Mission: The purpose of the Burlington
Historical Society is to instill in the community a sense of pride and interest
in its town history, to preserve its history and keep alive its traditions and
heritage.
The Society works to encourage preservation of historic structures and to
discover, collect, preserve and make available for scholarly use any printed
materials and objects related to the history of the Town of Burlington.
The Society maintains and operates the Elton Tavern. In the past few years, the
Burlington Historical Society has enhanced period rooms and painted the tavern
interior. With grants from the Bristol Brass Foundation, the Burlington Fund of
the Hartford Foundation and the James Parker Trust, it has completed a chimney
renovation project. Now, fires can glow again in all seven fireplaces.
In addition, the Society has offered a series of programs on local history.
There have been programs on genealogy, the Nepaug Reservoir, early taverns in the
Burlington
-Farmington
area, and our own town resident Silas Brooks. Twice, we have held exciting
appraisal nights, where local residents discovered the value of their family
heirlooms.
In early September of each year the Historical Society welcomes more than 1000
visitors to tour the tavern free on Tavern Day. Visitors can find treasures at
the tag sale located in the barn behind the house. Exhibits and demonstrations
of historic crafts are provided throughout the day.
The Burlington Historical Society hopes to work with state and regional
organizations to bring additional funding to Burlington
for historic renovation and educational projects. The Society envisions the
future of the Elton Tavern as a community museum that tells Burlington's
story, a destination for both townspeople and visitors. It plans rooms that
will bring to life Burlington's
own past - from the earliest days when Giles Griswold built the tavern as the
most elegant house in town, through the tavern's days at the crossroads of a
town that produced muskets, clocks, and baby carriages, to a return to a quieter
agricultural life.