Connecticut has a long industrial and maritime history that matters in asbestos litigation. Across the state, workers spent years in machine shops, mills, paper facilities, powerhouses, factories, boiler rooms, schools, hospitals, municipal buildings, and older commercial properties where asbestos-containing materials were common. The state’s coastal shipbuilding and submarine-related work, along with naval service and defense contracting, also created exposure risks that continue to affect families today. In many Connecticut cases, the story is not about a single event but about repeated contact over time in workplaces that once relied heavily on insulation, gaskets, pumps, valves, cement products, floor materials, and heat-resistant equipment.
That history makes Connecticut claims distinct. A person in New London County may have a very different exposure path than someone in Hartford, Bridgeport, Waterbury, New Haven, Danbury, or a smaller town with older industrial buildings or public facilities. Some people were exposed while performing skilled trades. Others encountered asbestos during custodial work, maintenance, demolition, school renovations, or home remodeling in older properties. A statewide asbestos case in CT often requires looking closely at the industries, buildings, and work practices that shaped the person’s life here.


