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Lakeville, Connecticut

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Lakeville, Connecticut httpsmediacdntripadvisorcommediaphotos01

Restaurants
  
The Boathouse At Lakeville, Black Rabbit Bar & Grille, Mizza's, B&F Burgers and Frites, Pastorale Bistro & Bar

Hotels
  
Interlaken Inn, Wake Robin Inn, Inn At Iron Masters

Lakeville is a town in Litchfield County, Connecticut, bordering Dutchess County, New York. It has its own zip code (06039), post Office, and street addresses. While technically a part of Salisbury, Connecticut, for the purpose of navigation and mail, Lakeville is not Salisbury, which has zip code 06068. The Hotchkiss and Indian Mountain Schools are located in Lakeville.

Contents

Map of Lakeville, Salisbury, CT, USA

History

Until 1846, Lakeville was called "Furnace Village", due to the location there of one of the early blast furnaces of the historic Salisbury iron industry (one of which was established in the 1760s by future Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen). Benjamin B. Hotchkiss, inventor of the Hotchkiss gun was born in nearby Watertown.

A boarding school in his name, the Hotchkiss School, was founded by his widow Maria Bissell Hotchkiss in Lakeville in 1891. It later became coeducational. Lakeville is also the home of Indian Mountain School which is a boarding school for students Pre-K through 9th. It was founded in 1922.

It was also the original home to what would eventually relocate and become the Mansfield Training School, an institution for profoundly retarded residents of Connecticut.

Other notable events

In the early 1950s, the well-known Belgian-French writer Georges Simenon resided for several years in Shadow Rock Farm, a large house in Lakeville. The town forms the background for Simenon's novel La Mort de Belle (The Death of Belle), depicting its small town quiet life being shattered by the (fictional) murder of a young girl. It was later adapted to film, released as Passion of Slow Fire, or The End of Belle.

Lakeville is the site of Connecticut's oldest cold case. Camp Sloane camper Connie Smith left the camp on Indian Mountain Road on the morning of July 16, 1952. She was ten years old and was from Sundance, Wyoming; she was the granddaughter of former Wyoming Governor Nels H. Smith. Several people observed her walking and hitchhiking toward the center of Lakeville. She was last seen walking along Route 44 near the intersection of Belgo Road. Her disappearance sparked one of the largest searches ever conducted by the Connecticut State Police. Despite a nationwide search, she was never found, and foul play is suspected. Her case remains open and still has a detective assigned to it.

Harpsichordist Wanda Landowska was a resident of Lakeville from 1949 until her death in 1959. From the 1970s onward, Nobel Economics Laureate Wassily Leontief made his summer home here.

New England's oldest Methodist congregation is in Lakeville.

References

Lakeville, Connecticut Wikipedia