We apologize for the inconvenience

The people search feature on Superpages.com is temporarily unavailable. You can still search for people on yellowpages.com since Yellow Pages and Superpages are part of one company.

You will be automatically re-directed to People Search on yellowpages.com in .

Please note our privacy policy has changed. To view the policy, please go to https://corporate.thryv.com/privacy/

Details

General Info

THE GUEST HOUSE The rest is history. We’re proud to have completed the restoration of the 1750 homestead at 93 East Avenue – a property that is rich in history – to its original grandeur in 2013. According to historic records, in 1724 Samuel Grumman purchased the property at Grumman Hill, known as Rail Hill at the time. The first record of a house on the property is in Samuel Grumman’s will, in 1750, leaving it to his son Thomas Grumman and his wife Deborah (Deolf) Grumman. In 1779, following General Tryon’s orders to burn Norwalk, the house may have been partially or completely burned. Over the next hundred years, the property was the home to many noted Connecticut families, including the Buckingham-St. Johns, and the Bush and the Hoyt families. During the 20th century, the home was owned by the Nagys, the Eriksons, the Singewalds and the Wiegands. As a tribute to its long history, each suite in the newly renovated Guest House bears the name of its former owners.THE GUEST HOUSE The rest is history. We’re proud to have completed the restoration of the 1750 homestead at 93 East Avenue – a property that is rich in history – to its original grandeur in 2013. According to historic records, in 1724 Samuel Grumman purchased the property at Grumman Hill, known as Rail Hill at the time. The first record of a house on the property is in Samuel Grumman’s will, in 1750, leaving it to his son Thomas Grumman and his wife Deborah (Deolf) Grumman. In 1779, following General Tryon’s orders to burn Norwalk, the house may have been partially or completely burned. Over the next hundred years, the property was the home to many noted Connecticut families, including the Buckingham-St. Johns, and the Bush and the Hoyt families. During the 20th century, the home was owned by the Nagys, the Eriksons, the Singewalds and the Wiegands. As a tribute to its long history, each suite in the newly renovated Guest House bears the name of its former owners.

HoursOPEN NOW
Regular Hours:
Mon - Sun

Contact Info

Phones:

Main - 203-838-2000

Fax - 203-838-9722

Extra - 203-838-5531

Address:
99 East Ave Norwalk, CT 06851
Email:

Reviews

Be the first to review!
Write a Review
Categories
Hotels, Conference Centers, Lodging, Restaurants
Payment Options
master card, visa
Brands
None
AKA

Norwalk Inn & Conference Center

The Norwalk Inn & Conference Center

Suggest an Edit
Are you the business owner?Claim This Business
Data provided by one or more of the following: Thryv, Data Axle, Yext.