Mystic, Connecticut Hotels, Resorts & Accommodations

go back to home page home page
        < United States
             < Connecticut

Mystic hotels, resorts & accommodations
Mystic Convention & Visitors Bureau
Mystic Chamber of Commerce
Mystic Regional Directory
Google Images: Mystic
Google Map: Mystic
Wikipedia: Mystic

Customer Service & Support
Airline Tickets
Group Hotel Bookings
Travel Weblog and Live Chat
Travel Forum

State CONNECTICUT

MYSTIC
(regional info)
Best Western Sovereign Hotel - Mystic
COMFORT INN MYSTIC
DAYS INN MYSTIC
ECONO LODGE MYSTIC
HILTON MYSTIC
HOWARD JOHNSON MYSTIC CT
HYATT PLACE MYSTIC
Residence Inn By Marriott Mystic
The old whaling port and shipbuilding center of MYSTIC , the purists will tell you, does not in fact exist; it is an area governed 
partly by Groton and partly by Stonington. Nonetheless, it does have a small, well-kept, and somewhat touristy downtown , 
lined with typical New England-quaint clapboard galleries and antique shops. The old bridge across the bustling Mystic River 
that divides it down the middle still opens hourly, and self-guided walking tours take in the many old houses built by well-off sea 
captains. The Olde Mistick Village , at the intersection of I-95 and US-27, is a pleasant enough outdoor mall with over sixty 
upmarket shops in colonial-style buildings. For a scenic walk or bike ride away from the tourists, take the four-mile river road, 
which is protected from cars and development and passes by Downes Marsh, a sanctuary for osprey. 

What brings the tourists to Mystic is the impeccably reconstructed seventeen-acre waterfront village of Mystic Seaport , at the 
mouth of the river, where more than sixty weathered buildings house old-style workshops, stores and a printing press. Its Stillman 
Building exhibits exquisitely carved scrimshaw and a vast amount of products made from whales' wax-like spermaceti, as well 
as showing film of a bloody whale capture. There are demonstrations of shanty-singing, fish-splitting and sail-setting, among 
other salty pastimes, as well as storytelling and theater, while in the shipyard you can watch the building, restoration and 
maintenance of wooden ships. The pièce de résistance is the restored Charles W Morgan , a three-masted wooden Yankee 
whaling ship built in 1841 (daily: summer 9am-6pm; rest of year 9am-5pm, late-afternoon arrivals are granted free entrance 
on the next day; tel 1-888/9SEAPORT). The last of its kind, the Morgan is a remnant of an age of exploration and arrogant 
expansion remembered now with a mixture of nostalgia and shame. Done up ready to embark on a hypothetical two-year voyage, 
the ship is filled with whaling memorabilia; below deck, accessible by perilously narrow stairs, the blubber room is crowded with 
huge iron try-pots for melting down the blubber. 

Over six thousand weird and wonderful sea creatures glug about the Mystic Aquarium , at exit 90 off I-95. Hourly shows at the 
Marine Theater (daily: summer 9am-6pm; rest of year 9am-5pm) showcase porpoises and a beluga whale, and the 
explanations of the creatures' behavior make this a step up from standard aquarium fare. For those interested in the history 
of underwater exploration, there's the high-tech "Challenge of the Deep" exhibit, hosted by Dr Robert D. Ballard of the team 
that found the Titanic .




OTHER POPULAR DESTINATIONS IN CONNECTICUT
All available cities in Connecticut
Cromwell
Danbury
East Hartford
Farmington
Groton
Hartford
Manchester
Meriden
Milford
Mystic
New Haven
New London
Niantic
Norwalk
Norwich
Shelton
Southington
Stamford
Torrington
Vernon
Waterbury
Windsor
Windsor Locks

copyright (c) 2008 SecuredTravel.com hotel reservations network
All rights reserved

commercial advertisement