By Dan Cruson
At 1:00 in the afternoon of the second Monday in
June, 1824, a group of Newtown Village residents gathered at the tavern of
Czar Keeler located diagonally across from the site of the present Edmond
Town Hall. In the previous month the State General Assembly had granted
the petition of a number of these residents asking to be incorporated as a
borough, and now the villagers were meeting for the first time to set up
the organization, draw up by-laws for the new political entity, and elect
their first officers.
The idea of a borough was not new. Bridgeport had
been incorporated as the first one in the state twenty four years before, but it
was unusual in a small rural town. Its purpose was simply to establish a
political entity which could handle the special needs of the Village.
With its greater population density than the rest of
the town, the Village needed special services from which the rest of the
town would not benefit and therefore was unwilling to finance. With its
incorporation, the Borough become a legal person with the power to buy and
sell real estate, enter into contracts, build roads, develop other public
works projects, and, most importantly, tax itself to pay for all of this.
The residents of the Borough remained citizens of the
town of Newtown and took part in all of the town’s political activities
but they benefited from their own special services, which went beyond
those that the town supplied to all of its citizens. Although it was a
political entity similar to a town, it could not send representatives to
the General Assembly or otherwise take part in state politics. This had to
be done through the town at large.
Over the years, then, the Borough has provided
numerous benefits for the Village, often long before similar benefits were
supplied to the town in general. In 1883, for example, the Borough
provided the town with its first hook and ladder fire truck.
In 1907, in addition to enlarging its boundaries to
their present extent, it contracted with the Newtown Water Company to
provide the Village with fire hydrants. Eight years later it negotiated
with CL&P for the first street lights in town.
As early as 1931, the Borough saw the need to control
growth in the Village and passed its first zoning regulations. It would be
another quarter century before the town would follow its lead. The Borough
has had a quiet but vital history as for over a century and a half it has
supplied first the Village and then the town with essential services and
leadership.