City, Town,
Borough, and County
City
and town government in the twentieth century has been more
the
province of political scientists than of historians, but a few
relevant pieces are listed below. (For the colonial era, turn
back to the section on town history in the early pan of this
bibliography.)
Blawie,
James, and Blawie, Marilyn. "The Inherent Right to Local
Self Government in Connecticut" Connecticut Bar Journal
30(October and December, 1956):231-52, 376-89. The authors assert
that the General Assembly dealt only with state and colony matters
until the 1830s or so. They are dead wrong, and so their contention
that Assembly authority over towns was unconstitutionally usurped
hogwash. This is a polemic in support of the Home Rule Act of
the 1950s.
Littlefield,
Neil O. "Municipal Home Rule--Connecticut's Mature Approach."
Connecticut Bar Journal 37(September, 1963)3:390-419. Makes
much better sense than Blawie.
Lockard,
Duane. "Home Rule for Connecticut's Municipalities."
Connecticut Bar Journal 29(March, 1955)1:51-60. An article
generated by the controversy over the Home Rule bill. Lockard
argues that, despite town-meeting government, Connecticut towns
have less control over local affairs than do towns in many Western
states. Home-rule legislation, Lockard claims, was not successful
in Connecticut when vied between 1917 and 1923.
The
first town in New England to be incorporated as a city was
New
Haven in 1784--yes, even before Boston City charters introduced
the office of mayor, and Amos A. Brewing, in "The Mayoralty
in Connecticut" Connecticut Magazine 5(1899)1:27-33,
discusses the evolution of the office from a largely honorific
position in 1784 to that of a modern executive at the dose of
the nineteenth century.
County
government in Connecticut was initiated in 1666 as a result of
the completion of the incorporation into Connecticut of the New
Haven colony towns. They were at first principally judicial entities,
but county courts were abolished in 1855. County government never
amounted to much and in 1965 was virtually done away with. The
subject is discussed in the following:
Faeth,
Henry J. The Connecticut County: A Description of its Organization,
Function and Relationship with Other Governmental Units, 1666-1948.
Storrs: University of Connecticut, 1949.
Levenson,
Rosalie. County Government in Connecticut Its History and Demise.
Storrs: University of Connecticut Institute of Public Service,
1966. An extensive, scholarly work of 237 pages. The plan to abolish
counties was not new. There was one afoot early in the twentieth
century. See Mathewson, below.
Mathewson,
Albert McClellan. The County System of Connecticut New
Haven, 1917. A ten-page pamphlet urging the abolition of county
administration. "The County System as at present organized
is irresponsive and irresponsible and its work could be much better
performed by other existing organizations." (p. 7) The author
calls attention to significant legislation of 1838 affecting
counties.
Talbot
Irwin N. "Regional Administration: the Role of the County
in Connecticut and New Jersey." Doctoral dissertation, New
York University, 1971. Talbot selected Connecticut because it
was "said to be the first state to abolish its county governments
and establish regional planning agencies throughout the major
portion of its Jurisdiction." He concluded that "the
regional planning agencies of Connecticut at present [1971] may
be less effective than anticipated, possibly being handicapped
by their inability to enforce their decisions and recommendations." To
say the least! (quotations from the abstract)
Connecticut's
boroughs date from 1801, when Bridgeport was carved out of
Stratford.
They have served various administrative purposes over the years
and have proved a flexible entity. Their story up to the late
nineteenth century when they were numerous, is told in Calvin
H. Carter's "Connecticut Buroughs," Papers of
the NHCHS 4(1888):139-84. There are only eleven boroughs left
none incorporated since 1915.
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