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    Social Security

    4.5 (2 reviews)
    Open 9:00 am - 4:00 pm

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    US Post Office

    US Post Office

    (7 reviews)

    Very freindly sales clerks and beautiful historic building. Needs a face lift though. Has been…read moregetting better upkeep this year. I prefer this office over Seymour and Derby. Didnt know they were open on Saturdays either. Postmaster helped me do a advertising online, USPS.com. It was a program that let me mail to select part of town and was cheaper than any other advertising ive ever used. It was call Each Door Direct Mailing/ EDDM. Great deal....

    Today 4-10-26; I went to my mailbox to place an outgoing mail when I realized that the mail lady…read morewas next door. I asked her if she could take the outgoing mail and she did then she handed me my mail. I asked her why she had not delivered my mail and she said because of my dog. I said to her; the dog is chained in the garage. It is no where near the mailbox. She said the dog scares her. I've been noticing that my mail has not been delivered on time. I told her that I will be putting a complaint. She had already called the post office letting them know I was coming. I went to the worst post office ever (Ansonia,CT) in person and asked to speak to the Post Master and of course he wasn't there and the Supervisor came out and the first thing he says to me is no matter what he's going to believe his mail carrier. That's not the way to start a conversation. I showed him pictures of where the dog was, picture of the mailbox which she doesn't even have to step a foot in my property to get to the mailbox. He didn't care to look at the pictures. I got very upset and maybe came out rude. He did not care about anything I had to say.

    Derby Historical Marker

    Derby Historical Marker

    (1 review)

    Who was General David Humphreys? He accepted the British flag when they surrendered to end the…read moreAmerican Revolutionary War. He was a Derby native. Add that historical nugget to the knowledge that pins, silver, bolts, typewriters, harnesses, and hoop skirts were manufactured here back in the day and you have one pretty cool marker. This is a 2-sided marker from the CT Historical Commission in the familiar white lettering on a blue background. It has different inscriptions on each side. The marker was dedicated in 1981 and is in excellent shape. The blue background is fairly bright with no signs of fading or peeling. The full inscription reads: Derby Birthplace of two distinguished wartime heroes General David Humphreys, aide-de-camp to General George Washington, accepted the British colors at the surrender at Yorktown, Virginia. Friend of both Washington and General Thaddeus Kosciuszko, Polish patriot and hero of the American Revolutionary War. Commodore Isaac Hull, commander of the frigate Constitution ("Old Ironsides") which destroyed the British frigate Guerriere in the first great naval battle of the War of 1812. Many brave men and women from Derby also served or gave their lives for their country in all wars in which the United States has engaged. In 1642 John Wakeman established the first trading post in the Naugatuck Valley at the confluence of the Naugatuck and Housatonic Rivers. Edward Wooster, a Milford pioneer, became the first permanent settler in 1654. The land, originally called Paugassett for the native Paugasuck Indians, was granted rights of a plantation and in 1675 named Derby after Derby, England, former home of some of the settlers. It included what is now Ansonia, Seymour, and parts of Oxford and Beacon Falls. Shipbuilding and agriculture made Derby a major foreign and domestic seaport until the early 1800's. In 1833 Sheldon Smith began a manufacturing center between the two rivers. Industries flourished in the making of iron, copper, organs, pins, silver, bolts, typewriters, harness, hoop skirts, tools, and wheels. The first trolley car in New England ran here in 1888. In 1893, with its present boundaries, Derby became a city. Today it remains an industrial center of great diversity Erected 1981 by the City of Derby, the Old Derby Historical Society, and the Connecticut Historical Commission. 154 CT towns done, 16 to go

    Social Security - publicservicesgovt - Updated May 2026

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