Resolved by this Assembly, That all that part of the town
of Lyme lying south of the dividing line between the north and south school
societies in said town, with all the inhabitants residing south of said line,
be and the same is hereby incorporated into a distinct and separate town,
by the name of South Lyme, with all the rights, privileges and immunities,
and subject to all the duties and liabilities of other towns in this state,
with the right of sending one representative to the general assembly.
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And said new town shall pay its proportion, according to
the list of 1854, of all debts, charges, expenses, suits, petitions and claims,
already due and commenced, or which may exist against said town of Lyme, and
for which said town shall be hereafter rendered liable by force of any claim
now existing.
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And said new town shall take and maintain its portion of
the poor persons now maintained by said town of Lyme, said proportion to be
their respective lists, according to the grand list of 1854.
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And said town shall be liable to maintain, all such persons,
residing out of said Town of Lyme, as are now chargeable thereto, or may hereafter
become chargeable thereto, provided such persons, at the time of their departure
from said town, had a legal settlement in that part of said town hereby incorporated
into a new town, and shall not subsequent to such departure have gained a
settlement elsewhere.
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All rights and property, of whatsoever nature or description,
except as herein after provided, now owned by, due or belonging to the town
of Lyme, or which may hereafter accrue to said town by virtue of any claim,
right or title now existing, shall belong to said new town as hereby incorporated,
and said town of Lyme, in proportion to their respective lists, according
to the grand list of 1854.
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And the town deposit fund shall belong to and be divided
between said new town as hereby incorporated, and said town of Lyme, in proportion
to the number of their respective inhabitants, according to the census of
1850.
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The present town hall in said town of Lyme shall be and
remain the property of said town of Lyme; and the ferry house, wharf, and
all the real estate and other property belonging to said town, situated at
or near said ferry, and used in connection therewith, shall be and remain
the property of said new town; and the said new town shall be liable to all
the burdens imposed upon said town of Lyme by statute, relative to the support
and maintenance of said ferry, and shall be entitled to all the privileges
and emoluments arising therefrom.
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And the said respective proportions of taxable lists and
the population of said towns respectively, and the number of paupers belonging
to each, shall be ascertained and determined by the selectmen, or a majority
of them, of said respective towns, and in such manner as they may deem advisable;
always provided, that if, after the organization of said new town, the selectmen
of said towns do not agree in the divisions of the paupers, funds, deposit
fund and property, real and personal, belonging to said towns, and also upon
their respective taxable lists and number of inhabitants, on or before the
first Monday of September, 1855, the selectmen of either town may apply to
Edward P. Brownell, of East Haddam, Selden M. Pratt, of Saybrook, and William
R. Clark, of Old Saybrook, who, or either of whom, are hereby authorized and
empowered to divide said paupers, funds, deposit funds, and property, and
to ascertain and determine the amount of the taxable lists and number of inhabitants
of said towns respectively, in manner aforesaid, which division, whether made
by said selectmen, or a majority of them, or by said Brownell, Pratt, Clark,
or either two of them, shall be final and conclusive. And in case said division
shall be made by said last mentioned persons, the selectmen of both said towns
shall be first duly notified of the time and place when and where said division
shall be made; and the expense of said service shall be borne by said towns
according to their respective lists, as they shall be ascertained in manner
aforesaid.
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The collectors of the state, town and other taxes in the
town of Lyme are hereby authorized to collect their respective taxes already
laid, and in their respective rate-books contained, and pay the same over
for the benefit of said towns of Lyme and South Lyme, in proportion to their
respective lists, to be ascertained as aforesaid.
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Said new town, as hereby incorporated, shall belong to and
constitute part of the ninth senatorial district, and also of the probate
district of Lyme. The first meeting of said new town, as hereby incorporated,
shall be holden at the conference house in said new town, on the first Monday
of July, 1855, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and Daniel P. Noyes, Esq.,
or in case of his failure, William Beckwith, Esq., shall be moderator thereof;
and the said meeting shall be warned by the said Noyes or Beckwith, by setting
up a notification of the same on the public sign-posts within the limits of
said town, at least five days before said meeting. And said new town shall
have all the powers incident to other towns in this state at said first meeting,
and full right to act accordingly; and the others elected at such meeting
shall hold their respective offices until others are appointed and qualified
in their stead.
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This act shall take effect and be in force from and after
the day of its passage.
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Effective date: Passed 1855
Reference: Private and Special Laws of Connecticut, Vol. 4, p. 1275
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Effective date: May 26, 1857
Reference: Private and Special Laws of Connecticut, Vol. 5, p. 8
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The Hatchetts Improvement Company, its successors and assigns,
is authorized to construct and maintain a sea-wall or sea-walls in front of
and around its land situated at Hatchetts Point, at South Lyme in the town
of Old Lyme, bounded easterly and southerly by Long Island Sound, which sea-walls
may be built on the line of high-water as it existed on the fifteenth day
of March 1915, as shown on a map of lands of The Hatchetts Improvement Company,
dated September 11, 1915, and certified to by Spencer & Washburn, Civil
Engineers, and filed in the office of the town clerk of Old Lyme on or about
October 1, 1915; and it is also authorized to fill in and grade the space
inside of said walls, as it may deem expedient, and the land between said
walls and the lands of adjoining owners, who are stockholders in said The
Hatchetts Improvement Company, are granted to said company, its successors
and assigns forever, provided said filling and sea-walls shall not impede
public navigation.
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Effective date: April 2, 1919
Reference: Special Acts of Connecticut, Vol. 25, p. 1181
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The adjutant general may, with the advice and consent of
the governor, acquire for the state any land or interest therein contiguous
to the land of the military reservation in the towns of Lyme, Old Lyme and
East Lyme, which, in the opinion of said adjutant general, may be desirable
and necessary for the use of said reservation in exchange for land of the
state forming part of said reservation or interests therein which are not
desirable and necessary for the use of said reservation. The treasurer shall
execute and deliver any deed or instrument to convey the title of any property
of the state or interests therein, the exchange of which is authorized by
this act.
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Effective date: June 8, 1937
Reference: Special Acts of Connecticut, Vol. 2, p. 797
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Beginning at the north-westerly corner of the land herein
described at a point where the southerly line of land now or formerly of the
estate of Nathaniel C. Hall meets the easterly line of route number 156; thence
running in an easterly direction along the southerly line of land of said
Hall, following the line of a stone wall, 354 feet more or less, to a point
where said southerly line meets the northerly line of land of the state of
Connecticut; thence running in a westerly direction, along said northerly
line of the state of Connecticut, 297 feet more or less, to a point where
said northerly line meets the easterly line of route number 156; thence running
in a northerly direction along said easterly line of route number 156, 180
feet more or less, to the point or place of beginning. The parcel herein described
is bounded northerly and easterly by land now or formerly of the estate of
Nathaniel C. Hall; southerly by land of the state of Connecticut; and westerly
by route number 156. Said parcel of land is triangular in shape and contains
six-tenths of an acre, more or less.
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Effective date: July 26, 1949
Reference: Special Acts, 1948 and 1949, p. 1181
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Effective date: 1958
Reference: General Statutes of Connecticut, Revision of 1958, § 19-98
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Any person who takes any clams less than two inches in length
or more than one-half bushel of clams, or more than one-half bushel of oysters
except from an area designated for planting oysters, in any day in the town
of Old Lyme shall be fined not more than fifty dollars ($50.00) or imprisoned
not more than thirty (30) days or both.
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Effective date: 1978
Reference: Connecticut State Statutes, 1978, § 26-285
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No person shall take or attempt to take any fish from the
waters of the Thames River or Niantic Bay above the bridges of the Penn-Central
Railroad Company or from the waters of the Mystic River or from the waters
of the Connecticut River easterly of a straight line extending northerly from
the westerly tip of Griswold Spit to the easterly abutment of the Bridge of
the Penn-Central Railroad Company over the Connecticut River in the town of
Old Lyme, by means of any otter or beam trawl or any device of a similar nature,
or by use of any gill net and no person shall take or attempt to take any
fish from the waters of North Cove in Old Saybrook by means of any otter or
beam trawl or any similar device.
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Effective date: 1978
Reference: Connecticut State Statutes, 1978, § 26-176
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