Look to your right for a row of tightly-packed houses climbing a steep hill, some sitting above old stone retaining walls-if it feels like a neighborhood built on a natural staircase, you’ve found the Hempstead Historic District.
Alright, soak it in. This part of New London is like a time capsule stacked three centuries deep. Settled way back in the 1600s, folks first put their roots here when the rest of New England was more forest than town. The view might’ve been of muddy Bream Cove back then-now it’s 142 houses packed onto sloping streets that zigzag the hillside. In the mid-1800s, the whaling boom turned these old farms into prime real estate. Suddenly, whalemen and new industry left their mark, followed by factories and, in a rare twist for the era, a thriving free Black community. Walk past, and you’ll spot everything from Colonial wood beams to Greek Revival columns. Anti-escape features-think high fences and narrow lanes-hint at early jailhouses and factories. If you want to see museums, both Hempstead houses are open. This district saw fortunes made, families settled, and a city growing up-one steep step at a time.
Ready for Huntington Street Baptist Church? Wander east for about 8 minutes.




