Page 30 - Rowayton Flipbook
        P. 30
     The Story of Norwalk
              The Name “Norwalk” itself comes from the Algonquin
       word “noyank” meaning “point of land”, or its Native
       American name, “Naramauke”, a Native American chief.
       Norwalk was purchased in 1640 by Roger Ludlow.
              The original purchase included all land between the
       Norwalk and Saugatuck rivers and a day’s walk north from
       the sea. Norwalk was chartered as a town on September 11,
       1651.
              The traditional American song “Yankee Doodle” has
       Norwalk related origins. During the French and Indian War, a
       regiment of Norwalkers arrived at Fort Crailo, NY, the British
       regulars began to mock and ridicule the rag-tag CT troops
       who only had chicken feathers for uniforms.
              Dr. Richard Shuckburgh, who was a British army
       surgeon, added some new words to a popular tune of the
       time, Lucy Locket (for example, “stuck a feather in his cap
       and called it “macaroni, macaroni being the London slang
       at the time for a foppish dandy).
              In 1849, the New York and New Haven Railroad
       started operating through Norwalk. In 1852 the Danbury and
       Norwalk Railroad connected Norwalk with Danbury. Both
       railroads eventually became parts of the New York, New
       Haven and Hartford Railroad.
              Norwalk is a city in Fairfield County, Connecticut.
       It is estimated that Norwalk is the sixth largest city in
       Connecticut, and the third largest in Fairfield County. The
       city is part of the New York Metropolitan area. Residents of
       Norwalk are often referred to as “Norwalkers”.





