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Bridgeport, Connecticut

Bridgeport is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Connecticut[7] and the fifth-most populous city in New England, with a population of 148,654 in 2020.[3] Located in eastern Fairfield County at the mouth of the Pequonnock River on Long Island Sound, it is a port city 60 miles (97 km) from Manhattan and 40 miles (64 km) from The Bronx. It borders the towns of Trumbull to the north, Fairfield to the west, and Stratford to the east. Bridgeport and other towns in Fairfield County make up the Greater Bridgeport Planning Region, as well as the Bridgeport–Stamford–Norwalk–Danbury metropolitan statistical area, the second largest metropolitan area in Connecticut. The Bridgeport–Stamford–Norwalk–Danbury metropolis forms part of the New York metropolitan area.

Bridgeport
Nicknames: 
The Park City, BPT[1]
Mottoes: 
  • Industria Crecimus (Latin)
  • "By industry we thrive" (English)
Coordinates: 41°11′11″N 73°11′44″W / 41.18639°N 73.19556°W / 41.18639; -73.19556
CountryUnited States
StateConnecticut
CountyFairfield
RegionCT Metropolitan
MSABridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk
CSANew York
Incorporated (town)1821
Incorporated (city)1836
Named forA drawbridge over the Pequonnock River
Government
 • TypeMayor-council
 • MayorJoseph P. Ganim (D)
Area
 • City19.4 sq mi (50.2 km2)
 • Land16.0 sq mi (41.4 km2)
 • Water3.4 sq mi (8.8 km2)
 • Urban
397.29 sq mi (1,029.0 km2)
Elevation
3 ft (1 m)
Population
 • City148,654
 • RankUS: 172nd
 • Density7,700/sq mi (3,000/km2)
 • Urban916,408 (US: 51st)
 • Urban density2,306.6/sq mi (890.6/km2)
 • Metro
939,904 (US: 57th)
DemonymBridgeporter
GDP
 • Bridgeport (MSA)$104.368 billion (2022)
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP Codes
06601–06602, 06604–06608, 06610, 06650, 06673, 06699[6]
Area code(s)203/475
FIPS code09-08000
GNIS feature ID205720
AirportSikorsky Memorial Airport
Major highways
Commuter rail
Websitebridgeportct.gov

Inhabited by the Paugussett Native American tribe until English settlement in the 1600s, Bridgeport was incorporated in 1821 as a town, and as a city in 1836. Showman P. T. Barnum was a resident of the city and served as the town's mayor (1871).[8] Barnum built four houses in Bridgeport and housed his circus in town during winter. The city in the early 20th century saw an economic and population boom, becoming by all measures Connecticut's chief manufacturing city by 1905.[9] Bridgeport was the site of the world's first mutual telephone exchange (1877),[10] the first dental hygiene school (1949),[11] and the first bank telephone bill service in the US (1981).[12] Inventor Harvey Hubbell II invented the electric plug outlet in Bridgeport in 1912.[13] The Frisbie Pie Company was founded and operated in Bridgeport.[14] The world's first Subway restaurant opened in the city's North End in 1965.[15] After World War II, industrial restructuring and suburbanization caused the loss of many large companies and affluent residents, leaving Bridgeport struggling with issues of poverty and violent crime.[16]

Since the beginning of the 21st century, Bridgeport has begun extensive redevelopment of its downtown and other neighborhoods. Bridgeport's crime rate started going down significantly around 2010; by 2018, it had been reduced by almost 50 percent.[17] Bridgeport is home to three museums,[18] the University of Bridgeport, Housatonic Community College, Paier College, and part of Sacred Heart University[19][20] as well as the state's only zoo.[21] Bridgeport is officially nicknamed "Park City", due to its 35 public parks taking up 1,300 acres, including two large ones. Although none are headquartered within the city itself, more than a dozen Fortune 500 companies are based in its metropolitan area, which it shares with Stamford. Bridgeport by various sites has been consistently ranked as among the 25 most ethnically and culturally diverse American cities.[22][23][24][25][26]

History edit

Bridgeport was inhabited by the Paugussett native American tribe during the start of European colonization. The earliest European communal settlement was in the historical Stratfield district,[27] along US Route 1, known in colonial times as the King's Highway. Close by, Mount Grove Cemetery was laid out on what was a native village that extended past the 1650s.[28] It is also an ancient Paugusett burial ground.

The burgeoning farming community grew and became a center of trade, shipbuilding, and whaling. The town was incorporated to subsidize the Housatonic Railroad and rapidly industrialized following the rail line's connection to the New York and New Haven railroad. The town was given its name because of the need for bridges over the Pequonnock River that provided a navigable port at the mouth of the river. Manufacturing was the mainstay of the local economy until the 1970s.

Colonial history edit

The first documented European settlement within the present city limits of Bridgeport took place in 1644, centered at Black Rock Harbor and along North Avenue between Park and Briarwood Avenues. The place was called Pequonnock[9] (Quiripi for "Cleared Land"), after a band of the Paugussett, an Algonquian-speaking Native American people who occupied this area. One of their sacred sites was Golden Hill, which overlooked the harbor and was the location of natural springs and their planting fields. (It has since been blasted through for construction of an expressway.)[29][30] The Golden Hill Indians were granted a reservation here by the Colony of Connecticut in 1639; it lasted until 1802. (One of the tribes acquired land for a small reservation in the late 19th century that was recognized by the state. It is retained in the Town of Trumbull.)

In 1639, Roger Ludlow, deputy governor of the English Connecticut Colony was ordered by the colony's General Assembly in Hartford to establish two plantations, one at Cupheg the mouth of the Housatonic River (today Stratford), and one at the harbor at the mouth of the Pequonnock River, today's Bridgeport Harbor. Ludlow disobeyed orders and instead established a settlement in Unconway (today's Fairfield), probably due to fears of the large Paugussett settlement at Golden Hill, which was a sacred site of theirs, so it is believed that they perhaps instead settled in sparsely populated land surrounding the village.[31] In 1659, the general court in Hartford established the official borders of the Paugussett Reservation.[32]

Bridgeport's early years were marked by residents' reliance on fishing and farming. This was similar to the economy of the Paugussett, who had cultivated corn, beans, and squash; and fished and gathered shellfish from both the river and sound. A village called Newfield began to develop around the corner of State and Water streets in the 1760s.[33] The area officially became known as Stratfield in 1695[9] or 1701, due to its location between the already existing towns of Stratford and Fairfield.[34] During the American Revolution, Newfield Harbor was a center of privateering.[30][9]

19th century edit

 
East Bridgeport Bridge over Pequannock River, c. 1850

By the time of the State of Connecticut's ratification of the Articles of Confederation in 1781, many of the local farmers held shares in vessels trading at Newfield Harbor or had begun trading in their own name. Newfield initially expanded around the coasting trade with Boston, New York, and Baltimore and the international trade with the West Indies.[33][35] The commercial activity of the village was clustered around the wharves on the west bank of the Pequonnock, while the churches were erected inland on Broad Street. In 1787, the Fairfield County Court ordered the laying out and widening of what is now State Street and Main Street in downtown Bridgeport, along the Pequannock River then Newfield. It was assumed before the Revolution that this land would grow into a city.[36] [37]

"Bridgeport grew up without a plan, or in spite of one".

— Samuel Orcutt, A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport (1886), Chapter XIX

In 1800, the village became the Borough of Bridgeport,[40] the first so incorporated in the state.[41] It was named for the Newfield or Lottery Bridge across the Pequonnock, connecting the wharves on its east and west banks.[39] Bridgeport Bank was established in 1806.[42] In 1821, the township of Bridgeport became independent of Stratford.[43]

 
Map of Bridgeport, 1824

In 1821, a small community of remaining Golden Hill Pauguasett Natives, along with free blacks and runaway slaves was established in the South End along Main Street known as Little Liberia, with its own churches, schools and hotels, and served as a stop in the underground railroad. Many remaining Paugusset Indians also lived there.[44]

The West India trade died down around 1840,[33] but by that time the Bridgeport Steamship Company (1824)[45] and Bridgeport Whaling Company (1833) had been incorporated[33] and the Housatonic Railroad chartered (1836).[46][47] The HRRC ran upstate along the Housatonic Valley, connecting with Massachusetts's Berkshire Railroad at the state line. Bridgeport was chartered as Connecticut's fifth city in 1836[43][48][51] in order to enable the town council to secure funding (ultimately $150,000) to provide to the HRRC and ensure that it would terminate in Bridgeport.[52] The Naugatuck Railroad—connecting Bridgeport to Waterbury and Winsted along the Naugatuck River—was chartered in 1845 and began operation four years later.[53][54] The same year, the New York and New Haven Railroad began operation,[55] connecting Bridgeport to New York and the other towns along the north shore of the Long Island Sound. Now a major junction, the city began to industrialize.

The city's first immigrants were Irish Catholics who settled in the Sterling Hill section of the Hollow. Having come to the US to escape the famine, they arrived in town during the 1830s to build the railroad. They mostly lived in wooden four to six family tenements, often subdivided homes.

In 1842, showman P.T. Barnum spent a night in Bridgeport, and there met Charles Stratton, a local dwarf. He soon became part of Barnum's act and a star under the name "General Tom Thumb". Barnum moved to Bridgeport and built four houses in the city over the course of his life, the first being Iranistan.[56]

 
Iranistan, the residence of P. T. Barnum, in 1848

In 1852, Barnum began an endeavor with William Noble to develop the land (inherited by Noble) on the other side of the Pequonnock River, across the river from Bridgeport to be known as "East Bridgeport" with Washington Park at the center.[57] The new neighborhood had homes, commerce, and factories, centered around East Main Street. The neighborhood eventually became the East Side of Bridgeport (occasionally spelled "Eastside").

In 1863, during the Civil War, the Bridgeport Standard ran a series of articles encouraging the creation of a public park in the city. This led wealthy residents P.T. Barnum, William Noble and Nathaniel Wheeler to purchase the land on Long Island Sound and donating the land to the city in 1864. The land on the shore became Seaside Park. A second park was built near East Main Street, when in 1878, James Beardsley donated more than 100 acres (40 ha) to the city along the Pequonnock River under the condition that the land be "kept the same forever as a public park". Both parks were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, known for creating Central Park. These two large public parks gave Bridgeport the nickname "The Park City".[58]

The county's Catholic seat, St. Augustine Cathedral was finished in 1869, built by the Irish who had arrived 30 year earlier. Saint James Church, predating the Archdiocese of Hartford, was the first Catholic congregation in Fairfield County, starting with 250 members in 1842. The congregation gave rise to St Augustine's in Sterling Hill, the seat of the Diocese of Bridgeport.[59]

Following the Civil War, the town held several iron foundries and factories manufacturing firearms, metallic cartridges, horse harnesses, locks, and blinds.[43] Wheeler & Wilson's sewing machines were exported throughout the world. Bridgeport absorbed the West End and the village of Black Rock and its busy harbor in 1870.[60] In 1875, P. T. Barnum was elected mayor of the town, which afterwards served as the winter headquarters of Barnum and Bailey's Circus and Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.[9] Barnum also helped establish Fairfield County's first hospital (Conn.'s 3rd) and the Bridgeport-Port Jefferson ferry, connecting the town to Long Island.[61]

Harvey Hubbell founded Hubbell Incorporated in Bridgeport in 1888. The Holmes & Edwards Silver Co. was founded in 1882, its wares sold nationally, and the company became part of the International Silver Company in 1898.[62] (The H&E brand continued well into the 1950s and was advertised in national magazines such as LIFE and Ladies' Home Journal.)[63] Hungarian immigrants began to arrive, which led to the Ráckόczi Hungarian Aid Association in Bridgeport in 1887 and the American Hungarian Immigrant Aid Society in 1892.[64] They established themselves in the West End. In 1894, Bridgeport's Slavic immigrants played a major role in the development of the Orthodox Christian faith in America when they met with Fr Alexis Toth (now Saint Alexis) and founded Holy Ghost Russian Orthodox Church in the city's Eastside. This parish became the mother church of all Orthodox Churches in New England.

20th century edit

From 1870 to 1910, Bridgeport became the largest industrial center in Connecticut; its population rose from around 25,000 to over 100,000, including thousands of Irish, Slovaks, Hungarians, Germans, English, and Italian immigrants. Jewish migration to the city began in the 1881, with an influx of Polish, Russian, and especially Hungarian Jews calling Bridgeport home. Bridgeport Jew Edwin Land grew up to invent the Polaroid.[65]

 
Bridgeport in 1913, today's downtown, before the city's first high rises

In 1905, Bridgeport was already "the largest industrial center in the state, $49,381,348 was invested in manufacturing and the products being valued at $44,586,519." The city was a port of entry with its imports being valued at around $656,271 in 1908.[9]

The Singer factory joined Wheeler & Wilson in producing sewing machines[9] and the Locomobile Company of America was a prominent early automobile manufacturer, producing a prototype of the Stanley Steamer and various luxury cars.[66]

The town was also the center of America's corset production, responsible for 19.9% of the national total,[9] and became the headquarters of Remington Arms following its 1912 merger with the Union Metallic Cartridge Co. Around the time of the First World War, Bridgeport was also producing steam-fitting and heating apparatuses, brass goods, phonographs, typewriters,[9] milling machines, brassieres, and saddles.[67]

 
1912 postcard showing Main Street in downtown Bridgeport

Brideport's Italian immigrants settled in the "Central End", today's Little Italy, and the city was the 3rd most Italian in the state by 1910. Their newspapers were the weekly La Tribuna de Connecticut (1906–1908) and later La Sentinella (1920–1948)[68][69] The West End along Wordin Avenue, known as "Hunktown," grew into one of the largest Hungarian communities in the US.[64] It was visited by Hungarian republicans trying to take down the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, in order to garner support. The West Side nearby was home to Slovenians, French-Canadians and Swedish immigrants. By 1910 Bridgeport had grown into second largest city in Connecticut at 102,052, behind New Haven.[70][9]

Between 1910 and 1920, during World War I, the city's population exploded from 102,054 to 143,555, due to the city's role in the First World War.[71] Bridgeport had the largest factory in the world at the time, the new Remington Arms plant on Boston Avenue (on the East Side). Built in 1915, it had 13 separate buildings, each of them 5 stories, connected by a long corridor half a mile long. The purpose of the building was to fulfil a company order from the Russian tzar for a million rifles and 100 million round of ammunition. The construction site was protected by the National Guard to prevent Bolshevik arson. The factory by 1916 employed 16,000 people and led to the construction of "Remington City" in the Mill Hill neighborhood, and "Remington Village" in the East End, by Remington Arms.[71]

 
The Remington Arms plant, bought by General Electric after the war

In the summer of 1915, a series of strikes imposed the eight-hour day on the town's factories; rather than moving business elsewhere, the success spread the eight-hour day throughout the Northeast.[72] Due to housing shortages in many US cities during World War I, the federal government created the US Housing Corporation. This resulted in 7 USHC housing developments being built in Bridgeport, notably Seaside Village in the South End and Black Rock Gardens in Black Rock. By this point, Remington Arms was producing 50% of America's cartridges during the war, with 17,000 employees, and homes for new workers were needed. The factory became a General Electric plant after the war.[73] The First World War had continued the city's expansion so that, on the eve of the Great Depression, there were more than 500 factories in Bridgeport, including Columbia Records' primary pressing plant and a Singer Sewing Machine factory.[74]

The 1920s saw the city's population stabilize at 143,555 after the war.[75] The Roaring Twenties brought more leisure and entertainment. In 1919, the city of Bridgeport bought Pleaseure Beach (also known as Steepchase Island) for $220,000. Pleasure Beach was an amusement park and beach on an island in the East End next to Stratford.[76] In 1920, the city parks commissioner began the process of creating a zoo in Beardsley Park.[77] Bridgeport a stop became for performances with around 20 theatres. 1922 was the year the elegantly designed Majestic and Poli Palace theatres, were built downtown, along with the Savoy Hotel. The Poli Palace theatre (built by Sylvester Poli) was the largest theatre in the state of Connecticut, with gilded hand-carved moldings and vaulted ceilings.[78] [79] The Ritz Ballroom was opened in 1923. In 1928, the city bought an 800-acre (320 ha) racetrack and landing field in Lordship to construct Bridgeport Airport.[80] Spanish immigration in 1920 and 1921 brought hundreds of migrants from Spain, particularly from Pedreguer, Valencia, where "practiclly the entire town migrated" to Bridgeport.[81]

 
Birdseye view of Main Street
 
Main Street and Golden Hill Street, showing Stratfield Hotel

During the Great Depression the city elected Socialist party candidate Jasper McLevy as mayor in 1933. McLevy's election made headlines as a New England city had a socialist mayor. Known for cutting costs, he would serve as mayor for 12 terms, finally losing in 1957.[82]

The Great Migration led southern African-Americans to Bridgeport around the 1930s (thanks to railroads)[83] along with black foreigners (such as Cape Verdean),[83] By 1930, Bridgeport had the third largest percentage of African Americans in New England. The Italian population by 1930 had more than doubled, now the city's largest ethnic group.[69] The build-up to World War II helped the city's recovery in the late 1930s.

Suburban development made its expansion into the undeveloped North End neighborhood.[84] On Park Avenue in 1962 the Museam of Art, Science and Industry (MASI) was opened to the public, today's Discovery Museam and Planetarium. Known for the newly developed approach of hands on-exhibits, the Museam became science oriented later on.[18] Continued development of new suburban housing outside of Bridgeport in the city's adjacent suburbs such as Fairfield and Milford[85] attracted middle and upper-class residents, leaving the city with a higher proportion of poor. By the 1960s, Puerto Ricans had begun to immigrate to settle to Bridgeport in large numbers, and by about 1970 had made up 10% of the city's population, or 15,000 people, the largest Puerto Rican population in Connecticut, and they would continue to grow.[86] Groups such as the local Young Lords branch organized themselves on East Main Street, leading to activism to advance the Puerto Rican community with increased access to health care, better housing, food and an end to poverty and police brutality.

As cities across the country were renovating their central business district after the war, Bridgeport attempted its own urban renewal projects in its old downtown in the early 1960s during the construction of the highways. Hunktown, with a population of 15,000 and the Irish neighborhood in the South End were demolished and replaced with highways and an industrial park. The Trumbull Shopping Park was built just outside Bridgeport city limits in Trumbull in 1965, Connecticut's first fully enclosed shopping mall.[87][88] Bridgeport under Mayor Tedesco went under the 52-acre (21 ha) State Street redevelopment project,[89] demolishing 52 acres of State Street, clearing the land for development. Replaced with modern high-rise office buildings, parking, the Route 8/25 expressway towards Waterbury and Newtown, and a shopping mall at its core.[90] Large parts of Main Street were demolished in what was called the Congress Street Renewal project, nothing was built on the land. Constructed with federal funding, on Lafayette Boulevard and Broad Street, the 450,000 acre, 2 story (with basement) Lafayette Shopping Plaza was erected, a downtown shopping mall with a Sears and a Gimbels department store as anchors connected to it.Military contracts during the 1950s and 1960s enabled the Bridgeport-Lycoming division of AVCO, founded 1951, to employ at times more than 12,000 people, building tanks, helicopters, and other military hardware. Decreased demand led to layoffs, and then closure in 1984.[91] Other examples of urban development include two city landmarks, the 12-story 855 Main Street (People's Savings Bank building), and 18-floor Park City Plaza, (State National Bank building) built 1972. The plan for three identical towers never materialized, due to the Oil Crisis and corporate vacancies.

Bridgeport was largely bypassed by the New York City companies fleeing Manhattan for suburban Fairfield County locations for various reasons; the city developed a reputation for having an industrial character thanks to the factories located right along both sides of Interstate 95, and the city's lack of urban amities and its reputation as a "blue collar" city simply wasn't the image these companies wanted to identify with in order to attract top executives, Bridgeport was being farther from New York City than Stamford or White Plains with no immediate benefits, and the trend of establishing headquarters outside of major cities in suburban campuses all played a factor.[92] As such, most skyscraper construction models for downtown Bridgeport from the 70s were never built, unlike Hartford (a city already home to major insurance companies) or Stamford. Much of north downtown Bridgeport would end up abandoned, neglected and boarded up as department and discount stores closed, leaving only federal and municipal buildings along now empty lots.[93][94]

 
The downtown Bridgeport area around 1977, facing the train station (which burned down the next year)

Restructuring of heavy industry starting after the mid-20th century caused the loss of thousands of jobs and residents. Like other urban centers in Connecticut, Bridgeport suffered during the deindustrialization of the United States in the 1970s and 1980s.[95] Pleasure Beach was sold 5 years after a rollercoaster caught fire. A year later the park closed for good.[96] The old Bridgeport station caught fire in 1978.

In September 1978, Bridgeport teachers went on a 19-day strike due to deadlocked contract negotiations. A court order, as well as a state law that made strikes by public workers illegal in Connecticut, resulted in 274 teachers being arrested and jailed.[97] In November 1978, a wave of arson passed through the city's East side, with the fire chief calling it as a microcosm of "the Bronx".[98] The city suffered from overall mismanagement, for which several city officials were convicted, contributing to the economic and social decline.[99] The once busy Lafayette Shopping Plaza began to lose customers after Gimbel's closed in 1984. Replaced with a Read's store, the mall was later bought by Hi-Ho Industries and renamed "Hi-Ho Mall", until it closed in 1993 and became Housatonic Community College in 1997.[100]

Bridgeport remained the state's second city and as Hartford's population continued to shrink, Bridgeport became the largest city in Connecticut in 1974, with a population of 142,546.A 1981 Times article read; "Bridgeport... for years has suffered an image problem when compared with Hartford because of that city's role as state capital and as the site of a number of large corporations." Mayor Mandanici's response was "Hartford reported state sales taxes of $712.7 million, but Bridgeport yielded state sales taxes of $890.4 million. That's economic power, right?"[101] In 1985, Bridgeport was still Connecticut's chief manufacturing center, its major industries including General Electric, Remington Shaver, Bryant Electric, and Raybestos plants. A New York Times in 1985 stated Bridgeport was the fifth largest banking center in New England, with five of the banks based Bridgeport having assets of more than $6 billion.[16] The largest scissors, shear and surgical materials manufacturer in the world by 1946, Bridgeport-based ACME Shear closed its Bridgeport plant in 1996 due to mergers and acquisitions. The industrial operations relocated to Fremont, North Carolina. Between 1984 and 1989 the construction of the new $75 million headquarters for People's United Bank, the second largest bank in New England. The 10-story Connecticut National Bank building was demolished and replaced with the new 18-story Bridgeport Center overlooking McLevy Square, and was designed by famous architect Richard Meier and was meant to give the city a new icon[16]

Bridgeport in 1989 had more homicides per capita than any Northeastern US city over 100,000 people. Bridgeport had a smaller police force than smaller cities like Hartford or New Haven, yet hiring due to city financial issues, having not recovered from the exodus of manufacturing companies, would result in even higher taxes for residents.[102][91] The city in 1995 saw a serious reduction in violent crime, notably in its East Side, where crime rate fell by nearly half, homicides dropped, burglaries by 3/4s and stolen car thefts by more than half, among other stats, as the Phoenix Project led to barricading city streets, confusing out of town drug buyers, and preventing sellers to escape.[103]

In 1991, the city filed for bankruptcy protection but was declared solvent by a federal court.[104] Later that same year, Mayor Mary C. Moran lost the election to Joseph Ganim, at 33 years old, the youngest person to hold that office.[105] and under him the city was able to begin redevelopment with the construction of the Arena at Harbor Yard and the Ballpark at Harbor Yard.

Bridgeport made numerous efforts at revitalization. In a proposal in 1995, Las Vegas developer Steve Wynn was to build a large casino, but that project failed due to traffic concerns.[106] The project was opposed as rival Donald Trump feared a Bridgeport casino would harm his Atlantic City properties and proposed to build a theme park and potential casino on the same site.[106]

New waves of migrants from places such as Brazil, Jamaica, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Mexico, and other nations arrived in Bridgeport. Immigrants from Brazil, after the nation's inflation crisis, established themselves in the city due to the large Portuguese population already present, easing the language barrier. Bridgeport was a common second US destination for Vietnamese refugees "There's already an established community here, so that's why they come," from the New York Times in 1996. Along with them, Thai, Koreans, Chinese, and especially Laotians and Cambodians established themselves in the city. Laotians refugees settled in the West End opening businesses [107][108] Bridgeport's Mexican population grew gradually, from 24 people counted in 1970,[109] 599 people in 1990, to 2,687 by the 2000 census, becoming at that point the second largest Latino group in the city behind the city's Puerto Ricans (31,117 people), surpassing the Cuban population. Likewise, the population from other Central and South American nations continued to increase[110] while the Cuban population continued to decrease.[110][111] "There has been a big shift in ethnic groups. Just look at the restaurants that have opened in the last few years—Mexican, Brazilian, Chilean and Jamaican." an interviewee, local chamber of council president Paul Timpanelli stated in 2000 according to the Connecticut Post.

In 1999, city-owned Sikorsky Memorial Airport ceased its commercial regional flight offerings.

21st century edit

 
Street scene in downtown Bridgeport, intersection of State and Main St.

In 2003, Mayor Ganim was involved in a corruption scandal after being investigated by the FBI as he received gifts from developers in exchange for being allowed to build in Bridgeport. He was sentenced to federal prison, and was replaced by John Fabrizi.

In the early 21st century, Bridgeport has taken steps toward redevelopment of its downtown and other neighborhoods. In 2004, artists' lofts were developed in the former Read's Department Store on Broad Street. Several other rental conversions have been completed, including the 117-unit Citytrust bank building on Main Street. The recession halted, at least temporarily, two major mixed-use projects including a $1-billion waterfront development at Steel Point, but other redevelopment projects have proceeded, such as the condominium conversion project in Bijou Square.[112] In 2009, the City Council under Mayor Finch approved a new master plan for development, designed both to promote redevelopment in selected areas and to protect existing residential neighborhoods.[113] The plan was updated in April 2019.[114] In 2010, the Bridgeport Housing Authority and a local health center announced plans to build a $20 million medical and housing complex at Albion Street, making use of federal stimulus funds and designed to replace some of the housing lost with the demolition of Father Panik Village.[115]

The Steel Point (or Steelpointe) project of Bridgeport's on the lower portion of the East Side finally led to the construction of a big box retailer in 2013, along with other stores, shops, and a lighthouse with a marina and oyster bar). The plan for high-end mixed use apartments is in place, although concerns about gentrification have been raised. A hotel is also in the works.[116] A new proposed train station in East Bridgeport, meant to be completed in 2021, was postponed in 2019.

By 2013 the city and local business owners agreed that work needed to be done in the downtown area north of Fairfield Avenue, nicknamed Downtown North, above. Made up of old empty brick buildings which were neglected for years, the city and developers began their rehabilitation starting in 2015, most of which are now converted apartments or retail.[93][117] Bridgeport's downtown renovation has resulted in various restaurants, the renovation of the Bishop Arcade Mall, a comedy club, and theatres. A 2022 plan to renovate McLevy Hall is in place.[118]

 
Sterling Block-Bishop Arcade, a Victorian-era shopping arcade, Main St., downtown

In 2017, MGM had announced plans to build a waterfront casino and shopping center in the city, awaiting approval by the state government. If built, the development would have created 2,000 permanent jobs and about 5,779 temporary jobs.[119] After a legal battle with the Mohegan and Pequot tribes on the right to build a casino in Connecticut, the project "appears to be dead", and tenants such as Bridgeport Boatworks now occupy the proposed space.[120] The construction of Honey Locust Square began on the East End, which when complete will house a supermarket (something the neighborhood lacks), a public library, a health center, and a retail building.[121]

Notable speeches edit

On March 10, 1860, Abraham Lincoln spoke in the city's Washington Hall, an auditorium at the old Bridgeport City Hall (now McLevy Hall), at the corner of State and Broad Streets. The largest room in the city was packed, and a crowd formed outside, as well. Lincoln received a standing ovation before taking the 9:07 pm train that night back to Manhattan.[122][123] A plaque marks the site where Lincoln spoke; later that year, he was elected president.

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke three times at the Klein Auditorium during the 1960s, as well as at the University of Bridgeport and the original Central High School (today Bridgeport City Hall)., as well as in Bridgeport City Hall. Additionally, President George W. Bush spoke before a small group of Connecticut business people and officials at the Playhouse on the Green in 2006.[124] President Barack Obama also spoke at the Harbor Yard arena in 2010 to gain support for the campaign of Democratic Governor Dan Malloy.[125]

Timeline of notable first and inventions edit

Geography edit

Bridgeport lies along Long Island Sound at the mouth of the Pequonnock River.

Neighborhoods edit

 
The Hollow neighborhood of Bridgeport, Connecticut, along North Avenue

Bridgeport has many distinct neighborhoods,[131] divided into five geographic areas: Downtown, the East Side, the North End, the South End, and the West Side.[132]

 
Neighborhoods of Bridgeport

East End

  • North End
    • Lake Forest
    • Lake Success
    • Reservoir/Whiskey Hill
    • Old Town Road
  • Brooklawn/St. Vincent
  • South End
  • West Side
  • Black Rock
    • St. Mary's by the Sea

Climate edit

 
Yellow Mill Bridge

Under the Köppen climate classification, Bridgeport straddles the humid subtropical climate (Cfa) and humid continental climate (Dfa) zones with long, hot summers, and cool to cold winters, with precipitation spread fairly evenly throughout the year. Bridgeport, like the rest of coastal Connecticut, lies in the broad transition zone between the colder continental climates of the northern United States and southern Canada to the north, and the warmer temperate and subtropical climates of the middle and south Atlantic states to the south.

The warm/hot season in Bridgeport is from mid-April through early November. Late day thundershowers are common in the hottest months (June, July, August, September), despite the mostly sunny skies. The cool/cold season is from late November though mid March. Winter weather is far more variable than summer weather along the Connecticut coast, ranging from sunny days with higher temperatures to cold and blustery conditions with occasional snow. Like much of the Connecticut coast and nearby Long Island, NY, most of the winter precipitation is rain or a mix and rain and wet snow in Bridgeport. Bridgeport averages about 29 inches (75 cm) of snow annually, compared to inland areas like Hartford and Albany which average 45–60 inches (110–150 cm) of snow annually.

Although infrequent, tropical cyclones (hurricanes/tropical storms) have struck Connecticut and the Bridgeport metropolitan area. Hurricane landfalls have occurred along the Connecticut coast in 1903, 1938, 1944, 1954 (Carol), 1960 (Donna), Hurricane Gloria in 1985, and Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

 
Climate chart for Bridgeport

Bridgeport lies in USDA garden hardiness zone 7a, averaging about 92 days annually with freeze. The coastal location of Bridgeport allows it to be milder than locations well south but inland. For example, the record coldest low temperature at Atlanta is -8 F, while the record coldest at Bridgeport is -7 F. Coastal Connecticut is the broad transition zone where so-called "subtropical indicator" plants such as cold hardy palms and other broadleaf evergreens can successfully be cultivated. As such, Southern Magnolias, Needle Palms, Windmill palm, Loblolly Pines, and Crape Myrtles are grown in private and public gardens. Like much of coastal Connecticut, Long Island, NY, and coastal New Jersey, the growing season is rather long in Bridgeport—averaging 210 days from April 8 to November 5 according to the National Weather Service in Bridgeport.

The average monthly temperature ranges from 31.4 °F (−0.3 °C) in January to 75.7 °F (24.3 °C) in July. The record low is −7 °F (−22 °C), set on January 22, 1984, while the record high is 103 °F (39 °C), set on July 22 in 1957 and 2011.[133]

Precipitation averages 44.9 inches (1,140 mm) annually, and is somewhat evenly distributed throughout the year, with March and April the wettest months. Annual snowfall averages 33.6 inches (85 cm), falling almost entirely from December to March. As is typical of coastal Connecticut, snow cover does not usually last long, with an average of 33 days per winter with snow cover of at least 1 inch (2.5 cm).

Climate data for Bridgeport, Connecticut (Sikorsky Airport), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1948–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 69
(21)
68
(20)
84
(29)
91
(33)
97
(36)
97
(36)
103
(39)
100
(38)
99
(37)
89
(32)
79
(26)
76
(24)
103
(39)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 56.7
(13.7)
55.3
(12.9)
64.8
(18.2)
76.4
(24.7)
85.1
(29.5)
90.7
(32.6)
93.8
(34.3)
91.5
(33.1)
86.2
(30.1)
78.1
(25.6)
67.9
(19.9)
59.7
(15.4)
95.4
(35.2)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 38.4
(3.6)
40.5
(4.7)
47.4
(8.6)
58.3
(14.6)
68.4
(20.2)
77.7
(25.4)
83.4
(28.6)
81.9
(27.7)
75.4
(24.1)
64.4
(18.0)
53.6
(12.0)
43.8
(6.6)
61.1
(16.2)
Daily mean °F (°C) 31.4
(−0.3)
33.1
(0.6)
39.3
(4.1)
50.0
(10.0)
60.0
(15.6)
69.6
(20.9)
75.7
(24.3)
74.5
(23.6)
67.6
(19.8)
56.4
(13.6)
46.0
(7.8)
37.0
(2.8)
53.4
(11.9)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 24.4
(−4.2)
25.7
(−3.5)
32.3
(0.2)
41.7
(5.4)
51.7
(10.9)
61.5
(16.4)
67.9
(19.9)
67.0
(19.4)
59.8
(15.4)
48.3
(9.1)
38.4
(3.6)
30.2
(−1.0)
45.7
(7.6)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 6.6
(−14.1)
9.9
(−12.3)
17.6
(−8.0)
30.4
(−0.9)
40.8
(4.9)
49.8
(9.9)
59.1
(15.1)
56.9
(13.8)
46.2
(7.9)
34.2
(1.2)
23.9
(−4.5)
15.6
(−9.1)
4.6
(−15.2)
Record low °F (°C) −7
(−22)
−6
(−21)
4
(−16)
18
(−8)
31
(−1)
41
(5)
49
(9)
44
(7)
36
(2)
26
(−3)
13
(−11)
−4
(−20)
−7
(−22)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.18
(81)
3.12
(79)
4.09
(104)
4.16
(106)
3.58
(91)
3.77
(96)
3.32
(84)
3.98
(101)
3.96
(101)
3.84
(98)
3.11
(79)
3.98
(101)
44.09
(1,120)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 8.5
(22)
10.7
(27)
7.0
(18)
0.9
(2.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
0.9
(2.3)
5.5
(14)
33.6
(85)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 11.2 10.4 11.2 11.4 12.1 11.2 8.9 9.2 8.2 9.9 9.4 11.5 124.7
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 4.5 4.2 2.6 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.4 2.9 14.8
Average relative humidity (%) 66.1 65.8 65.9 63.9 70.2 73.6 73.0 73.9 74.1 70.3 70.2 69.6 69.7
Average dew point °F (°C) 18.0
(−7.8)
18.7
(−7.4)
26.4
(−3.1)
34.3
(1.3)
46.8
(8.2)
57.4
(14.1)
63.1
(17.3)
63.5
(17.5)
57.2
(14.0)
45.9
(7.7)
36.0
(2.2)
24.6
(−4.1)
41.0
(5.0)
Source: NOAA[133][134][135]

See or edit raw graph data.

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18101,089
18201,50037.7%
18302,80086.7%
18403,29417.6%
18507,560129.5%
186013,29975.9%
187018,96942.6%
188027,64345.7%
189048,86676.8%
190070,99645.3%
1910102,05443.7%
1920143,55540.7%
1930146,7162.2%
1940147,1210.3%
1950158,7097.9%
1960156,748−1.2%
1970156,542−0.1%
1980142,546−8.9%
1990141,686−0.6%
2000139,529−1.5%
2010144,2293.4%
2020148,6543.1%
Population 1840–1970[75]
U.S. Decennial Census[136]
2018 Estimate[137]

As of the 2010 census, there were 144,229 people living in the city. The racial makeup of the city residents was 39.6% White; 34.6% Black or African American; 3.4% Asian; and 4.3% from two or more races. A total of 38.2% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 50,307 households, out of which 34.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 35.0% were married couples living together, 24.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 34.9% were non-families. 29.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.70 and the average family size was 3.34.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 28.4% under the age of 18, 11.2% from 18 to 24, 30.5% from 25 to 44, 18.4% from 45 to 64, and 11.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 31 years. For every 100 females, there were 91.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 86.3 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $34,658, and the median income for a family was $39,571. Males had a median income of $32,430 versus $26,966 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,306. About 16.2% of families and 18.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 24.8% of those under age 18 and 13.2% of those age 65 or over.

According to the 2020 five-year community survey, 48.2% of Bridgeport's population speaks a different primary language at home other than English, 33.8% percent of the city's total population speaks Spanish at home, and 22.5% speak English less than very well.[138] Bridgeport has the largest percentage and population of Hispanic Americans in the state of Connecticut. The city is known for having one of the largest communities of Puerto Ricans in the United States; Bridgeport has the 7th largest Puerto Rican population in the United States, with 30,250 people claiming Puerto Rican heritage in 1990, that number has grown to about 31,900 (22.10% of the population) in 2013.[139][140] 45,270 people (31%)[141] of Bridgeport's population is foreign born in 2010. Other than Puerto Ricans, 5.4% of Bridgeport's population was noted under Mexican in 2013,[142] a number that has grown to 5.8% (8,479 people) in the 2020 five-year American Community Survey, meaning Bridgeport has the largest Mexican population in New England.[143]Dominicans are 5,248 (3.53%) of Bridgeport's population. The total Latino Central American population (Guatemalans, Salvadorians, Nicaraguans, Hondurans, Costa Ricans, Panamanians) is 6,701 people total in the city (4.507%). 8,454 South Americans (5.697%); 4,020 Equadorians, 2,326 Colombians, Peruvians, and then populations from every Latin American nation except Bolivia can be found, with the smallest group being Paraguayans at 16 people according to the census.[144][145] [146] Bridgeport also has the largest Cuban population in the state, with more than 1,000 of the state's 10,600 Cubans living in Bridgeport, although down from the at least 5,000 Cubans in Bridgeport in 1980, and even more before that time in the 1950s according to the CTPost. Bridgeport was once a major destination for migrating Cubans, but many families have since moved to the city's suburbs or Florida. Bridgeport, along with Danbury, CT were considered as a potential locations for a new Ecuadorian consulate, but it instead opened in New Haven, CT, due to its immigrant welcoming mayor, in 2008.[147]

As for Portuguese-speaking peoples, the city also has the 12th largest Cape Verdean population in the country.[83] The group settled in the Hollow to work in factories and established a social club in the 1940s. The Cape Verdean Association of Bridgeport is located in the Hollow today.[148] The Portuguese community in the city is the largest in the state and the population primarily hails from the Tras Os Montes region of Portugal according to a 2018 research study, and the Hollow is considered the "Portuguese section" of Bridgeport.[149] The large Brazilian population in Bridgeport and Danbury led to the opening of a Brazilian consulate in the state capital of Hartford.[150] Migration to Connecticut began in the 90s, social networks brought immigrants from Governador Valadares, Minas Gerais in Brazil to Bridgeport, CT and Framingham, MA.[151] Fairfield County has the 7th largest Brazilian population of the United States, and 1/3rd of them live within Bridgeport's city limits, most of whom reside in the city's North End and St. Vincent neighborhood.

A small population of people from various majority-Muslim nations exists along with Kurds, at least 4,000 according to an estimate by a local mosque in 2008. Bridgeport Public Schools now observes Eid al-Fitr, effective 2024, thanks to a campaign by city 8th graders from Park City Magnet School, which found 10% of the school body was Muslim in a school project. Bengali in 2022 was the fifth most common primary language for Bridgeport Public School students (behind English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Haitian Creole, and is followed by Arabic at sixth place).[152][153] There is also a sizeable Kurdish population in Bridgeport, primarily from Iraq.[154] In total (and counting East and Southeast Asians), Bridgeport had 7,725 Asian residents according to the 2021[155] 5 year American Community Survey, up from 2020's count, 5,553 Asians. The largest national origin groups and their estimated populations are Vietnamese (1,258 people), Indian (1,153 people), Chinese, excluding Taiwanese and Pakistanis (both 982 people), and Filipinos (729 people). Other groups with over 500 people include Laotians and Cambodians, Bangladeshi Americans in the city numbered 385 people in the survey.[156]

Jamaicans, the state's largest foreign-born group,[157] have a significant presence in Bridgeport, with 6.3% of Bridgeport's population being Jamaican in 2013.[158] Bridgeport in 2013 was 10.2% non-hispanic West Indian.[159]

 
Bridgeport's East Side became the center of Puerto Rican migration in the 1950s. Shown here is East Main Street.

At least 92 languages are spoken as primary languages by Bridgeport Public School students according to district data in 2022. 3,145 students are missing data in primary language.[160]

The Bridgeport-Stamford metropolitan area (i.e.: Fairfield County) is home to the 7th largest percentage of Italian ancestry in the country (the population is 16.5% Italian). Italian Americans until 1985 were the largest ethnic group in Bridgeport itself, and had been since the 1920s.[161][162] According to 2010 census data, the Bridgeport MSA, containing all of Fairfield County, is the most economically unequal region in America, with 57% of the wealth going to the top income quintile.[163][164]

As of the census of 2000, there were 139,529 people, 50,307 households, and 32,749 families living in the city. The population density was 8,720.9 inhabitants per square mile (3,367.2/km2). There were 54,367 housing units at an average density of 3,398.1 per square mile (1,312.0/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 45.0% White, 30.8% African American, 0.5% Native American, 3.3% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 31.9% of the population.[165] European (white) ancestry groups include: Italian (8.6%), Irish (5.1%), Portuguese (2.9%), Polish (2.8%), and German (2.4%).

Economy edit

 
People's United Financial headquarters, the city's biggest non-medical employer

Since the decline of its industrial sector beginning in the middle of the 20th century, Bridgeport has gradually adjusted to a service-based economy. As late as 1985, the city was still home to company plants such as General Electric, with 1,900 employees, and Remington Products, with 900, both of which are now closed. Bryant Electric didn't close its plant until 1988. The last major factory to close was the Sikorsky helicopter plant in 2015.[166] Various famous industrial companies, that were founded and based in Bridgeport, such as ACME Sheer, Fortune 1000 Hubbell Incorporated, etc. are now based in suburban Shelton, two towns away. Subway, which started out in Bridgeport in 1965, is now based in Milford.

Though a level of industrial activity continues, healthcare, finance, and education have become the centerpieces of Bridgeport's economy.

The two largest employers in the city are Bridgeport's primary hospitals, Bridgeport Hospital and St. Vincent's Medical Center. Park City Hospital in the South End closed in 1993 and was reopened in 2010 as elderly and homeless housing units.[167]

In April 2022, M&T Bank of Buffalo, New York, merged with Bridgeport-based People's United Financial. The combined company is now the 11th largest bank in the United States, and gave M&T a foothold in the New England market, in total serving 12 states. Although M&T laid off Bridgeport employees (which made national headlines),[168] the company as part of this effort made Bridgeport Center the regional M&T headquarters of New England.[169]

Top employers edit

Top employers in Bridgeport according to the city's 2020 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report:[170]

 
Bridgeport Hospital, an affiliate of the Yale School of Medicine
 
St Vincent's Medical Center, affiliated with Columbia University and Quinnipiac University medical schools
 
A portion of the harbor in Bridgeport. Facilities shown are part of the United Illuminating coal-fired power plant.
# Employer # of employees
1 Bridgeport Hospital 3,243
2 St. Vincent's Medical Center 1,800
3 M&T Bank 1,117
4 Jewish Senior Services Center 358
5 Goodwin University 526
6 Sikorsky Aircraft 383
7 Housatonic Community College 343
8 Lacey Manufacturing Co. 350
9 Bridgeport Healthcare Center 297
10 alphabroder Prime Line 253
 
Bridgeport Bryant Electric Company, building 24 on left, building 7 on right, 80 Organ Street

Arts and culture edit

 
Palace Theatre in downtown Bridgeport, now abandoned
 
Palace and Majestic Theater exterior in Bridgeport, on Main Street, with failed renovation proposals over the years. Savory Hotel was upstairs.

Performing arts edit

Theater and music edit

Venues for live theater and music events include:[171]

  • Downtown Cabaret Theatre – cabaret, children's theater, concerts
  • The Stress Factory (300 seats) – comedy club with national and local acts
  • Klein Memorial Auditorium (1,400 seats) – home to the Greater Bridgeport Symphony, touring shows and concerts
  • Total Mortgage Arena – sporting events venue, but also hosts large concerts
  • Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater - outdoor concert venue

Music festivals and concert series edit

Bridgeport was the annual home to Gathering of the Vibes, a weekend-long arts, music and camping festival, until it ended in 2015.[172]

Beginning in 2022, Bridgeport played host to the Sound on Sound Music Festival, at Seaside Park. Past performers included; John Mayer, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Dave Matthews Band, Hozier, and The Roots.[173]

The Greater Bridgeport Symphony, established in 1945, performs at Bridgeport's 1,400-seat Klein Memorial Auditorium. Gustav Meier directed the orchestra from 1972 to 2013.

Museums and zoos edit

The Greater Bridgeport metropolitan area is home to the Maritime Aquarium in Norwalk, 30 minutes from downtown Bridgeport.[177] One of the two aquariums in Connecticut, the aquarium focuses on Long Island Sound as well as creatures and conservation efforts from around the world.[178]

Historic districts edit

Bridgeport has five local historic districts, where exterior changes to structures are under the control of two Historic District Commissions:

Bridgeport was once home to a Little Asia along Wood Avenue in the West Side, established in 2012 by local business owners with a sign and a festival every year. By 2016 the name had fallen out of use, and the committee no longer exists. The more or less 3 or 4 block area is still home to Asian restaurants, an insurance and tax agency with Vietnamese, Mandarin, Laotian, Cantonese as well as Spanish language services,[179] and a Vietnamese grocery store.[180][181]

Cuisine edit

NerdWallet ranked Bridgeport the 100th most foodie city in the United States, 2nd in Connecticut behind New Haven (which was ranked #97). Nerdwallet in 2022 ranked Bridgeport as the 17th most ethnically diverse city in the United States, making it the most diverse in New England, and the third most diverse in the New York Metropolitan Area in an annual ranking. It ranked 23rd in 2021, and #22 in 2015. It is #28 on Niche.com "2022 Most Diverse Cities in America" list. Bridgeport's Madison Avenue, and Hollow Brazilian restaurants, located alongside various Portuguese ones, have been mentioned by publications such as the New York Times. Examples include churascaria restaurants.[182] It is "among the top cities in the state to immerse yourself in Brazilian traditions" according to CTBites.[183] Azteca was ranked among the best Mexican restaurants in Connecticut in 2020 according to Connecticut Magazine, along with Pho Hong Thom and Pho Saigon in Bridgeport's Little Asia on the West Side for best Vietnamese places in the state.[184][185]

Sports edit

 
Total Mortgage Arena (then Webster Bank Arena)
 
2011 MACC Tournament at the Webster Bank Arena (Total Mortgage Arena)
Club League Venue Established Championships
Bridgeport Islanders AHL Total Mortgage Arena 2001 0
CT United FC MLS Next Pro New Waterfront Stadium 2024 0

Total Mortgage Arena serves as the city's sports and hospitality center. Seating 10,000, the Arena serves as the home rink of the Bridgeport Islanders American Hockey League team, the farm team of the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League.[186] Starting in 2024, it also serves as the home of PWHL New York of the Professional Women's Hockey League.[187]

The arena served as the temporary home of the Westchester Knicks of the NBA G League (the farm team for the NBA New York Knicks) from 2021 to 2023 when the team's home stadium, Westchester County Center in White Plains, NY iwas being used as a vaccination clinic.[188][189]

For college teams, Total Mortgage serves as the home court of Fairfield University's basketball team.

The Ballpark at Harbor Yard served as a minor-league baseball stadium from 1998 to 2017. It was built in 1998 to serve as the homefield of the Bridgeport Bluefish. From 2001 to 2003 it was the homefield for the Bridgeport Barrage, a Major League Lacrosse team. It is downtown on a former brownfield site. It is visually prominent to commuters on I-95 or on passing trains. On August 8, 2017, Mayor Joe Ganim announced that the Bluefish would be ending their 20-year stint at the ballpark at the end of the 2017 season. The ballpark was converted into an amphitheatre. The Bluefish played their final home game at the park on September 17, 2017, losing by a score of 9–2 to the Somerset Patriots.[190]

Kennedy Stadium serves as a community sports facility. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, it was the home of an Atlantic Coast Football League minor league football team, the Bridgeport Jets, a New York Jets farm team also known locally as the Hi-Ho Jets due to their sponsorship by the (Hi-Ho) D'Addario construction company.

 
John F. Kennedy stadium in Bridgeport

Fairfield University is in the neighboring town of Fairfield, and many of the athletic teams play on campus. Only the men's and women's basketball teams play in Bridgeport.

Nutmeg Curling Club, one of two curling clubs in Connecticut, is in Bridgeport. It is the home club of the 2013 USA Mixed National Champions,[191] led by club members Derek Surka and Charissa Lin. The club is a member of the Grand National Curling Club Region.

Bridgeport native Jim O'Rourke was the first baseball player to earn a hit in National League history in 1876. The founder and original owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Charles Ebbets, married his second wife in Bridgeport in 1922, five years before his death.

In early 2024, MLS Next Pro awarded an expansion team to Bridgeport.[192] Connecticut United FC plan to play at a new stadium to be located on the waterfront at a former dog-racing track, as stadium plans were approved by the Bridgeport government in November 2023.[193]

Amateur soccer team GZS Bridgeport play in the UPSL, playing home games at Kennedy Stadium.

Parks and recreation edit

The city has 1,300 acres of public space, with a pocket park in nearly every neighborhood.[194] Bridgeport's public park system led to its official nickname, "the Park City". The city's first public park was the westerly portion of McLevy Green, first set aside as a public square in 1806;[195] the Clinton Park Militia Grounds (1666) and Old Mill Green (1717) were set aside earlier as public commons by the towns of Fairfield and Stratford, respectively. Washington Park in 1850 was located in the center of East Bridgeport.[196] As the city rapidly grew in population, residents recognized the need for more public parks and by 1864, Barnum and other residents had donated approximately 44 acres (18 ha) to create Seaside Park, now increased by acquisition and landfill to 375 acres (152 ha).[197] In 1878, over 100 acres (40 ha) of land bordering the Pequonnock River was added as Beardsley Park.[198] Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed New York City's Central Park, designed both Seaside and Beardsley Parks.[199] Over time, more parks were added including 35-acre (14 ha) Beechwood Park and Pleasure Beach, home to an amusement park for many years. Went Field on the West End, between Wordin Avenue and Norman Street, used to be the winter headquarters of Barnum's circus.

Architecture edit

Bridgeport was largely bypassed by Fortune 500 companies moving to Fairfield County in the second half of the 20th century, due to the city's growing reputation for having a rough industrial character. Thus was also largely bypassed by the skyscraper construction boom of the 70s and 80s, resulting in fewer modern skyscrapers than otheir cities [201] The tallest building in Bridgeport is currently the Richard Meier-designed 16-story, 248-foot (76 m) Bridgeport Center, which was completed in 1989 and surpassed the 18-story Park City Plaza, which was completed in 1973.

Bridgeport in the early 20th century banned further construction of the triple decker, very common in the Hollow, Madison Avenue, in the East Side with other working class housing styles and Victorian mansions, the West Side with Queen Ann multifamiliy homes, parts of Black Rock, and the East End neighborhood.[202][203][107]

Government edit

 
City Hall
 
Margaret Morton Government Center
 
District Courthouse, one of three courthouses in the city (local, state and federal)
 
Bridgeport Public Library Main Branch

The city is governed by the mayor-council system. Twenty members of the city council are elected from districts. Each district elects two members. The mayor is elected at-large by the entire city

Bridgeport is notable for having had a socialist mayor for 24 years, Jasper McLevy, who served from 1933 to 1957.

The city's current mayor, Joseph P. Ganim, is a convicted felon who was sentenced to nine years in prison after conviction in 2003 of 16 federal counts including racketeering, extortion, conspiracy, bribery, mail fraud, and filing false tax returns arising from Ganim's "role in a six-year scheme to shake down city contractors…”.[204][205][206]

In June 2006, Mayor John M. Fabrizi admitted that he had used cocaine while in office.[207]

Bridgeport is recognized for its polarizing political culture. Mayor Ganim has served the city seven terms since first taking office in 1991.[205] After his release from prison in 2015, Ganim announced his mayoral campaign to serve a sixth term in office. His campaign ran on a theme of providing him with a "second-chance," as he was renowned for his work of escaping the city from bankruptcy and build its economy from a post-industrial standpoint.[208]

In a divisive primary election between him, the city's mayor at the time, Bill Finch, and University of Bridgeport professor and real estate developer, Mary-Jane Foster, Ganim was able to receive the endorsement of the politically volatile Democratic Town Committee, paving the way to his victory for being reelected mayor at the end of year.[208]

Bridgeport's Democratic Town Committee has the authority to nominate and endorse Democratic candidates running for local office, and they have the resources to outperform challenger slates that may compete with them. The chairman is former state representative and local restaurateur, Mario Testa.[209]

Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 29, 2019[210]
Party Active voters Inactive voters Total voters Percentage
Republican 4,505 205 4,710 6.06%
Democratic 48,117 2,154 50,271 64.73%
Unaffiliated 20,922 1,136 22,058 28.40%
Minor parties 589 32 621 0.80%
Total 74,133 3,527 77,660 100%

Bridgeport votes Democratic at the presidential level. In 1972 Richard M. Nixon was the last Republican to win the city; since then Democrats have prevailed, often by comfortable margins, the lone exception being 1984 when Walter Mondale carried the city by just 76 votes (0.16 percent) over Ronald Reagan.

Bridgeport city vote
by party in presidential elections[211][212]
Year Democratic Republican Third parties
2020 79.44% 33,515 19.60% 8,269 0.96% 404
2016 80.98% 32,035 16.67% 6,596 2.35% 929
2012 85.75% 32,135 13.79% 5,168 0.46% 173
2008 83.52% 33,976 15.99% 6,507 4.89% 199
2004 70.66% 26,280 27.76% 10,326 1.57% 585
2000 72.68% 24,303 22.15% 7,406 5.18% 1,731
1996 69.16% 22,883 20.51% 6,785 10.33% 3,419
1992 53.20% 22,321 31.34% 13,149 15.46% 6,486
1988 57.50% 23,831 41.22% 17,084 1.27% 527
1984 49.75% 24,332 49.59% 24,256 0.66% 321
1980 51.24% 23,505 41.82% 19,185 6.94% 3,185
1976 55.37% 26,330 43.79% 20,824 0.83% 397
1972 43.67% 24,572 54.09% 30,436 2.25% 1,265
1968 53.27% 30,065 37.23% 21,014 9.50% 5,363
1964 69.90% 43,710 30.10% 18,818 0.00% 0
1960 61.14% 41,950 38.86% 26,667 0.00% 0
1956 38.57% 26,560 61.43% 42,308 0.00% 0

Taxes edit

Bridgeport has one of the highest property tax rates in Connecticut.[213] A 2017 Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Minnesota Center of Fiscal Excellence study determined that Bridgeport had the second-highest property tax burden of any U.S. city (after Detroit), and the fourth-highest for commercial properties valued at more than $1 million (after Detroit, New York City, and Chicago).[214]

In 2016, Bridgeport enacted a 29% increase in the property tax rate, among the highest one-year property tax rate increases in recent U.S. history, in an effort to reduce the municipal deficit.[215] A citywide reassessment in 2015 determined that the value of taxable property in the city was $6 billion, a decline of $1 billion; the property tax increases, combined with property value decreases, have been a consistent political issue in the city.[215]

Education edit

Higher education edit

Bridgeport is home to the University of Bridgeport, Housatonic Community College, Paier College, St. Vincent's College, and the Yeshiva Gedola of Bridgeport. The Yeshiva Gedola is the home of the Bridgeport Community Kollel, a rabbinic fellowship program.[216] The University of Bridgeport's Ernest C. Trefz School of Business offers undergraduate and graduate programs.

Sacred Heart University is located in the neighboring suburb of Fairfield on the town line, with its campus extending into the North End of Bridgeport on Park Avenue. Many of its students live in the city's North End. It is the second largest Catholic University in New England (behind Boston College). [217] Sacred Heart has campuses in nearby Stamford, as well as Griswold, CT and Dingle, Ireland, as well as St. Vincent's College in Bridgeport. The University of Bridgeport has secondary campuses in Waterbury and Stamford. Paier College near the University of Bridgeport is the only Private Arts college in Connecticut. Founded in 1946 in West Haven and previously located in Hamden, the college recently relocated to Seaside Park in Bridgeport.[218][219]

The Greater Bridgeport Area (made up of the surrounding towns) is home to Fairfield University in neighboring Fairfield, and Western Connecticut State University in Danbury.

Public education edit

The city's public school system has 30 elementary schools, three comprehensive high schools, two alternative programs and an interdistrict vocational aquaculture school. The system has about 20,800 students, making the Bridgeport Public Schools the second largest school system in Connecticut after Hartford. It is ranked #158 out of the 164 Connecticut school districts.[220] The school system employs a professional staff of more than 1,700.

The city has started a large school renovation and construction program, with plans for new schools and modernization of existing buildings.

Public high schools

  • Bassick High School was established in 1929. It serves students residing south of Route 1, in the Black Rock, the Hollow, Downtown, West End and South End neighborhoods. 1181 Fairfield Ave, Bridgeport, CT 06605.
  • Central High School (CHS) was established in 1876. The current building was built in 1964. It houses the Central magnet program. Serves students from north of Route 1, including the North End, part of Brooklawn and St. Vincent neighborhoods. 1 Lincoln Blvd, Bridgeport, CT 06606.
  • Warren Harding High School is home to the International Baccalaureate Program (IBO) and the Health Magnet Program in association with Bridgeport Hospital, St. Vincent's Medical Center, and Bridgeport Manor. It is the alma mater of Walt Kelly, creator of Pogo. It serves East End, East Side, Mill Hill and North Bridgeport students. 379 Bond St, Bridgeport, CT 06610.
  • Bridgeport Regional Vocational Aquaculture School (BRVAS) is a half-day school specializing in marine and aquaculture curricula near Captain's Cove and open to students from surrounding towns. It serves all Bridgeport applicants and applicants from neighboring towns' (Trumbull, Stratford, Fairfield, Milford, Shelton, Monroe, and Region 9) school districts. 60 St. Stephens Rd, Bridgeport, CT.

Public magnet high schools

  • Fairchild Wheeler Interdistrict Multi-Magnet High School is three specialIzard STEM high schools in one building: an IT and software technology school, aerospace/hydrospace school, and biotechnology school. It serves all Bridgeport applicants and applicants from neighboring towns (Trumbull, Stratford, Fairfield, Milford, Shelton, Monroe, Region 9). Acceptance is by public lottery. 840 Old Town Road, Bridgeport, CT 06606.
  • Central Magnet (part of Central High School) is a public preparatory magnet school. It serves all Bridgeport applicants, who must meet grade requirements to enter the lottery. 1 Lincoln Blvd, Bridgeport, CT 06606.

Public military/trade high schools

  • Bridgeport Military Academy (BMA) is for students looking for a career in public safety. Partnerships with local fire, police, Homeland Security and other departments. It is open to all Bridgeport applicants. 160 Iranistan Ave, Bridgeport, CT 06604.
  • Bullard-Havens Technical High School is a vocational high school. It is a state school, not part of Bridgeport Public Schools.

Charter schools edit

  • The Bridge Academy: Bridgeport Charter High School
  • Achievement First Bridgeport Charter High School
  • Great Oaks Charter School
  • Park City Prep Charter School

Private education edit

Bridgeport is also home to private schools including Bridgeport Hope School (K–8), Bridgeport International Academy (grades 9–12), Catholic Academies of Bridgeport (Pre-K–8), Kolbe Cathedral High School (9–12), St. Andrew Academy (Pre-K–8), and St. Ann Academy (Pre-K–8).

Media edit

Radio edit

  • WCUM AM 1450; 1,000 watts (formerly WJBX-AM, and before that, WNAB-AM) Spanish Format station better known as Radio Cumbre.
  • WICC-AM 600; 1,000 watts (daytime), 500 watts (nighttime) – WICC began broadcasting on November 21, 1926, when a previous radio station, WCWS, was given a new name, WICC. The last three letters standing for Industrial Capitol of Connecticut. The Bridgeport Broadcasting Company Inc. was the new station's owner. Back then, the station was powered at 500 watts. From 1951 to 1956 one of the station's radio hosts was Bob Crane, who later went on to play Col. Robert Hogan on the Hogan's Heroes television comedy series.[221] WICC's transmitter is on Pleasure Beach in Bridgeport on a peninsula extending into Long Island Sound.
  • WEBE-FM 107.9; 50,000 watts. WEBE108 is Connecticut's Best Music Variety! The station is owned by Connoisseur Media. Licensed to Westport, CT with studios in Milford and WEBE's transmitter is located in Shelton. Besides a standard analog transmission, WEBE broadcasts over one HD Radio channel, and is available online.
  • WEZN-FM 99.9; 27,500 watts (formerly WJZZ-FM). Star 99.9 is Today's Best Mix! The station is owned by Connoisseur Media. Lincensed to Bridgeport, CT with studios in Milford and WEZN's transmitter is located in Trumbull.
  • WPKN-FM 89.5; 10,000 watts[222]

Newspapers edit

  • Elsolnews.com, a community Spanish-language weekly newspaper covering news and events, based in Stamford.
  • HaitianVoice.com, a Bridgeport-based newspaper covering local news in English, Haitian Creole and French.
  • Brazil News covers stories from Bridgeport in Portuguese.[223]
  • Connecticut Post – Formerly the Bridgeport Post and Bridgeport Telegram, which covers Bridgeport and the surrounding area. The newspaper is printed daily. It is owned by Hearst Connecticut Media.

Television edit

Bridgeport was NBC's pioneer UHF TV test site from December 29, 1949, to August 23, 1952;[224] the equipment from the "Operation Bridgeport" tests was later deployed commercially at KPTV in Portland, Oregon (1952–1957). While Bridgeport is primarily served by New York City or New Haven-Hartford stations, some local UHF broadcasters operate today:

  • WEDW channel 49; one of the Connecticut Public Television stations, broadcasts from Bridgeport and can be seen in Hartford.
  • In 2011, WTNH-TV opened a satellite studio in the offices of the Connecticut Post Downtown on State Street.
  • WZME channel 43; a Story Television affiliate, currently channel sharing with WEDW and licensed to Bridgeport

Cable:

Movies filmed in Bridgeport edit

A list of films shot or partially filmed in the city:[225]

Television shows filmed in Bridgeport edit

  • Kitchen Nightmares (Season 4, Episode 7, "Tavolini Restaurant", 2011)
  • Brian Boitano Skating Spectacular (2010) (TV)
  • Ghost Adventures:"Remington Arms Factory" (Episode 21, November 2009)
  • WWE Raw (November 18, 2002; March 8, 2004; December 26, 2005; August 21, 2006; April 9, 2007; April 27, 2009; June 21, 2010, April 11, 2011, and September 17, 2012)
  • WWE Smackdown, ECW, and NXT (May 7, 2002; March 4, 2003; August 2, 2005; December 9, 2008; November 24, 2009; November 2, 2010; and November 15, 2011)
  • Oprah Winfrey Presents: Mitch Albom's For One More Day (2007)
  • WWE Raw's 15th Anniversary Special (2007)
  • Flip This House: "Burning Down the House" (2005)
  • Extreme Makeover: Home Edition (2003 & 2007)
  • Made in America (2003)
  • U.S. Bounty Hunter (2003)
  • Muggsy (1976)
  • The Twentieth Century (1957, The Class of '58 episode)
  • Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye (TV movie, 1977), bar scene of JFK campaigning with local workers filmed in the Ideal Bar on Barnum Avenue across from the former Singer Building
  • Live PD (2016–2017)
  • Family Guy 2010
  • Sneaky Pete (2015–), although shot in the state of New York, much of the show takes place in Bridgeport

Infrastructure edit

Transportation edit

Airports edit

 
Sikorsky Memorial Airport (BDR), in neighboring Stratford; no longer offers commercial flights.

Sikorsky Memorial Airport in neighboring Stratford was previously owned by the City of Bridgeport before closing a deal in 2016 that sold the land to Stratford. It once provided regional flights to major cities, but commercial operations at the airport were terminated in November 1999.

General aviation airports Distance from Downtown/location
Sikorsky Memorial Airport 3 miles east in Stratford, Connecticut
Danbury Municipal Airport 20 miles northwest in Danbury, Connecticut
Waterbury–Oxford Airport 21 miles north in Oxford, Connecticut
Teterboro Airport 50 miles southwest in Teterboro, New Jersey
Regional airports Distance form Downtown/location
Tweed New Haven Airport 17 miles east in East Haven, Connecticut
Westchester County Airport 28 miles west in Westchester County, New York
International airports Distance from Downtown/location
LaGuardia Airport 45 miles southwest in Queens, New York
John F. Kennedy International Airport 48 miles southwest in Queens, NY
Stewart International Airport 52 miles northwest in Newburgh, New York
Bradley International Airport 58 miles northeast in Windsor Locks, Connecticut
Newark Liberty International Airport 61 miles southwest in Newark, New Jersey

Roads edit

 
A typical Bridgeport street sign, from Thorme Street in the North End

Bridgeport has several major roadways. Interstate 95 and the Route 8/Route 25 Connector meet in Downtown Bridgeport. I-95 runs east–west near the coast heading towards New York City to the southwest and Providence to the northeast. Routes 8 and 25 run north–south across the city, with the two routes splitting just north of the city. Route 8 continues towards Waterbury and Torrington and Route 25 continues towards the Danbury area. Both Routes 8 and 25 connect to the Merritt Parkway in the adjacent town of Trumbull.

Other major surface arteries are U.S. 1 (the Boston Post Road), which runs east–west north of Downtown, and Main Street, which runs north–south towards Trumbull center. The city also has several secondary state highways, namely, Route 127 (East Main Street), Route 130 (Connecticut Avenue, Stratford Avenue, Fairfield Avenue and Water Street), and the Huntington Turnpike.

Railroad and ferries edit

 
A New Haven Line train approaching the intermodal transit hub at Bridgeport Station

The Bridgeport Traction Company provided streetcar service in the region until 1937. The Housatonic Railroad carried passengers North through the Pequonnock and Housatonic Valleys prior to 1933.

The city is connected to nearby New York City by both Amtrak and Metro-North commuter trains, which serve Bridgeport's Metro-North station. Many residents commute to New York jobs on these trains, and the city to some extent is developing as an outpost of New York–based workers seeking cheaper rents and larger living spaces. Connecting service is also available to Waterbury via Metro-North, and New Haven via Amtrak and Metro-North. Shoreline East service links Old Saybrook and New London with New Haven, which extends to Bridgeport and Stamford during weekday rush hours only.

The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry service runs from Bridgeport across Long Island Sound to Port Jefferson, New York; the three vessels Grand Republic, P.T. Barnum, and Park City transport both automobiles and passengers.

Buses edit

 
A GBTA bus driving past North Avenue in the Hollow section of Bridgeport

The Greater Bridgeport Transit Authority (GBTA) provides bus service to Bridgeport and its immediate suburbs. Route 2 the Coastal Link goes west to Norwalk and east to the Connecticut Post Mall in Milford, from where Connecticut Transit can bring passengers to the New Haven Green. Greyhound and Peter Pan Bus Lines both offer intercity bus service to points throughout the Northeast and points beyond.

Emergency services edit

Fire department edit

The Bridgeport Fire Department provides fire protection and emergency medical services at the Basic life support level to the city of Bridgeport.

Police department edit

The Bridgeport Police Department is the primary law enforcement agency in Bridgeport, Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. It is responsible for most law enforcement within the geographical boundaries of City of Bridgeport.

The Connecticut State Police Troop G barracks is located in Bridgeport but they do not primarily perform law enforcement functions in the city.

Emergency medical services edit

Emergency medical services are provided by American Medical Response at the paramedic level.

In popular culture edit

 
Mark Twain quote on Library Way in Midtown Manhattan

Novels set in Bridgeport include:

Notable people edit


See also edit

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bridgeport, connecticut, bridgeport, redirects, here, other, uses, bridgeport, disambiguation, bridgeport, most, populous, city, state, connecticut, fifth, most, populous, city, england, with, population, 2020, located, eastern, fairfield, county, mouth, pequo. Bridgeport redirects here For other uses see Bridgeport disambiguation Bridgeport is the most populous city in the U S state of Connecticut 7 and the fifth most populous city in New England with a population of 148 654 in 2020 3 Located in eastern Fairfield County at the mouth of the Pequonnock River on Long Island Sound it is a port city 60 miles 97 km from Manhattan and 40 miles 64 km from The Bronx It borders the towns of Trumbull to the north Fairfield to the west and Stratford to the east Bridgeport and other towns in Fairfield County make up the Greater Bridgeport Planning Region as well as the Bridgeport Stamford Norwalk Danbury metropolitan statistical area the second largest metropolitan area in Connecticut The Bridgeport Stamford Norwalk Danbury metropolis forms part of the New York metropolitan area BridgeportCityPerry Memorial Arch facing southwards towards Seaside ParkDowntown BridgeportTotal Mortgage ArenaBridgeport StationHartford HealthCare AmphitheaterBridgeport CenterBarnum MuseumConnecticut s Beardsley ZooFlagSealNicknames The Park City BPT 1 Mottoes Industria Crecimus Latin By industry we thrive English Fairfield County and Connecticut Greater Bridgeport Planning Region and ConnecticutShow BridgeportShow ConnecticutShow the United StatesCoordinates 41 11 11 N 73 11 44 W 41 18639 N 73 19556 W 41 18639 73 19556CountryUnited StatesStateConnecticutCountyFairfieldRegionCT MetropolitanMSABridgeport Stamford NorwalkCSANew YorkIncorporated town 1821Incorporated city 1836Named forA drawbridge over the Pequonnock RiverGovernment TypeMayor council MayorJoseph P Ganim D Area City19 4 sq mi 50 2 km2 Land16 0 sq mi 41 4 km2 Water3 4 sq mi 8 8 km2 Urban397 29 sq mi 1 029 0 km2 Elevation3 ft 1 m Population 2020 2 3 City148 654 RankUS 172nd Density7 700 sq mi 3 000 km2 Urban 4 916 408 US 51st Urban density2 306 6 sq mi 890 6 km2 Metro939 904 US 57th DemonymBridgeporterGDP 5 Bridgeport MSA 104 368 billion 2022 Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 Eastern ZIP Codes06601 06602 06604 06608 06610 06650 06673 06699 6 Area code s 203 475FIPS code09 08000GNIS feature ID205720AirportSikorsky Memorial AirportMajor highwaysCommuter railWebsitebridgeportct wbr gov Inhabited by the Paugussett Native American tribe until English settlement in the 1600s Bridgeport was incorporated in 1821 as a town and as a city in 1836 Showman P T Barnum was a resident of the city and served as the town s mayor 1871 8 Barnum built four houses in Bridgeport and housed his circus in town during winter The city in the early 20th century saw an economic and population boom becoming by all measures Connecticut s chief manufacturing city by 1905 9 Bridgeport was the site of the world s first mutual telephone exchange 1877 10 the first dental hygiene school 1949 11 and the first bank telephone bill service in the US 1981 12 Inventor Harvey Hubbell II invented the electric plug outlet in Bridgeport in 1912 13 The Frisbie Pie Company was founded and operated in Bridgeport 14 The world s first Subway restaurant opened in the city s North End in 1965 15 After World War II industrial restructuring and suburbanization caused the loss of many large companies and affluent residents leaving Bridgeport struggling with issues of poverty and violent crime 16 Since the beginning of the 21st century Bridgeport has begun extensive redevelopment of its downtown and other neighborhoods Bridgeport s crime rate started going down significantly around 2010 by 2018 it had been reduced by almost 50 percent 17 Bridgeport is home to three museums 18 the University of Bridgeport Housatonic Community College Paier College and part of Sacred Heart University 19 20 as well as the state s only zoo 21 Bridgeport is officially nicknamed Park City due to its 35 public parks taking up 1 300 acres including two large ones Although none are headquartered within the city itself more than a dozen Fortune 500 companies are based in its metropolitan area which it shares with Stamford Bridgeport by various sites has been consistently ranked as among the 25 most ethnically and culturally diverse American cities 22 23 24 25 26 Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial history 1 2 19th century 1 3 20th century 1 4 21st century 1 5 Notable speeches 1 6 Timeline of notable first and inventions 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhoods 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Economy 4 1 Top employers 5 Arts and culture 5 1 Performing arts 5 1 1 Theater and music 5 1 2 Music festivals and concert series 5 2 Museums and zoos 5 3 Historic districts 5 4 Cuisine 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 8 Architecture 9 Government 9 1 Taxes 10 Education 10 1 Higher education 10 2 Public education 10 3 Charter schools 10 4 Private education 11 Media 11 1 Radio 11 2 Newspapers 11 3 Television 11 4 Movies filmed in Bridgeport 11 5 Television shows filmed in Bridgeport 12 Infrastructure 12 1 Transportation 12 1 1 Airports 12 1 2 Roads 12 1 3 Railroad and ferries 12 1 4 Buses 12 2 Emergency services 12 2 1 Fire department 12 2 2 Police department 12 2 3 Emergency medical services 13 In popular culture 14 Notable people 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory editMain article History of Bridgeport Connecticut Bridgeport was inhabited by the Paugussett native American tribe during the start of European colonization The earliest European communal settlement was in the historical Stratfield district 27 along US Route 1 known in colonial times as the King s Highway Close by Mount Grove Cemetery was laid out on what was a native village that extended past the 1650s 28 It is also an ancient Paugusett burial ground The burgeoning farming community grew and became a center of trade shipbuilding and whaling The town was incorporated to subsidize the Housatonic Railroad and rapidly industrialized following the rail line s connection to the New York and New Haven railroad The town was given its name because of the need for bridges over the Pequonnock River that provided a navigable port at the mouth of the river Manufacturing was the mainstay of the local economy until the 1970s Colonial history edit The first documented European settlement within the present city limits of Bridgeport took place in 1644 centered at Black Rock Harbor and along North Avenue between Park and Briarwood Avenues The place was called Pequonnock 9 Quiripi for Cleared Land after a band of the Paugussett an Algonquian speaking Native American people who occupied this area One of their sacred sites was Golden Hill which overlooked the harbor and was the location of natural springs and their planting fields It has since been blasted through for construction of an expressway 29 30 The Golden Hill Indians were granted a reservation here by the Colony of Connecticut in 1639 it lasted until 1802 One of the tribes acquired land for a small reservation in the late 19th century that was recognized by the state It is retained in the Town of Trumbull In 1639 Roger Ludlow deputy governor of the English Connecticut Colony was ordered by the colony s General Assembly in Hartford to establish two plantations one at Cupheg the mouth of the Housatonic River today Stratford and one at the harbor at the mouth of the Pequonnock River today s Bridgeport Harbor Ludlow disobeyed orders and instead established a settlement in Unconway today s Fairfield probably due to fears of the large Paugussett settlement at Golden Hill which was a sacred site of theirs so it is believed that they perhaps instead settled in sparsely populated land surrounding the village 31 In 1659 the general court in Hartford established the official borders of the Paugussett Reservation 32 Bridgeport s early years were marked by residents reliance on fishing and farming This was similar to the economy of the Paugussett who had cultivated corn beans and squash and fished and gathered shellfish from both the river and sound A village called Newfield began to develop around the corner of State and Water streets in the 1760s 33 The area officially became known as Stratfield in 1695 9 or 1701 due to its location between the already existing towns of Stratford and Fairfield 34 During the American Revolution Newfield Harbor was a center of privateering 30 9 19th century edit nbsp East Bridgeport Bridge over Pequannock River c 1850 By the time of the State of Connecticut s ratification of the Articles of Confederation in 1781 many of the local farmers held shares in vessels trading at Newfield Harbor or had begun trading in their own name Newfield initially expanded around the coasting trade with Boston New York and Baltimore and the international trade with the West Indies 33 35 The commercial activity of the village was clustered around the wharves on the west bank of the Pequonnock while the churches were erected inland on Broad Street In 1787 the Fairfield County Court ordered the laying out and widening of what is now State Street and Main Street in downtown Bridgeport along the Pequannock River then Newfield It was assumed before the Revolution that this land would grow into a city 36 37 Bridgeport grew up without a plan or in spite of one Samuel Orcutt A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport 1886 Chapter XIX In 1800 the village became the Borough of Bridgeport 40 the first so incorporated in the state 41 It was named for the Newfield or Lottery Bridge across the Pequonnock connecting the wharves on its east and west banks 39 Bridgeport Bank was established in 1806 42 In 1821 the township of Bridgeport became independent of Stratford 43 nbsp Map of Bridgeport 1824 In 1821 a small community of remaining Golden Hill Pauguasett Natives along with free blacks and runaway slaves was established in the South End along Main Street known as Little Liberia with its own churches schools and hotels and served as a stop in the underground railroad Many remaining Paugusset Indians also lived there 44 The West India trade died down around 1840 33 but by that time the Bridgeport Steamship Company 1824 45 and Bridgeport Whaling Company 1833 had been incorporated 33 and the Housatonic Railroad chartered 1836 46 47 The HRRC ran upstate along the Housatonic Valley connecting with Massachusetts s Berkshire Railroad at the state line Bridgeport was chartered as Connecticut s fifth city in 1836 43 48 51 in order to enable the town council to secure funding ultimately 150 000 to provide to the HRRC and ensure that it would terminate in Bridgeport 52 The Naugatuck Railroad connecting Bridgeport to Waterbury and Winsted along the Naugatuck River was chartered in 1845 and began operation four years later 53 54 The same year the New York and New Haven Railroad began operation 55 connecting Bridgeport to New York and the other towns along the north shore of the Long Island Sound Now a major junction the city began to industrialize The city s first immigrants were Irish Catholics who settled in the Sterling Hill section of the Hollow Having come to the US to escape the famine they arrived in town during the 1830s to build the railroad They mostly lived in wooden four to six family tenements often subdivided homes In 1842 showman P T Barnum spent a night in Bridgeport and there met Charles Stratton a local dwarf He soon became part of Barnum s act and a star under the name General Tom Thumb Barnum moved to Bridgeport and built four houses in the city over the course of his life the first being Iranistan 56 nbsp Iranistan the residence of P T Barnum in 1848 In 1852 Barnum began an endeavor with William Noble to develop the land inherited by Noble on the other side of the Pequonnock River across the river from Bridgeport to be known as East Bridgeport with Washington Park at the center 57 The new neighborhood had homes commerce and factories centered around East Main Street The neighborhood eventually became the East Side of Bridgeport occasionally spelled Eastside In 1863 during the Civil War the Bridgeport Standard ran a series of articles encouraging the creation of a public park in the city This led wealthy residents P T Barnum William Noble and Nathaniel Wheeler to purchase the land on Long Island Sound and donating the land to the city in 1864 The land on the shore became Seaside Park A second park was built near East Main Street when in 1878 James Beardsley donated more than 100 acres 40 ha to the city along the Pequonnock River under the condition that the land be kept the same forever as a public park Both parks were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted known for creating Central Park These two large public parks gave Bridgeport the nickname The Park City 58 The county s Catholic seat St Augustine Cathedral was finished in 1869 built by the Irish who had arrived 30 year earlier Saint James Church predating the Archdiocese of Hartford was the first Catholic congregation in Fairfield County starting with 250 members in 1842 The congregation gave rise to St Augustine s in Sterling Hill the seat of the Diocese of Bridgeport 59 Following the Civil War the town held several iron foundries and factories manufacturing firearms metallic cartridges horse harnesses locks and blinds 43 Wheeler amp Wilson s sewing machines were exported throughout the world Bridgeport absorbed the West End and the village of Black Rock and its busy harbor in 1870 60 In 1875 P T Barnum was elected mayor of the town which afterwards served as the winter headquarters of Barnum and Bailey s Circus and Buffalo Bill s Wild West Show 9 Barnum also helped establish Fairfield County s first hospital Conn s 3rd and the Bridgeport Port Jefferson ferry connecting the town to Long Island 61 Harvey Hubbell founded Hubbell Incorporated in Bridgeport in 1888 The Holmes amp Edwards Silver Co was founded in 1882 its wares sold nationally and the company became part of the International Silver Company in 1898 62 The H amp E brand continued well into the 1950s and was advertised in national magazines such as LIFE and Ladies Home Journal 63 Hungarian immigrants began to arrive which led to the Rackoczi Hungarian Aid Association in Bridgeport in 1887 and the American Hungarian Immigrant Aid Society in 1892 64 They established themselves in the West End In 1894 Bridgeport s Slavic immigrants played a major role in the development of the Orthodox Christian faith in America when they met with Fr Alexis Toth now Saint Alexis and founded Holy Ghost Russian Orthodox Church in the city s Eastside This parish became the mother church of all Orthodox Churches in New England 20th century edit From 1870 to 1910 Bridgeport became the largest industrial center in Connecticut its population rose from around 25 000 to over 100 000 including thousands of Irish Slovaks Hungarians Germans English and Italian immigrants Jewish migration to the city began in the 1881 with an influx of Polish Russian and especially Hungarian Jews calling Bridgeport home Bridgeport Jew Edwin Land grew up to invent the Polaroid 65 nbsp Bridgeport in 1913 today s downtown before the city s first high rises In 1905 Bridgeport was already the largest industrial center in the state 49 381 348 was invested in manufacturing and the products being valued at 44 586 519 The city was a port of entry with its imports being valued at around 656 271 in 1908 9 The Singer factory joined Wheeler amp Wilson in producing sewing machines 9 and the Locomobile Company of America was a prominent early automobile manufacturer producing a prototype of the Stanley Steamer and various luxury cars 66 The town was also the center of America s corset production responsible for 19 9 of the national total 9 and became the headquarters of Remington Arms following its 1912 merger with the Union Metallic Cartridge Co Around the time of the First World War Bridgeport was also producing steam fitting and heating apparatuses brass goods phonographs typewriters 9 milling machines brassieres and saddles 67 nbsp 1912 postcard showing Main Street in downtown Bridgeport Brideport s Italian immigrants settled in the Central End today s Little Italy and the city was the 3rd most Italian in the state by 1910 Their newspapers were the weekly La Tribuna de Connecticut 1906 1908 and later La Sentinella 1920 1948 68 69 The West End along Wordin Avenue known as Hunktown grew into one of the largest Hungarian communities in the US 64 It was visited by Hungarian republicans trying to take down the Austro Hungarian monarchy in order to garner support The West Side nearby was home to Slovenians French Canadians and Swedish immigrants By 1910 Bridgeport had grown into second largest city in Connecticut at 102 052 behind New Haven 70 9 Between 1910 and 1920 during World War I the city s population exploded from 102 054 to 143 555 due to the city s role in the First World War 71 Bridgeport had the largest factory in the world at the time the new Remington Arms plant on Boston Avenue on the East Side Built in 1915 it had 13 separate buildings each of them 5 stories connected by a long corridor half a mile long The purpose of the building was to fulfil a company order from the Russian tzar for a million rifles and 100 million round of ammunition The construction site was protected by the National Guard to prevent Bolshevik arson The factory by 1916 employed 16 000 people and led to the construction of Remington City in the Mill Hill neighborhood and Remington Village in the East End by Remington Arms 71 nbsp The Remington Arms plant bought by General Electric after the war In the summer of 1915 a series of strikes imposed the eight hour day on the town s factories rather than moving business elsewhere the success spread the eight hour day throughout the Northeast 72 Due to housing shortages in many US cities during World War I the federal government created the US Housing Corporation This resulted in 7 USHC housing developments being built in Bridgeport notably Seaside Village in the South End and Black Rock Gardens in Black Rock By this point Remington Arms was producing 50 of America s cartridges during the war with 17 000 employees and homes for new workers were needed The factory became a General Electric plant after the war 73 The First World War had continued the city s expansion so that on the eve of the Great Depression there were more than 500 factories in Bridgeport including Columbia Records primary pressing plant and a Singer Sewing Machine factory 74 The 1920s saw the city s population stabilize at 143 555 after the war 75 The Roaring Twenties brought more leisure and entertainment In 1919 the city of Bridgeport bought Pleaseure Beach also known as Steepchase Island for 220 000 Pleasure Beach was an amusement park and beach on an island in the East End next to Stratford 76 In 1920 the city parks commissioner began the process of creating a zoo in Beardsley Park 77 Bridgeport a stop became for performances with around 20 theatres 1922 was the year the elegantly designed Majestic and Poli Palace theatres were built downtown along with the Savoy Hotel The Poli Palace theatre built by Sylvester Poli was the largest theatre in the state of Connecticut with gilded hand carved moldings and vaulted ceilings 78 79 The Ritz Ballroom was opened in 1923 In 1928 the city bought an 800 acre 320 ha racetrack and landing field in Lordship to construct Bridgeport Airport 80 Spanish immigration in 1920 and 1921 brought hundreds of migrants from Spain particularly from Pedreguer Valencia where practiclly the entire town migrated to Bridgeport 81 nbsp Birdseye view of Main Street nbsp Main Street and Golden Hill Street showing Stratfield Hotel During the Great Depression the city elected Socialist party candidate Jasper McLevy as mayor in 1933 McLevy s election made headlines as a New England city had a socialist mayor Known for cutting costs he would serve as mayor for 12 terms finally losing in 1957 82 The Great Migration led southern African Americans to Bridgeport around the 1930s thanks to railroads 83 along with black foreigners such as Cape Verdean 83 By 1930 Bridgeport had the third largest percentage of African Americans in New England The Italian population by 1930 had more than doubled now the city s largest ethnic group 69 The build up to World War II helped the city s recovery in the late 1930s Suburban development made its expansion into the undeveloped North End neighborhood 84 On Park Avenue in 1962 the Museam of Art Science and Industry MASI was opened to the public today s Discovery Museam and Planetarium Known for the newly developed approach of hands on exhibits the Museam became science oriented later on 18 Continued development of new suburban housing outside of Bridgeport in the city s adjacent suburbs such as Fairfield and Milford 85 attracted middle and upper class residents leaving the city with a higher proportion of poor By the 1960s Puerto Ricans had begun to immigrate to settle to Bridgeport in large numbers and by about 1970 had made up 10 of the city s population or 15 000 people the largest Puerto Rican population in Connecticut and they would continue to grow 86 Groups such as the local Young Lords branch organized themselves on East Main Street leading to activism to advance the Puerto Rican community with increased access to health care better housing food and an end to poverty and police brutality As cities across the country were renovating their central business district after the war Bridgeport attempted its own urban renewal projects in its old downtown in the early 1960s during the construction of the highways Hunktown with a population of 15 000 and the Irish neighborhood in the South End were demolished and replaced with highways and an industrial park The Trumbull Shopping Park was built just outside Bridgeport city limits in Trumbull in 1965 Connecticut s first fully enclosed shopping mall 87 88 Bridgeport under Mayor Tedesco went under the 52 acre 21 ha State Street redevelopment project 89 demolishing 52 acres of State Street clearing the land for development Replaced with modern high rise office buildings parking the Route 8 25 expressway towards Waterbury and Newtown and a shopping mall at its core 90 Large parts of Main Street were demolished in what was called the Congress Street Renewal project nothing was built on the land Constructed with federal funding on Lafayette Boulevard and Broad Street the 450 000 acre 2 story with basement Lafayette Shopping Plaza was erected a downtown shopping mall with a Sears and a Gimbels department store as anchors connected to it Military contracts during the 1950s and 1960s enabled the Bridgeport Lycoming division of AVCO founded 1951 to employ at times more than 12 000 people building tanks helicopters and other military hardware Decreased demand led to layoffs and then closure in 1984 91 Other examples of urban development include two city landmarks the 12 story 855 Main Street People s Savings Bank building and 18 floor Park City Plaza State National Bank building built 1972 The plan for three identical towers never materialized due to the Oil Crisis and corporate vacancies Bridgeport was largely bypassed by the New York City companies fleeing Manhattan for suburban Fairfield County locations for various reasons the city developed a reputation for having an industrial character thanks to the factories located right along both sides of Interstate 95 and the city s lack of urban amities and its reputation as a blue collar city simply wasn t the image these companies wanted to identify with in order to attract top executives Bridgeport was being farther from New York City than Stamford or White Plains with no immediate benefits and the trend of establishing headquarters outside of major cities in suburban campuses all played a factor 92 As such most skyscraper construction models for downtown Bridgeport from the 70s were never built unlike Hartford a city already home to major insurance companies or Stamford Much of north downtown Bridgeport would end up abandoned neglected and boarded up as department and discount stores closed leaving only federal and municipal buildings along now empty lots 93 94 nbsp The downtown Bridgeport area around 1977 facing the train station which burned down the next year Restructuring of heavy industry starting after the mid 20th century caused the loss of thousands of jobs and residents Like other urban centers in Connecticut Bridgeport suffered during the deindustrialization of the United States in the 1970s and 1980s 95 Pleasure Beach was sold 5 years after a rollercoaster caught fire A year later the park closed for good 96 The old Bridgeport station caught fire in 1978 In September 1978 Bridgeport teachers went on a 19 day strike due to deadlocked contract negotiations A court order as well as a state law that made strikes by public workers illegal in Connecticut resulted in 274 teachers being arrested and jailed 97 In November 1978 a wave of arson passed through the city s East side with the fire chief calling it as a microcosm of the Bronx 98 The city suffered from overall mismanagement for which several city officials were convicted contributing to the economic and social decline 99 The once busy Lafayette Shopping Plaza began to lose customers after Gimbel s closed in 1984 Replaced with a Read s store the mall was later bought by Hi Ho Industries and renamed Hi Ho Mall until it closed in 1993 and became Housatonic Community College in 1997 100 Bridgeport remained the state s second city and as Hartford s population continued to shrink Bridgeport became the largest city in Connecticut in 1974 with a population of 142 546 A 1981 Times article read Bridgeport for years has suffered an image problem when compared with Hartford because of that city s role as state capital and as the site of a number of large corporations Mayor Mandanici s response was Hartford reported state sales taxes of 712 7 million but Bridgeport yielded state sales taxes of 890 4 million That s economic power right 101 In 1985 Bridgeport was still Connecticut s chief manufacturing center its major industries including General Electric Remington Shaver Bryant Electric and Raybestos plants A New York Times in 1985 stated Bridgeport was the fifth largest banking center in New England with five of the banks based Bridgeport having assets of more than 6 billion 16 The largest scissors shear and surgical materials manufacturer in the world by 1946 Bridgeport based ACME Shear closed its Bridgeport plant in 1996 due to mergers and acquisitions The industrial operations relocated to Fremont North Carolina Between 1984 and 1989 the construction of the new 75 million headquarters for People s United Bank the second largest bank in New England The 10 story Connecticut National Bank building was demolished and replaced with the new 18 story Bridgeport Center overlooking McLevy Square and was designed by famous architect Richard Meier and was meant to give the city a new icon 16 Bridgeport in 1989 had more homicides per capita than any Northeastern US city over 100 000 people Bridgeport had a smaller police force than smaller cities like Hartford or New Haven yet hiring due to city financial issues having not recovered from the exodus of manufacturing companies would result in even higher taxes for residents 102 91 The city in 1995 saw a serious reduction in violent crime notably in its East Side where crime rate fell by nearly half homicides dropped burglaries by 3 4s and stolen car thefts by more than half among other stats as the Phoenix Project led to barricading city streets confusing out of town drug buyers and preventing sellers to escape 103 In 1991 the city filed for bankruptcy protection but was declared solvent by a federal court 104 Later that same year Mayor Mary C Moran lost the election to Joseph Ganim at 33 years old the youngest person to hold that office 105 and under him the city was able to begin redevelopment with the construction of the Arena at Harbor Yard and the Ballpark at Harbor Yard Bridgeport made numerous efforts at revitalization In a proposal in 1995 Las Vegas developer Steve Wynn was to build a large casino but that project failed due to traffic concerns 106 The project was opposed as rival Donald Trump feared a Bridgeport casino would harm his Atlantic City properties and proposed to build a theme park and potential casino on the same site 106 New waves of migrants from places such as Brazil Jamaica Vietnam Laos Cambodia Mexico and other nations arrived in Bridgeport Immigrants from Brazil after the nation s inflation crisis established themselves in the city due to the large Portuguese population already present easing the language barrier Bridgeport was a common second US destination for Vietnamese refugees There s already an established community here so that s why they come from the New York Times in 1996 Along with them Thai Koreans Chinese and especially Laotians and Cambodians established themselves in the city Laotians refugees settled in the West End opening businesses 107 108 Bridgeport s Mexican population grew gradually from 24 people counted in 1970 109 599 people in 1990 to 2 687 by the 2000 census becoming at that point the second largest Latino group in the city behind the city s Puerto Ricans 31 117 people surpassing the Cuban population Likewise the population from other Central and South American nations continued to increase 110 while the Cuban population continued to decrease 110 111 There has been a big shift in ethnic groups Just look at the restaurants that have opened in the last few years Mexican Brazilian Chilean and Jamaican an interviewee local chamber of council president Paul Timpanelli stated in 2000 according to the Connecticut Post In 1999 city owned Sikorsky Memorial Airport ceased its commercial regional flight offerings 21st century edit nbsp Street scene in downtown Bridgeport intersection of State and Main St In 2003 Mayor Ganim was involved in a corruption scandal after being investigated by the FBI as he received gifts from developers in exchange for being allowed to build in Bridgeport He was sentenced to federal prison and was replaced by John Fabrizi In the early 21st century Bridgeport has taken steps toward redevelopment of its downtown and other neighborhoods In 2004 artists lofts were developed in the former Read s Department Store on Broad Street Several other rental conversions have been completed including the 117 unit Citytrust bank building on Main Street The recession halted at least temporarily two major mixed use projects including a 1 billion waterfront development at Steel Point but other redevelopment projects have proceeded such as the condominium conversion project in Bijou Square 112 In 2009 the City Council under Mayor Finch approved a new master plan for development designed both to promote redevelopment in selected areas and to protect existing residential neighborhoods 113 The plan was updated in April 2019 114 In 2010 the Bridgeport Housing Authority and a local health center announced plans to build a 20 million medical and housing complex at Albion Street making use of federal stimulus funds and designed to replace some of the housing lost with the demolition of Father Panik Village 115 The Steel Point or Steelpointe project of Bridgeport s on the lower portion of the East Side finally led to the construction of a big box retailer in 2013 along with other stores shops and a lighthouse with a marina and oyster bar The plan for high end mixed use apartments is in place although concerns about gentrification have been raised A hotel is also in the works 116 A new proposed train station in East Bridgeport meant to be completed in 2021 was postponed in 2019 By 2013 the city and local business owners agreed that work needed to be done in the downtown area north of Fairfield Avenue nicknamed Downtown North above Made up of old empty brick buildings which were neglected for years the city and developers began their rehabilitation starting in 2015 most of which are now converted apartments or retail 93 117 Bridgeport s downtown renovation has resulted in various restaurants the renovation of the Bishop Arcade Mall a comedy club and theatres A 2022 plan to renovate McLevy Hall is in place 118 nbsp Sterling Block Bishop Arcade a Victorian era shopping arcade Main St downtown In 2017 MGM had announced plans to build a waterfront casino and shopping center in the city awaiting approval by the state government If built the development would have created 2 000 permanent jobs and about 5 779 temporary jobs 119 After a legal battle with the Mohegan and Pequot tribes on the right to build a casino in Connecticut the project appears to be dead and tenants such as Bridgeport Boatworks now occupy the proposed space 120 The construction of Honey Locust Square began on the East End which when complete will house a supermarket something the neighborhood lacks a public library a health center and a retail building 121 Notable speeches edit On March 10 1860 Abraham Lincoln spoke in the city s Washington Hall an auditorium at the old Bridgeport City Hall now McLevy Hall at the corner of State and Broad Streets The largest room in the city was packed and a crowd formed outside as well Lincoln received a standing ovation before taking the 9 07 pm train that night back to Manhattan 122 123 A plaque marks the site where Lincoln spoke later that year he was elected president The Rev Martin Luther King Jr spoke three times at the Klein Auditorium during the 1960s as well as at the University of Bridgeport and the original Central High School today Bridgeport City Hall as well as in Bridgeport City Hall Additionally President George W Bush spoke before a small group of Connecticut business people and officials at the Playhouse on the Green in 2006 124 President Barack Obama also spoke at the Harbor Yard arena in 2010 to gain support for the campaign of Democratic Governor Dan Malloy 125 Timeline of notable first and inventions edit 1896 The chain socket was invented in Bridgeport 1904 The AC plug outlet was also invented in Bridgeport by Harvey Hubbell 1877 The world s first telephone exchange was established in Bridgeport by the District Telephone Company 126 The first commercial phone exchange was opened in nearby New Haven two years later 10 1903 German immigrant Gustave Whitehead claimed to have flown the first airplane in Bridgeport two years before the Wright Brothers confirmed in the Bridgeport Post 127 1914 Caresse Crosby the woman credited with inventing the modern bra sold her patent to Bridgeport based Warnaco which mass produced it for the first time The alphabet bra sizing system was invented which we still use today in 1937 by the Bridgeport company 128 1949 The first dental school was founded in the University of Bridgeport 129 1920 The Frisbie Pie Company was founded in Bridgeport in 1871 clarification needed 126 1949 The first daily UHF television station KC2XAK aired in Bridgeport It was a test conducted by NBC and was known as Operation Bridgeport 126 1965 The first Subway restaurant was founded in Bridgeport Student Fred DeLuca needed money to attend college and with the help of Peter Buck started Pete s Subs Renamed Subway the franchise grew into one of the largest fast food chains in the world 130 1981 The first telephone banking service in the United States was provided by People s Bank to its clients Geography editSee also Geography of Bridgeport Connecticut Bridgeport lies along Long Island Sound at the mouth of the Pequonnock River Neighborhoods edit nbsp The Hollow neighborhood of Bridgeport Connecticut along North Avenue Bridgeport has many distinct neighborhoods 131 divided into five geographic areas Downtown the East Side the North End the South End and the West Side 132 nbsp Neighborhoods of Bridgeport Downtown McLevy Green Downtown South Downtown North The Hollow The Hollow Enterprise Zone East Side Steel Point Lower East Side East Side Upper East Side North Bridgeport East End Boston Avenue Mill Hill East End Newfield Pleasure Beach North End Lake Forest Lake Success Reservoir Whiskey Hill Old Town Road Brooklawn St Vincent Central End Little Italy Brooklawn South End Seaside Park Soundgate West Side Black Rock West Side West End Black Rock St Mary s by the Sea Climate edit nbsp Yellow Mill Bridge Under the Koppen climate classification Bridgeport straddles the humid subtropical climate Cfa and humid continental climate Dfa zones with long hot summers and cool to cold winters with precipitation spread fairly evenly throughout the year Bridgeport like the rest of coastal Connecticut lies in the broad transition zone between the colder continental climates of the northern United States and southern Canada to the north and the warmer temperate and subtropical climates of the middle and south Atlantic states to the south The warm hot season in Bridgeport is from mid April through early November Late day thundershowers are common in the hottest months June July August September despite the mostly sunny skies The cool cold season is from late November though mid March Winter weather is far more variable than summer weather along the Connecticut coast ranging from sunny days with higher temperatures to cold and blustery conditions with occasional snow Like much of the Connecticut coast and nearby Long Island NY most of the winter precipitation is rain or a mix and rain and wet snow in Bridgeport Bridgeport averages about 29 inches 75 cm of snow annually compared to inland areas like Hartford and Albany which average 45 60 inches 110 150 cm of snow annually Although infrequent tropical cyclones hurricanes tropical storms have struck Connecticut and the Bridgeport metropolitan area Hurricane landfalls have occurred along the Connecticut coast in 1903 1938 1944 1954 Carol 1960 Donna Hurricane Gloria in 1985 and Hurricane Sandy in 2012 nbsp Climate chart for Bridgeport Bridgeport lies in USDA garden hardiness zone 7a averaging about 92 days annually with freeze The coastal location of Bridgeport allows it to be milder than locations well south but inland For example the record coldest low temperature at Atlanta is 8 F while the record coldest at Bridgeport is 7 F Coastal Connecticut is the broad transition zone where so called subtropical indicator plants such as cold hardy palms and other broadleaf evergreens can successfully be cultivated As such Southern Magnolias Needle Palms Windmill palm Loblolly Pines and Crape Myrtles are grown in private and public gardens Like much of coastal Connecticut Long Island NY and coastal New Jersey the growing season is rather long in Bridgeport averaging 210 days from April 8 to November 5 according to the National Weather Service in Bridgeport The average monthly temperature ranges from 31 4 F 0 3 C in January to 75 7 F 24 3 C in July The record low is 7 F 22 C set on January 22 1984 while the record high is 103 F 39 C set on July 22 in 1957 and 2011 133 Precipitation averages 44 9 inches 1 140 mm annually and is somewhat evenly distributed throughout the year with March and April the wettest months Annual snowfall averages 33 6 inches 85 cm falling almost entirely from December to March As is typical of coastal Connecticut snow cover does not usually last long with an average of 33 days per winter with snow cover of at least 1 inch 2 5 cm Climate data for Bridgeport Connecticut Sikorsky Airport 1991 2020 normals extremes 1948 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high F C 69 21 68 20 84 29 91 33 97 36 97 36 103 39 100 38 99 37 89 32 79 26 76 24 103 39 Mean maximum F C 56 7 13 7 55 3 12 9 64 8 18 2 76 4 24 7 85 1 29 5 90 7 32 6 93 8 34 3 91 5 33 1 86 2 30 1 78 1 25 6 67 9 19 9 59 7 15 4 95 4 35 2 Mean daily maximum F C 38 4 3 6 40 5 4 7 47 4 8 6 58 3 14 6 68 4 20 2 77 7 25 4 83 4 28 6 81 9 27 7 75 4 24 1 64 4 18 0 53 6 12 0 43 8 6 6 61 1 16 2 Daily mean F C 31 4 0 3 33 1 0 6 39 3 4 1 50 0 10 0 60 0 15 6 69 6 20 9 75 7 24 3 74 5 23 6 67 6 19 8 56 4 13 6 46 0 7 8 37 0 2 8 53 4 11 9 Mean daily minimum F C 24 4 4 2 25 7 3 5 32 3 0 2 41 7 5 4 51 7 10 9 61 5 16 4 67 9 19 9 67 0 19 4 59 8 15 4 48 3 9 1 38 4 3 6 30 2 1 0 45 7 7 6 Mean minimum F C 6 6 14 1 9 9 12 3 17 6 8 0 30 4 0 9 40 8 4 9 49 8 9 9 59 1 15 1 56 9 13 8 46 2 7 9 34 2 1 2 23 9 4 5 15 6 9 1 4 6 15 2 Record low F C 7 22 6 21 4 16 18 8 31 1 41 5 49 9 44 7 36 2 26 3 13 11 4 20 7 22 Average precipitation inches mm 3 18 81 3 12 79 4 09 104 4 16 106 3 58 91 3 77 96 3 32 84 3 98 101 3 96 101 3 84 98 3 11 79 3 98 101 44 09 1 120 Average snowfall inches cm 8 5 22 10 7 27 7 0 18 0 9 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 25 0 9 2 3 5 5 14 33 6 85 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 11 2 10 4 11 2 11 4 12 1 11 2 8 9 9 2 8 2 9 9 9 4 11 5 124 7 Average snowy days 0 1 in 4 5 4 2 2 6 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 2 9 14 8 Average relative humidity 66 1 65 8 65 9 63 9 70 2 73 6 73 0 73 9 74 1 70 3 70 2 69 6 69 7 Average dew point F C 18 0 7 8 18 7 7 4 26 4 3 1 34 3 1 3 46 8 8 2 57 4 14 1 63 1 17 3 63 5 17 5 57 2 14 0 45 9 7 7 36 0 2 2 24 6 4 1 41 0 5 0 Source NOAA 133 134 135 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org See or edit raw graph data Demographics editSee also List of Connecticut locations by per capita income Historical population CensusPop Note 18101 089 18201 50037 7 18302 80086 7 18403 29417 6 18507 560129 5 186013 29975 9 187018 96942 6 188027 64345 7 189048 86676 8 190070 99645 3 1910102 05443 7 1920143 55540 7 1930146 7162 2 1940147 1210 3 1950158 7097 9 1960156 748 1 2 1970156 542 0 1 1980142 546 8 9 1990141 686 0 6 2000139 529 1 5 2010144 2293 4 2020148 6543 1 Population 1840 1970 75 U S Decennial Census 136 2018 Estimate 137 As of the 2010 census there were 144 229 people living in the city The racial makeup of the city residents was 39 6 White 34 6 Black or African American 3 4 Asian and 4 3 from two or more races A total of 38 2 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race There were 50 307 households out of which 34 3 had children under the age of 18 living with them 35 0 were married couples living together 24 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 34 9 were non families 29 0 of all households were made up of individuals and 11 3 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 70 and the average family size was 3 34 In the city the population was spread out with 28 4 under the age of 18 11 2 from 18 to 24 30 5 from 25 to 44 18 4 from 45 to 64 and 11 5 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 31 years For every 100 females there were 91 2 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 86 3 males The median income for a household in the city was 34 658 and the median income for a family was 39 571 Males had a median income of 32 430 versus 26 966 for females The per capita income for the city was 16 306 About 16 2 of families and 18 4 of the population were below the poverty line including 24 8 of those under age 18 and 13 2 of those age 65 or over According to the 2020 five year community survey 48 2 of Bridgeport s population speaks a different primary language at home other than English 33 8 percent of the city s total population speaks Spanish at home and 22 5 speak English less than very well 138 Bridgeport has the largest percentage and population of Hispanic Americans in the state of Connecticut The city is known for having one of the largest communities of Puerto Ricans in the United States Bridgeport has the 7th largest Puerto Rican population in the United States with 30 250 people claiming Puerto Rican heritage in 1990 that number has grown to about 31 900 22 10 of the population in 2013 139 140 45 270 people 31 141 of Bridgeport s population is foreign born in 2010 Other than Puerto Ricans 5 4 of Bridgeport s population was noted under Mexican in 2013 142 a number that has grown to 5 8 8 479 people in the 2020 five year American Community Survey meaning Bridgeport has the largest Mexican population in New England 143 Dominicans are 5 248 3 53 of Bridgeport s population The total Latino Central American population Guatemalans Salvadorians Nicaraguans Hondurans Costa Ricans Panamanians is 6 701 people total in the city 4 507 8 454 South Americans 5 697 4 020 Equadorians 2 326 Colombians Peruvians and then populations from every Latin American nation except Bolivia can be found with the smallest group being Paraguayans at 16 people according to the census 144 145 146 Bridgeport also has the largest Cuban population in the state with more than 1 000 of the state s 10 600 Cubans living in Bridgeport although down from the at least 5 000 Cubans in Bridgeport in 1980 and even more before that time in the 1950s according to the CTPost Bridgeport was once a major destination for migrating Cubans but many families have since moved to the city s suburbs or Florida Bridgeport along with Danbury CT were considered as a potential locations for a new Ecuadorian consulate but it instead opened in New Haven CT due to its immigrant welcoming mayor in 2008 147 As for Portuguese speaking peoples the city also has the 12th largest Cape Verdean population in the country 83 The group settled in the Hollow to work in factories and established a social club in the 1940s The Cape Verdean Association of Bridgeport is located in the Hollow today 148 The Portuguese community in the city is the largest in the state and the population primarily hails from the Tras Os Montes region of Portugal according to a 2018 research study and the Hollow is considered the Portuguese section of Bridgeport 149 The large Brazilian population in Bridgeport and Danbury led to the opening of a Brazilian consulate in the state capital of Hartford 150 Migration to Connecticut began in the 90s social networks brought immigrants from Governador Valadares Minas Gerais in Brazil to Bridgeport CT and Framingham MA 151 Fairfield County has the 7th largest Brazilian population of the United States and 1 3rd of them live within Bridgeport s city limits most of whom reside in the city s North End and St Vincent neighborhood A small population of people from various majority Muslim nations exists along with Kurds at least 4 000 according to an estimate by a local mosque in 2008 Bridgeport Public Schools now observes Eid al Fitr effective 2024 thanks to a campaign by city 8th graders from Park City Magnet School which found 10 of the school body was Muslim in a school project Bengali in 2022 was the fifth most common primary language for Bridgeport Public School students behind English Spanish Portuguese and Haitian Creole and is followed by Arabic at sixth place 152 153 There is also a sizeable Kurdish population in Bridgeport primarily from Iraq 154 In total and counting East and Southeast Asians Bridgeport had 7 725 Asian residents according to the 2021 155 5 year American Community Survey up from 2020 s count 5 553 Asians The largest national origin groups and their estimated populations are Vietnamese 1 258 people Indian 1 153 people Chinese excluding Taiwanese and Pakistanis both 982 people and Filipinos 729 people Other groups with over 500 people include Laotians and Cambodians Bangladeshi Americans in the city numbered 385 people in the survey 156 Jamaicans the state s largest foreign born group 157 have a significant presence in Bridgeport with 6 3 of Bridgeport s population being Jamaican in 2013 158 Bridgeport in 2013 was 10 2 non hispanic West Indian 159 nbsp Bridgeport s East Side became the center of Puerto Rican migration in the 1950s Shown here is East Main Street At least 92 languages are spoken as primary languages by Bridgeport Public School students according to district data in 2022 3 145 students are missing data in primary language 160 The Bridgeport Stamford metropolitan area i e Fairfield County is home to the 7th largest percentage of Italian ancestry in the country the population is 16 5 Italian Italian Americans until 1985 were the largest ethnic group in Bridgeport itself and had been since the 1920s 161 162 According to 2010 census data the Bridgeport MSA containing all of Fairfield County is the most economically unequal region in America with 57 of the wealth going to the top income quintile 163 164 As of the census of 2000 there were 139 529 people 50 307 households and 32 749 families living in the city The population density was 8 720 9 inhabitants per square mile 3 367 2 km2 There were 54 367 housing units at an average density of 3 398 1 per square mile 1 312 0 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 45 0 White 30 8 African American 0 5 Native American 3 3 Asian 0 1 Pacific Islander Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 31 9 of the population 165 European white ancestry groups include Italian 8 6 Irish 5 1 Portuguese 2 9 Polish 2 8 and German 2 4 Economy edit nbsp People s United Financial headquarters the city s biggest non medical employer Since the decline of its industrial sector beginning in the middle of the 20th century Bridgeport has gradually adjusted to a service based economy As late as 1985 the city was still home to company plants such as General Electric with 1 900 employees and Remington Products with 900 both of which are now closed Bryant Electric didn t close its plant until 1988 The last major factory to close was the Sikorsky helicopter plant in 2015 166 Various famous industrial companies that were founded and based in Bridgeport such as ACME Sheer Fortune 1000 Hubbell Incorporated etc are now based in suburban Shelton two towns away Subway which started out in Bridgeport in 1965 is now based in Milford Though a level of industrial activity continues healthcare finance and education have become the centerpieces of Bridgeport s economy The two largest employers in the city are Bridgeport s primary hospitals Bridgeport Hospital and St Vincent s Medical Center Park City Hospital in the South End closed in 1993 and was reopened in 2010 as elderly and homeless housing units 167 In April 2022 M amp T Bank of Buffalo New York merged with Bridgeport based People s United Financial The combined company is now the 11th largest bank in the United States and gave M amp T a foothold in the New England market in total serving 12 states Although M amp T laid off Bridgeport employees which made national headlines 168 the company as part of this effort made Bridgeport Center the regional M amp T headquarters of New England 169 Top employers edit Top employers in Bridgeport according to the city s 2020 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report 170 nbsp Bridgeport Hospital an affiliate of the Yale School of Medicine nbsp St Vincent s Medical Center affiliated with Columbia University and Quinnipiac University medical schools nbsp A portion of the harbor in Bridgeport Facilities shown are part of the United Illuminating coal fired power plant Employer of employees 1 Bridgeport Hospital 3 243 2 St Vincent s Medical Center 1 800 3 M amp T Bank 1 117 4 Jewish Senior Services Center 358 5 Goodwin University 526 6 Sikorsky Aircraft 383 7 Housatonic Community College 343 8 Lacey Manufacturing Co 350 9 Bridgeport Healthcare Center 297 10 alphabroder Prime Line 253 nbsp Bridgeport Bryant Electric Company building 24 on left building 7 on right 80 Organ StreetArts and culture edit nbsp Palace Theatre in downtown Bridgeport now abandoned nbsp Palace and Majestic Theater exterior in Bridgeport on Main Street with failed renovation proposals over the years Savory Hotel was upstairs Performing arts edit Theater and music edit Venues for live theater and music events include 171 Downtown Cabaret Theatre cabaret children s theater concerts The Stress Factory 300 seats comedy club with national and local acts Klein Memorial Auditorium 1 400 seats home to the Greater Bridgeport Symphony touring shows and concerts Total Mortgage Arena sporting events venue but also hosts large concerts Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater outdoor concert venue Music festivals and concert series edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Bridgeport was the annual home to Gathering of the Vibes a weekend long arts music and camping festival until it ended in 2015 172 Beginning in 2022 Bridgeport played host to the Sound on Sound Music Festival at Seaside Park Past performers included John Mayer Red Hot Chili Peppers Dave Matthews Band Hozier and The Roots 173 The Greater Bridgeport Symphony established in 1945 performs at Bridgeport s 1 400 seat Klein Memorial Auditorium Gustav Meier directed the orchestra from 1972 to 2013 Museums and zoos edit The Discovery Science Center and Planetarium emphasizes exhibits on science with the state s only Challenger Center affiliated with the national space program Opened in 1962 and run by SHU as of 2020 174 The Housatonic Museum of Art at Housatonic Community College has the largest collection of art of any two year college in the nation Founded in 1967 by collage art director Bob Chernow Shows both western and non western art from different eras including sculptures 175 The Barnum Museum celebrates the showman circuses and Bridgeport history Currently under renovation a room is open to visitors every Thursday The Beardsley Zoo opened 1922 is the only such center in Connecticut clarification needed and is the state s largest zoo 171 176 The Greater Bridgeport metropolitan area is home to the Maritime Aquarium in Norwalk 30 minutes from downtown Bridgeport 177 One of the two aquariums in Connecticut the aquarium focuses on Long Island Sound as well as creatures and conservation efforts from around the world 178 Historic districts edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Bridgeport has five local historic districts where exterior changes to structures are under the control of two Historic District Commissions Black Rock Harbor Historic District Pembroke City Historic District Stratfield Historic District Barnum Palliser Development Historic District Marina Park Historic District Downtown North Historic District Downtown South Historic District Remington City Historic District Black Rock Gardens Historic District Seaside Village Historic District AMFAB Art Building Bridgeport was once home to a Little Asia along Wood Avenue in the West Side established in 2012 by local business owners with a sign and a festival every year By 2016 the name had fallen out of use and the committee no longer exists The more or less 3 or 4 block area is still home to Asian restaurants an insurance and tax agency with Vietnamese Mandarin Laotian Cantonese as well as Spanish language services 179 and a Vietnamese grocery store 180 181 Cuisine edit NerdWallet ranked Bridgeport the 100th most foodie city in the United States 2nd in Connecticut behind New Haven which was ranked 97 Nerdwallet in 2022 ranked Bridgeport as the 17th most ethnically diverse city in the United States making it the most diverse in New England and the third most diverse in the New York Metropolitan Area in an annual ranking It ranked 23rd in 2021 and 22 in 2015 It is 28 on Niche com 2022 Most Diverse Cities in America list Bridgeport s Madison Avenue and Hollow Brazilian restaurants located alongside various Portuguese ones have been mentioned by publications such as the New York Times Examples include churascaria restaurants 182 It is among the top cities in the state to immerse yourself in Brazilian traditions according to CTBites 183 Azteca was ranked among the best Mexican restaurants in Connecticut in 2020 according to Connecticut Magazine along with Pho Hong Thom and Pho Saigon in Bridgeport s Little Asia on the West Side for best Vietnamese places in the state 184 185 Sports edit nbsp Total Mortgage Arena then Webster Bank Arena nbsp 2011 MACC Tournament at the Webster Bank Arena Total Mortgage Arena Club League Venue Established Championships Bridgeport Islanders AHL Total Mortgage Arena 2001 0 CT United FC MLS Next Pro New Waterfront Stadium 2024 0 Total Mortgage Arena serves as the city s sports and hospitality center Seating 10 000 the Arena serves as the home rink of the Bridgeport Islanders American Hockey League team the farm team of the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League 186 Starting in 2024 it also serves as the home of PWHL New York of the Professional Women s Hockey League 187 The arena served as the temporary home of the Westchester Knicks of the NBA G League the farm team for the NBA New York Knicks from 2021 to 2023 when the team s home stadium Westchester County Center in White Plains NY iwas being used as a vaccination clinic 188 189 For college teams Total Mortgage serves as the home court of Fairfield University s basketball team The Ballpark at Harbor Yard served as a minor league baseball stadium from 1998 to 2017 It was built in 1998 to serve as the homefield of the Bridgeport Bluefish From 2001 to 2003 it was the homefield for the Bridgeport Barrage a Major League Lacrosse team It is downtown on a former brownfield site It is visually prominent to commuters on I 95 or on passing trains On August 8 2017 Mayor Joe Ganim announced that the Bluefish would be ending their 20 year stint at the ballpark at the end of the 2017 season The ballpark was converted into an amphitheatre The Bluefish played their final home game at the park on September 17 2017 losing by a score of 9 2 to the Somerset Patriots 190 Kennedy Stadium serves as a community sports facility In the late 1960s and early 1970s it was the home of an Atlantic Coast Football League minor league football team the Bridgeport Jets a New York Jets farm team also known locally as the Hi Ho Jets due to their sponsorship by the Hi Ho D Addario construction company nbsp John F Kennedy stadium in Bridgeport Fairfield University is in the neighboring town of Fairfield and many of the athletic teams play on campus Only the men s and women s basketball teams play in Bridgeport Nutmeg Curling Club one of two curling clubs in Connecticut is in Bridgeport It is the home club of the 2013 USA Mixed National Champions 191 led by club members Derek Surka and Charissa Lin The club is a member of the Grand National Curling Club Region Bridgeport native Jim O Rourke was the first baseball player to earn a hit in National League history in 1876 The founder and original owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers Charles Ebbets married his second wife in Bridgeport in 1922 five years before his death In early 2024 MLS Next Pro awarded an expansion team to Bridgeport 192 Connecticut United FC plan to play at a new stadium to be located on the waterfront at a former dog racing track as stadium plans were approved by the Bridgeport government in November 2023 193 Amateur soccer team GZS Bridgeport play in the UPSL playing home games at Kennedy Stadium Parks and recreation editPhotos from Bridgeport s public parks nbsp Soldiers and Sailors Monument Seaside Park nbsp Seaside Park Spanish American War memorial nbsp The beach at Seaside Park nbsp James Beardsley Monument at Beardsley Park in Bridgeport nbsp Nathaniel Wheeler Fountain on Park Avenue The city has 1 300 acres of public space with a pocket park in nearly every neighborhood 194 Bridgeport s public park system led to its official nickname the Park City The city s first public park was the westerly portion of McLevy Green first set aside as a public square in 1806 195 the Clinton Park Militia Grounds 1666 and Old Mill Green 1717 were set aside earlier as public commons by the towns of Fairfield and Stratford respectively Washington Park in 1850 was located in the center of East Bridgeport 196 As the city rapidly grew in population residents recognized the need for more public parks and by 1864 Barnum and other residents had donated approximately 44 acres 18 ha to create Seaside Park now increased by acquisition and landfill to 375 acres 152 ha 197 In 1878 over 100 acres 40 ha of land bordering the Pequonnock River was added as Beardsley Park 198 Frederick Law Olmsted who designed New York City s Central Park designed both Seaside and Beardsley Parks 199 Over time more parks were added including 35 acre 14 ha Beechwood Park and Pleasure Beach home to an amusement park for many years Went Field on the West End between Wordin Avenue and Norman Street used to be the winter headquarters of Barnum s circus Architecture editNotable buildings and architectural styles in Bridgeport nbsp Bridgeport Center An 18 floor postmodern building designed by Richard Meier and built 1989 It is the tallest building in Bridgeport nbsp Park City Plaza an 18 story modernist style building completed in 1973 Originally the headquarters for the State National Bank it was designed by Palestinian born architect Victor Bisharat and built by the F D Rich Company of Stamford 200 nbsp Hotel Beach a 13 story Art Deco building built downtown in 1927 on Fairfield Avenue nbsp Apartment house on Milne Street in Sterling Hill settled by the Irish Three deckers brick tenerments and small houses are found here nbsp Remington City rowhouses on Bond Street Built for workers during WW1 emulates European cottage styles nbsp Queen Anne style tenements within the Barnum Palliser historic district in the South End built by Barnum in the 1880s for working class families nbsp 1870s Victorian residences around Washington Park on the East Side nbsp Golden Hill United Methodist Church in between Downtown and the Hollow near City Hall nbsp CityTrust Bank building finished 1929 Today a Citi Bank branch and apartments above nbsp McLevy Hall built 1854 3 stories the original Bridgeport City Hall and County Courthouse Renamed after Mayor McLevy Bridgeport was largely bypassed by Fortune 500 companies moving to Fairfield County in the second half of the 20th century due to the city s growing reputation for having a rough industrial character Thus was also largely bypassed by the skyscraper construction boom of the 70s and 80s resulting in fewer modern skyscrapers than otheir cities 201 The tallest building in Bridgeport is currently the Richard Meier designed 16 story 248 foot 76 m Bridgeport Center which was completed in 1989 and surpassed the 18 story Park City Plaza which was completed in 1973 Bridgeport in the early 20th century banned further construction of the triple decker very common in the Hollow Madison Avenue in the East Side with other working class housing styles and Victorian mansions the West Side with Queen Ann multifamiliy homes parts of Black Rock and the East End neighborhood 202 203 107 Government edit nbsp City Hall nbsp Margaret Morton Government Center nbsp District Courthouse one of three courthouses in the city local state and federal nbsp Bridgeport Public Library Main Branch The city is governed by the mayor council system Twenty members of the city council are elected from districts Each district elects two members The mayor is elected at large by the entire cityBridgeport is notable for having had a socialist mayor for 24 years Jasper McLevy who served from 1933 to 1957 The city s current mayor Joseph P Ganim is a convicted felon who was sentenced to nine years in prison after conviction in 2003 of 16 federal counts including racketeering extortion conspiracy bribery mail fraud and filing false tax returns arising from Ganim s role in a six year scheme to shake down city contractors 204 205 206 In June 2006 Mayor John M Fabrizi admitted that he had used cocaine while in office 207 Bridgeport is recognized for its polarizing political culture Mayor Ganim has served the city seven terms since first taking office in 1991 205 After his release from prison in 2015 Ganim announced his mayoral campaign to serve a sixth term in office His campaign ran on a theme of providing him with a second chance as he was renowned for his work of escaping the city from bankruptcy and build its economy from a post industrial standpoint 208 In a divisive primary election between him the city s mayor at the time Bill Finch and University of Bridgeport professor and real estate developer Mary Jane Foster Ganim was able to receive the endorsement of the politically volatile Democratic Town Committee paving the way to his victory for being reelected mayor at the end of year 208 Bridgeport s Democratic Town Committee has the authority to nominate and endorse Democratic candidates running for local office and they have the resources to outperform challenger slates that may compete with them The chairman is former state representative and local restaurateur Mario Testa 209 Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 29 2019 210 Party Active voters Inactive voters Total voters Percentage Republican 4 505 205 4 710 6 06 Democratic 48 117 2 154 50 271 64 73 Unaffiliated 20 922 1 136 22 058 28 40 Minor parties 589 32 621 0 80 Total 74 133 3 527 77 660 100 Bridgeport votes Democratic at the presidential level In 1972 Richard M Nixon was the last Republican to win the city since then Democrats have prevailed often by comfortable margins the lone exception being 1984 when Walter Mondale carried the city by just 76 votes 0 16 percent over Ronald Reagan Bridgeport city vote by party in presidential elections 211 212 Year Democratic Republican Third parties 2020 79 44 33 515 19 60 8 269 0 96 404 2016 80 98 32 035 16 67 6 596 2 35 929 2012 85 75 32 135 13 79 5 168 0 46 173 2008 83 52 33 976 15 99 6 507 4 89 199 2004 70 66 26 280 27 76 10 326 1 57 585 2000 72 68 24 303 22 15 7 406 5 18 1 731 1996 69 16 22 883 20 51 6 785 10 33 3 419 1992 53 20 22 321 31 34 13 149 15 46 6 486 1988 57 50 23 831 41 22 17 084 1 27 527 1984 49 75 24 332 49 59 24 256 0 66 321 1980 51 24 23 505 41 82 19 185 6 94 3 185 1976 55 37 26 330 43 79 20 824 0 83 397 1972 43 67 24 572 54 09 30 436 2 25 1 265 1968 53 27 30 065 37 23 21 014 9 50 5 363 1964 69 90 43 710 30 10 18 818 0 00 0 1960 61 14 41 950 38 86 26 667 0 00 0 1956 38 57 26 560 61 43 42 308 0 00 0 Taxes edit Bridgeport has one of the highest property tax rates in Connecticut 213 A 2017 Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Minnesota Center of Fiscal Excellence study determined that Bridgeport had the second highest property tax burden of any U S city after Detroit and the fourth highest for commercial properties valued at more than 1 million after Detroit New York City and Chicago 214 In 2016 Bridgeport enacted a 29 increase in the property tax rate among the highest one year property tax rate increases in recent U S history in an effort to reduce the municipal deficit 215 A citywide reassessment in 2015 determined that the value of taxable property in the city was 6 billion a decline of 1 billion the property tax increases combined with property value decreases have been a consistent political issue in the city 215 Education editMain article Education in Bridgeport Connecticut Higher education edit Bridgeport is home to the University of Bridgeport Housatonic Community College Paier College St Vincent s College and the Yeshiva Gedola of Bridgeport The Yeshiva Gedola is the home of the Bridgeport Community Kollel a rabbinic fellowship program 216 The University of Bridgeport s Ernest C Trefz School of Business offers undergraduate and graduate programs Sacred Heart University is located in the neighboring suburb of Fairfield on the town line with its campus extending into the North End of Bridgeport on Park Avenue Many of its students live in the city s North End It is the second largest Catholic University in New England behind Boston College 217 Sacred Heart has campuses in nearby Stamford as well as Griswold CT and Dingle Ireland as well as St Vincent s College in Bridgeport The University of Bridgeport has secondary campuses in Waterbury and Stamford Paier College near the University of Bridgeport is the only Private Arts college in Connecticut Founded in 1946 in West Haven and previously located in Hamden the college recently relocated to Seaside Park in Bridgeport 218 219 The Greater Bridgeport Area made up of the surrounding towns is home to Fairfield University in neighboring Fairfield and Western Connecticut State University in Danbury Public education edit Main article Bridgeport Public Schools The city s public school system has 30 elementary schools three comprehensive high schools two alternative programs and an interdistrict vocational aquaculture school The system has about 20 800 students making the Bridgeport Public Schools the second largest school system in Connecticut after Hartford It is ranked 158 out of the 164 Connecticut school districts 220 The school system employs a professional staff of more than 1 700 The city has started a large school renovation and construction program with plans for new schools and modernization of existing buildings Public high schools Bassick High School was established in 1929 It serves students residing south of Route 1 in the Black Rock the Hollow Downtown West End and South End neighborhoods 1181 Fairfield Ave Bridgeport CT 06605 Central High School CHS was established in 1876 The current building was built in 1964 It houses the Central magnet program Serves students from north of Route 1 including the North End part of Brooklawn and St Vincent neighborhoods 1 Lincoln Blvd Bridgeport CT 06606 Warren Harding High School is home to the International Baccalaureate Program IBO and the Health Magnet Program in association with Bridgeport Hospital St Vincent s Medical Center and Bridgeport Manor It is the alma mater of Walt Kelly creator of Pogo It serves East End East Side Mill Hill and North Bridgeport students 379 Bond St Bridgeport CT 06610 Bridgeport Regional Vocational Aquaculture School BRVAS is a half day school specializing in marine and aquaculture curricula near Captain s Cove and open to students from surrounding towns It serves all Bridgeport applicants and applicants from neighboring towns Trumbull Stratford Fairfield Milford Shelton Monroe and Region 9 school districts 60 St Stephens Rd Bridgeport CT Public magnet high schools Fairchild Wheeler Interdistrict Multi Magnet High School is three specialIzard STEM high schools in one building an IT and software technology school aerospace hydrospace school and biotechnology school It serves all Bridgeport applicants and applicants from neighboring towns Trumbull Stratford Fairfield Milford Shelton Monroe Region 9 Acceptance is by public lottery 840 Old Town Road Bridgeport CT 06606 Central Magnet part of Central High School is a public preparatory magnet school It serves all Bridgeport applicants who must meet grade requirements to enter the lottery 1 Lincoln Blvd Bridgeport CT 06606 Public military trade high schools Bridgeport Military Academy BMA is for students looking for a career in public safety Partnerships with local fire police Homeland Security and other departments It is open to all Bridgeport applicants 160 Iranistan Ave Bridgeport CT 06604 Bullard Havens Technical High School is a vocational high school It is a state school not part of Bridgeport Public Schools Charter schools edit The Bridge Academy Bridgeport Charter High School Achievement First Bridgeport Charter High School Great Oaks Charter School Park City Prep Charter School Private education edit Bridgeport is also home to private schools including Bridgeport Hope School K 8 Bridgeport International Academy grades 9 12 Catholic Academies of Bridgeport Pre K 8 Kolbe Cathedral High School 9 12 St Andrew Academy Pre K 8 and St Ann Academy Pre K 8 Media editRadio edit WCUM AM 1450 1 000 watts formerly WJBX AM and before that WNAB AM Spanish Format station better known as Radio Cumbre WICC AM 600 1 000 watts daytime 500 watts nighttime WICC began broadcasting on November 21 1926 when a previous radio station WCWS was given a new name WICC The last three letters standing for Industrial Capitol of Connecticut The Bridgeport Broadcasting Company Inc was the new station s owner Back then the station was powered at 500 watts From 1951 to 1956 one of the station s radio hosts was Bob Crane who later went on to play Col Robert Hogan on the Hogan s Heroes television comedy series 221 WICC s transmitter is on Pleasure Beach in Bridgeport on a peninsula extending into Long Island Sound WEBE FM 107 9 50 000 watts WEBE108 is Connecticut s Best Music Variety The station is owned by Connoisseur Media Licensed to Westport CT with studios in Milford and WEBE s transmitter is located in Shelton Besides a standard analog transmission WEBE broadcasts over one HD Radio channel and is available online WEZN FM 99 9 27 500 watts formerly WJZZ FM Star 99 9 is Today s Best Mix The station is owned by Connoisseur Media Lincensed to Bridgeport CT with studios in Milford and WEZN s transmitter is located in Trumbull WPKN FM 89 5 10 000 watts 222 Newspapers edit Elsolnews com a community Spanish language weekly newspaper covering news and events based in Stamford HaitianVoice com a Bridgeport based newspaper covering local news in English Haitian Creole and French Brazil News covers stories from Bridgeport in Portuguese 223 Connecticut Post Formerly the Bridgeport Post and Bridgeport Telegram which covers Bridgeport and the surrounding area The newspaper is printed daily It is owned by Hearst Connecticut Media Television edit Bridgeport was NBC s pioneer UHF TV test site from December 29 1949 to August 23 1952 224 the equipment from the Operation Bridgeport tests was later deployed commercially at KPTV in Portland Oregon 1952 1957 While Bridgeport is primarily served by New York City or New Haven Hartford stations some local UHF broadcasters operate today WEDW channel 49 one of the Connecticut Public Television stations broadcasts from Bridgeport and can be seen in Hartford In 2011 WTNH TV opened a satellite studio in the offices of the Connecticut Post Downtown on State Street WZME channel 43 a Story Television affiliate currently channel sharing with WEDW and licensed to Bridgeport Cable News 12 Connecticut an Altice only cable news channel for local news and weather in Greater Bridgeport Movies filmed in Bridgeport edit A list of films shot or partially filmed in the city 225 Officer Down 2012 A Dance for Grace 2010 Ironmen 2010 3 Weeks to Daytona 2009 Accidental Mayor 2009 All Good Things 2009 Confessions of a Shopaholic 2009 Dear Beautiful 2009 The Godfather Musical Part III Luca Brasi Sleeps with the Fishes 2009 House of Satisfaction 2009 Made for Each Other 2009 The Music of Erich Zann 2009 II Old Dogs 2009 I College Road Trip 2008 Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull 2008 Pistol Whipped 2008 Righteous Kill 2008 The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 2008 What Just Happened 2008 Bobby Dogs 2007 Dear Beautiful 2007 Praying to Hendrix 2007 Die Hard with a Vengeance 1995 A Walk with Death 1993 Route One USA 1989 There s a Nightmare in My Closet 1987 Without a Trace 1983 The Case of the Cosmic Comic 1976 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man in the Moon Marigolds 1972 The Light that Failed 1916 Television shows filmed in Bridgeport edit Kitchen Nightmares Season 4 Episode 7 Tavolini Restaurant 2011 Brian Boitano Skating Spectacular 2010 TV Ghost Adventures Remington Arms Factory Episode 21 November 2009 WWE Raw November 18 2002 March 8 2004 December 26 2005 August 21 2006 April 9 2007 April 27 2009 June 21 2010 April 11 2011 and September 17 2012 WWE Smackdown ECW and NXT May 7 2002 March 4 2003 August 2 2005 December 9 2008 November 24 2009 November 2 2010 and November 15 2011 Oprah Winfrey Presents Mitch Albom s For One More Day 2007 WWE Raw s 15th Anniversary Special 2007 Flip This House Burning Down the House 2005 Extreme Makeover Home Edition 2003 amp 2007 Made in America 2003 U S Bounty Hunter 2003 Muggsy 1976 The Twentieth Century 1957 The Class of 58 episode Johnny We Hardly Knew Ye TV movie 1977 bar scene of JFK campaigning with local workers filmed in the Ideal Bar on Barnum Avenue across from the former Singer Building Live PD 2016 2017 Family Guy 2010 Sneaky Pete 2015 although shot in the state of New York much of the show takes place in BridgeportInfrastructure editTransportation edit Airports edit nbsp Sikorsky Memorial Airport BDR in neighboring Stratford no longer offers commercial flights Sikorsky Memorial Airport in neighboring Stratford was previously owned by the City of Bridgeport before closing a deal in 2016 that sold the land to Stratford It once provided regional flights to major cities but commercial operations at the airport were terminated in November 1999 General aviation airports Distance from Downtown location Sikorsky Memorial Airport 3 miles east in Stratford Connecticut Danbury Municipal Airport 20 miles northwest in Danbury Connecticut Waterbury Oxford Airport 21 miles north in Oxford Connecticut Teterboro Airport 50 miles southwest in Teterboro New Jersey Regional airports Distance form Downtown location Tweed New Haven Airport 17 miles east in East Haven Connecticut Westchester County Airport 28 miles west in Westchester County New York International airports Distance from Downtown location LaGuardia Airport 45 miles southwest in Queens New York John F Kennedy International Airport 48 miles southwest in Queens NY Stewart International Airport 52 miles northwest in Newburgh New York Bradley International Airport 58 miles northeast in Windsor Locks Connecticut Newark Liberty International Airport 61 miles southwest in Newark New Jersey Roads edit nbsp A typical Bridgeport street sign from Thorme Street in the North End Bridgeport has several major roadways Interstate 95 and the Route 8 Route 25 Connector meet in Downtown Bridgeport I 95 runs east west near the coast heading towards New York City to the southwest and Providence to the northeast Routes 8 and 25 run north south across the city with the two routes splitting just north of the city Route 8 continues towards Waterbury and Torrington and Route 25 continues towards the Danbury area Both Routes 8 and 25 connect to the Merritt Parkway in the adjacent town of Trumbull Other major surface arteries are U S 1 the Boston Post Road which runs east west north of Downtown and Main Street which runs north south towards Trumbull center The city also has several secondary state highways namely Route 127 East Main Street Route 130 Connecticut Avenue Stratford Avenue Fairfield Avenue and Water Street and the Huntington Turnpike Railroad and ferries edit nbsp A New Haven Line train approaching the intermodal transit hub at Bridgeport Station The Bridgeport Traction Company provided streetcar service in the region until 1937 The Housatonic Railroad carried passengers North through the Pequonnock and Housatonic Valleys prior to 1933 The city is connected to nearby New York City by both Amtrak and Metro North commuter trains which serve Bridgeport s Metro North station Many residents commute to New York jobs on these trains and the city to some extent is developing as an outpost of New York based workers seeking cheaper rents and larger living spaces Connecting service is also available to Waterbury via Metro North and New Haven via Amtrak and Metro North Shoreline East service links Old Saybrook and New London with New Haven which extends to Bridgeport and Stamford during weekday rush hours only The Bridgeport amp Port Jefferson Ferry service runs from Bridgeport across Long Island Sound to Port Jefferson New York the three vessels Grand Republic P T Barnum and Park City transport both automobiles and passengers Buses edit nbsp A GBTA bus driving past North Avenue in the Hollow section of Bridgeport The Greater Bridgeport Transit Authority GBTA provides bus service to Bridgeport and its immediate suburbs Route 2 the Coastal Link goes west to Norwalk and east to the Connecticut Post Mall in Milford from where Connecticut Transit can bring passengers to the New Haven Green Greyhound and Peter Pan Bus Lines both offer intercity bus service to points throughout the Northeast and points beyond Emergency services edit Fire department edit Further information Bridgeport Fire Department The Bridgeport Fire Department provides fire protection and emergency medical services at the Basic life support level to the city of Bridgeport Police department edit Further information Bridgeport Police Department The Bridgeport Police Department is the primary law enforcement agency in Bridgeport Fairfield County Connecticut United States It is responsible for most law enforcement within the geographical boundaries of City of Bridgeport The Connecticut State Police Troop G barracks is located in Bridgeport but they do not primarily perform law enforcement functions in the city Emergency medical services edit Emergency medical services are provided by American Medical Response at the paramedic level In popular culture edit nbsp Mark Twain quote on Library Way in Midtown Manhattan Novels set in Bridgeport include A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court written 1889 a classic novel by Mark Twain contains the line Bridgeport Said I Camelot said he when a man from Hartford who does not yet know his has been transported to early medieval times arrives with his escort to Camelot confusing it for Bridgeport Bridgeport is the setting of Maureen Howard s novel Natural History which includes scenes from the city s history and depicts historical figures such as P T Barnum David Foster Wallace mentions Bridgeport in his novel Infinite Jest calling it the true lower intestine of North America 226 Notable people editFurther information List of people from Bridgeport Connecticut Brian Dennehy 1938 2020 actor of stage film and television Joe Ganim 1959 multiple term mayor and convicted felon Albert L Lehninger 1917 1986 biochemist known for work in bioenergetics and for his textbook Biochemistry John Mayer 1977 guitarist and singer songwriter Robert Mitchum 1917 1997 actor 227 Alyssa Naeher 1988 goalkeeper for the United States national soccer team 228 Justin Quiles 1990 singer songwriter Victoria Leigh Soto 1985 2012 defender during the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting Vinnie Vincent 1952 guitarist and songwriter best known as a former member of the band Kiss Larry Kramer 1935 2020 playwright author film producer public health advocate and gay rights activist founder of Act Up New YorkSee also edit nbsp Connecticut portal nbsp New England portal nbsp Cities portal Geography of Bridgeport Connecticut List of people from Bridgeport Connecticut National Register of Historic Places listings in Bridgeport Connecticut Seaside Village 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