Middle Haddam CT Remodeling Pros

Full Service Design | Build | Over 35 Years of Experience

Top Middle Haddam CT Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers

When it’s time to get your kitchen remodeled, trust the most highly trained professionals in Connecticut. Christino Kitchens has been helping homeowners transform their properties for many years and we are ready to help you.

Fill out the form on this page to contact our team today and book your appointment. They will demonstrate the #1 options for your home or property, which are fully customizable to meet your needs.

Middle Haddam CT Kitchen Remodeling
Middle Haddam CT Bathroom Remodeling

Schedule an Appointment

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Middle Haddam

Kitchen
Remodeling

Upgrade Your Old and Outdated Kitchen Today

Read More

Middle Haddam

Bathroom
Remodeling

Let Us Provide You With a New and Modern Bathroom

Read More

Middle Haddam

Custom
Cabinetry

Cabinetry That Fits Your Needs

Read More

Time to Book a New Kitchen Remodel in Middle Haddam

Christino Kitchens lets customers to work in tandem with a skilled designer. Your personal kitchen designer will help you create your unique vision for your remodel.

With so much experience, you know you are in good hands. Wherever you live in Connecticut, our professionals can come to you.

Our crew works quickly and professionally to deliver impeccable results for everyone. Contact Us Today!

The Middle Haddam Historic District is a historic district in the town of East Hampton, Connecticut. It encompasses the village center of Middle Haddam, a riverfront community founded in the 17th century on the east bank of the Connecticut River. It was an important port on the river between about 1730 and 1880. Its layout and architecture are reflective of this history, and by the geographic constraints of the local terrain. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

Middle Haddam was settled in the 17th century as part of Middletown, Connecticut, and was incorporated as part of East Hampton in 1767. From an early date it was a shipbuilding community, with a sawmill on Mill Brook, which runs through the village. By the early 18th century, a ferry service was operating across the Connecticut River. By the time of the American Revolutionary War, it was a significant but small commercial center for a large agricultural area to the east, and became the locus of a road network serving those areas. It also acted as a shipment point for trade with the West Indies and the North American coast, and was the site of shipyards building ocean-going vessels.

The village and historic district are shaped by the local topography. The river forms the boundary to the west, and the inland boundaries are generally the result of steep slopes along the river bank or of the streams that pass through the area. The village’s northern boundary is distinguished by a transition to later industrial development of Cobalt village, and to the south by a wooded open space and a more widely spaced development pattern. The district has 58 historically significant primary buildings, most of which were built before 1835, giving the village a distinctly Federal style. Its oldest buildings date to 1732. There is only one example of Queen Anne Victorian architecture, built as a summer residence near the town landing.

Among others, the Princeton University and Yale Divinity School-educated Second Great Awakening evangelist James Brainerd Taylor (1801–1829) was born in Middle Haddam’s historic district. As a boy, Taylor attended the town’s still-standing Christ Episcopal Church (est. 1786).