Community Corner

Hidden Gems Of Connecticut

Once a gunpowder factory during the Civil War, the Powder Mill Barn is now an integral part of other unions.

The Powder Mill Barn is one of the top wedding and event venues in north-central Connecticut.
The Powder Mill Barn is one of the top wedding and event venues in north-central Connecticut. (Courtesy of Polly Sweet)

ENFIELD, CT — This week's trek to a Hidden Gem takes us to the upper regions of the state and a rustic, 19th century former factory that once helped win the Civil War for the Union and now helps celebrate the union of happy couples.

The Powder Mill Barn is one of the top wedding and event venues in north-central Connecticut. It is located just a quarter-mile from busy Route 190 in the Hazardville section of Enfield, yet is secluded at the bottom of a hill, adjacent to a babbling river, just like in the 1860s.

It sits at 32 South Maple Street. That was once the site of the Hazard Powder Company, which flourished in the mid-19th century. The company furnished an estimated 40 percent of all the gunpowder used during the Civil War. One of the few surviving structures from the company’s original complex of buildings is a barn built around 1845. Constructed as a horse barn, it was converted by Ralph Sweet for square dancing in 1959.

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Hidden Gem
A look at the Powder Mill Barn, taken around the turn of the 20th century. (Courtesy of Polly Sweet)

Sweet was a caller, with a dream of finding a place to host and call his own dances in, so he bought the dilapidated Powder Mill Barn. It needed a new roof, every window was broken, and it was buried in trees and overgrowth. His kids and friends from town came to help, and by 1961 the barn was the place to be on a Friday night. You could drive by and see the large doors open and the hundreds of people dancing. Banners from clubs all over New England still hang in the barn today.

Following Sweet's passing in 2019, the barn was taken over by his daughter Polly. As the barn approached its 60-year anniversary in the Sweet family, many restorations were done, including installation of a brand new floor.

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"Keeping the history, while making it more suitable for events like weddings, was the priority," Polly Sweet told Patch. "The history of Powder Hollow is important to the Sweet family, and if you have the opportunity to visit the barn, you can still enjoy the historical photos and Ralph’s color-coded, labeled maps of the Hazard Powder Co. displayed on the walls."

Although the barn floor was built for dancing, and there is still one square dance club who dances regularly at the hall, the Powder Mill Barn has also been a popular rental venue for anything from weddings, showers, parties, club meetings, auctions, flea markets, dog training classes, and the annual Scantic Spring Splash.

The Powder Mill Barn is a beloved Enfield landmark, located in the Hazardville Historic District, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

For more photos and rental information, visit the Powder Mill Barn on Facebook and WeddingWire.

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Patch Editor Tim Jensen Contributed to this story. The Hidden Gems series features out-of-the-way mom and pop restaurants, small specialty stores you may have never heard of, little-known historical markers or beautiful nature spots that may be a bit off the beaten path, all located within Connecticut.

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