| |
|

1.
Canal boat on the Farmington Aqueductt |
|
|
A
Rapidly Changing Society
Worried
about declining trade, merchants urged the General Assembly to improve
the state's transportation system. Owners of toll roads fought in
the legislature to retain their advantages, while canal builders
and railroads lobbied to supplant them. The legislature balanced
regional interests by chartering the Farmington Canal in 1822 to
serve New Haven and the Windsor Locks Canal in 1824 to benefit Hartford
interests. Picture
1
The
General Assembly was slow to deal with rising crime, poverty and
theother social costs of a rapidly changing society. In 1827, the
General Assembly authorized the construction of a state-of-the art
prison in Wethersfield. Considered a model of humanitarian reform
in its day, it included workshops run by human-powered treadmills.
Picture
2
Reforming
Education
Connecticut's
once proud education system declined steadily in the early 1800's.
Between 1820 and 1839, the General Assembly provided no funding
for local education.
"The
common school should no longer be regarded as "common"
because it is cheap, inferior, and attended only by the poor and
those who are indifferent to the education of their children, but
"common" as the light and the air because its blessings
are open to all and enjoyed by all. That day will come."
Henry
Barnard, 1838
Canals
were eclipsed in the 1840's by the more efficient railroad, but
unsafe conditions and careless operations made deadly accidents
a common occurrence. In 1853, the General Assembly established the
State Railroad Commission to inspect railroads and investigate accidents.
Picture
3
In 1838,
the legislature created a Board of Commissioners of the Common Schools,
the forerunner of the Department of Education, to reform Connecticut's
common schools. Under former legislator Henry Barnard's leadership,
Connecticut's schools became a national model. Picture
4
An
Uproar of Causes
By
the 1850's, Connecticut's politics grew increasingly chaotic. Democrats
and Whigs contended with small, single issue parties advocating
such causes as the abolition of slavery, prohibition of alcohol
and the repression of immigrants. Repeatedly, the Assembly had to
elect a governor by joint ballot when no candidate in the multi-party
statewide election won a majority. Picture
5
By
1858, limiting the expansion of slavery nationally had become an
overriding political issue for most Connecticut residents. Calling
themselves the Republicans, a new political party rose above the
fragmented politics of the 1850's and took control of the General
Assembly. Picture
6, 7
During
the Civil War, Connecticut sent over 55,000 troops to help the Union
cause. More than 20,000 suffered casualties and 5,478 were killed.
The General Assembly outfitted 36 regiments, including Irish and
African-American units, and Connecticut's industries produced guns,
bayonets, boots, supply wagons, uniforms, buttons and ironclad warships
for the war effort. Picture
8
|
|