The Homes Seen On TV database documents 7 famous properties in Connecticut, each independently sourced and verified, including Branford House, Silas W. Robbins House, Eolia (The Harkness Estate), Hill-Stead Museum.
East Haddam (1)

📍 East Haddam, Connecticut
📐 William Gillette
🏛 Rustic medieval fieldstone (Arts and Crafts influence)
Gillette Castle — in Seven Sisters hills, East Haddam [FACT-0349]; designed by William Gillette [FACT-0350].
View property →Farmington (1)

📍 Farmington, Connecticut
📐 Theodate Pope Riddle
🏛 Colonial Revival
Hill-Stead Museum — in Farmington, Farmington [FACT-1489]; designed by Theodate Pope Riddle [FACT-1490]; in the Colonial Revival style [FACT-1492].
View property →Groton (1)
📍 Groton, Connecticut
📐 Robert W. Gibson
🏛 Late Gothic Revival (Jacobethan / Tudor Revival)
Branford House — in Avery Point, Groton [FACT-3091]; designed by Robert W. Gibson [FACT-3092]; built in 1903 [FACT-3093]; in the Late Gothic Revival (Jacob…
View property →Hartford (1)

📍 Hartford, Connecticut
📐 Edward Tuckerman Potter
Mark Twain House — in Nook Farm, Hartford [FACT-0893]; designed by Edward Tuckerman Potter [FACT-0894]; built in 1874 [FACT-0895].
View property →New Canaan (1)

📍 New Canaan, Connecticut
📐 Philip Johnson
🏛 International Style
The Glass House — in New Canaan [FACT-0213]; designed by Philip Johnson [FACT-0214]; built in 1949 [FACT-0215].
View property →Waterford (1)

📍 Waterford, Connecticut
Eolia (The Harkness Estate) — in Goshen Point, Waterford [FACT-1670].
View property →Wethersfield (1)

📍 Wethersfield, Connecticut
🏛 Second Empire
Silas W. Robbins House — built in 1873 [FACT-2375]; in the Second Empire style [FACT-2376].
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