Step Back in Time
Back in 1638, a group of English Puritans boarded a ship dubbed “The Hector,” and set sail for the future. They arrived in the heart of the New Haven harbor and settled into what was then known as Quinnipiac. Just two years later, the town of Quinnipiac was given a new name – New Haven. The moniker, which stemmed from an English maritime village, reflected the residents’ hopes for their new home. New Haven would be just that, a new haven for immigrants in search of a new life, religious freedom, and prosperity. That legacy held firm for centuries, seeping into the soil and growing upwards through the branches of abundant elm trees, continuing to welcome folks from across the globe in search of a new life, a fresh start, a true haven.
Since then, New Haven has become known for other things, newer things. Perhaps best known as the home to Ivy-League Yale University and its famous Neapolitan-inspired style of ‘apizza,’ New Haven is a place that inspires innovation, playing a fundamental role in major advances to medicine, science, and technology. Since 1638, New Haven has collected countless “firsts,” including becoming the first city in America to be planned on a grid system. We’re also home to the first pedaled bicycle, the first clinical use of penicillin, and the first lollipop. Innovation is what we do – that and serve up the best pizza you’ll taste in your lifetime.
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Yale alumnus Eli Whitney invented the first Cotton Gin, which became a gamechanger for cotton production across the U.S.