displayed on a
townwide map of Ridgefield.
Examine components
of the four categories.
HVCEO
as the regional planning agency for Ridgefield was formed
in 1968, the word "Housatonic" in its title having
its source in an old
indian name.
The Town Plan was updated in 1969, zoning regulations were
refined and inland wetland regulation was delegated to the
now consolidated Planning and Zoning Commission by the early
seventies. A study for sewer expansion out of the Center was
completed in 1972, with additional studies and
sewer development thereafter.
Growth continued during the 1970's, but slowed to a more moderate
pace as skyrocketing land values and a national recession
exerted restraining influences. Single family home construction
throughout the Town accounted for much of the population growth,
but apartments and condominiums were also being built along
the northeast fringe of the village.
A large shopping center, Copp's Hill Plaza, was completed
on Danbury Road, and several small light industries were established
on Ethan Allen Highway. There was a considerable growth of
new commercial buildings in the several business zones.
Civic organizations also expanded during this period, including
churches, clubs and recreation programs. Land acquisition
of 389 acres of the Great Swamp was effected by the State,
for flood control purposes, and a bequest to the State brought
the 304-acre Pierrepont State Park into being. Other large
tracts were being reserved for open space, and the Town adopted
its first open space plan in 1980.
After
the arrival of Connecticut's1973 wetlands protection law,
development potential in Ridgefield was significantly reduced
as the approximately 14% of municipal land area defined as
wetland was largely excluded from development.
By the
later seventies only very small portions of the long-planned
Route
7 Expressway had been completed northward from
I-84 to central Brookfield and southward from I-84 beyond
Danbury Airport. The final verdict on this massive roadway
proposal was that it would never come up from Norwalk and
cross northerly thru Ridgefield, Redding and Danbury (see
map of originally proposed route).
By 1980, the Town's population had increased to 20,120 persons,
a somewhat more modest 11% increase over the preceding decade.
In the 30 years since 1950, over 9,000 acres of land had been
developed or committed to new uses, and less than half the
Town's area remained vacant. The Town was no longer rural
but a spacious exurban residential community.
The Town Plan was comprehensively revised and adopted in 1980.
In addition to preserving the established centers and the
low-density residential character of most of the Town, it
advocated the development of campus-type research, office
and light industrial uses at three locations. One of these,
in north-eastern Ridgebury at the Danbury line, has been developed
as the corporate headquarters of Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals
on a site of over 100 acres.
Another site, north of Farmingville Road, has become a residential
subdivision and the third area, near the Routes 7 and 35 intersection,
remains largely undeveloped.
A key recommendation of the 1980 plan was that at least 25%
of the land in Ridgefield should be reserved from development
as either public or private open space. An Open Space Inventory,
published by the Conservation Commission in 1989 showed over
3,000 acres of land preserved, about 17% of the Town (excluding
schools but including private clubs, cemeteries and water
supply land as well as parks and dedicated open space land).
Historic preservation, community facilities, public utilities,
and community appearance were also addressed in the Town Plan.
With growing
congestion on scenic Main Street (Route 35) the Town completed
a detailed Downtown traffic study in 1985. This promoted better
local decisions and coordination with Conn DOT. Then in 2005
a 20 year update of the Route
35 Traffic Plan was completed.
The 1980's and early 1990's were a period of slow growth for
the Town. Much of the land in Ridgefield had been subdivided
by this time, and much of the remaining vacant land, which
totaled about 7,600 acres, or 33% of the Town's area, was
land more difficult to develop because of poor soils, slopes
or wetlands. Land cover changes from 1985 to 2002 may be viewed
on comparative
maps of Ridgefield.

The
population increased by only 4%, to 20,919 persons during
the decade from 1980 to 1990. The slow growth also reflected
economic and demographic changes: a more slowly growing national
economy and shrinking family sizes. Because there were fewer
children in the public schools, the Town closed two elementary
schools, Barlow Mountain and Branchville, and converted the
old high school on East Ridge to Town Offices and rental office
space.
As the 1990's progressed, the Town was once again updating
its Town Plan to reflect the new realities of a mature residential
community. Threatened with a massive development on one of
its few remaining large tracts, the Town opted in 1996 to
buy a 250 acre parcel in Ridgebury. An old farm on its southern
border with Wilton, the Weir Farm was acquired and designated
a National Historical Park, the first such park in Connecticut.
In 2000 Ridgefield reached a population of 23,643, reflecting
a ten year growth rate of 13% compared to 3.6% for Connecticut
as a whole. Entering the new millennium, Ridgefield finds
itself endowed with a rich past and a promising future.
To better understand land use features in Ridgefield today,
of value are inventories of the Town's retail
centers, large buildings housing major
employers, corporate
office developments, multi-family
housing complexes and local places
of worship.
Also of interest, local transportation improvement needs are
defined in the Ridgefield
section of the Transportation Planning Resource
Center. For a logical path for Ridgefield's
future land use to follow, the HVCEO Regional
Development Plan presents sound advice.
 
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