Connecticut may be one of the smallest states in the U.S., but it packs in more variety than many places twice its size. From classic New England villages and coastal towns to modern cities with thriving food and arts scenes, Connecticut surprises visitors with its contrasts. Each season brings a different reason to visit from the brilliant fall foliage and snowy town greens to spring festivals and sunny beach days on the Long Island Sound.
History runs deep in Connecticut. In Mystic, visitors can explore a recreated 19th-century seafaring village at the Mystic Seaport Museum, complete with ships, blacksmiths, and costumed historians. Nearby, the Mystic Aquarium is one of only two in the U.S. where you can see beluga whales. Inland, Hartford is home to the Mark Twain House & Museum, where the author wrote *The Adventures of Tom Sawyer* and *Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.* The building itself is a striking Gothic-style mansion full of original furnishings and oddities, like a bed with secret compartments built just for Twain.
Cultural life thrives across the state. In New Haven, you’ll find Yale University, where visitors can tour the Yale University Art Gallery and Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library which is home to one of the few surviving Gutenberg Bibles. The city is also famous for its pizza, especially the coal-fired pies at Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana, a landmark since 1925. New Haven-style pizza, or “apizza,” is thin-crust, slightly charred, and often topped with unexpected ingredients like white clam, making it a destination for food travelers in its own right.