DERBY
The City of Derby, the smallest city in the state of Connecticut,
covers 5.3 sq. miles and has 12,080 residents. It is located in
southwest Connecticut at the confluence of the Housatonic and
Naugatuck Rivers. The area was inhabited by several Native American
tribes including the Paugassetts and the Pootatucks for centuries. A
trading post was established at Derby Docks in 1642 by John Wakeman
of New Haven, but fur traders from New Haven had been in the area
previously. The first year-round houses were built around 1651, at
which time the New Haven Colony recognized it as a town, but the
residents of nearby Milford protested so vehemently that the order
was rescinded and the settlement returned to Milford jurisdiction
until 1675 when the former plantation of Paugassett was admitted as
the township of Derby by the state legislature.
For some time parts of the present day city of Derby were also known
as Smithville and then Birmingham. The area prospered through
agriculture, a successful foreign maritime trade, and finally
manufacturing. The city of Derby was chartered by the state in 1893.
The town's successful commercial development was by then based on
manufacturing. From the first water-powered gristmill in 1681 to the
opening of the Ousatonic Dam in 1870, efficient use of available
power attracted a series of large manufactures to the town.
While the rivers provided power and transportation that made Derby's
location the envy of its neighbors from the earliest times, its
geographic location continues to be a favorable asset to this day.
Currently located in the center of a triangle bordered by New Haven
on the east, Bridgeport to the south and Waterbury to the north,
Derby is the hub of one of the largest metropolitan areas in the
state, yet maintains its suburban charm. Route 8 provides a vital
north-south link to major interstate highways 84 and 95. New York is
little more than an hour's drive and Boston is about 2 hours away.
Derby is an ideal place to live and work, and we invite you to learn
more about the community by visiting our pages.
Colonial Towns of Connecticut Links
Bibliography