Each week the Wilton Town Clerk’s office releases data for the prior week’s real estate transactions. From Friday, Mar. 27 through April 2, 2026, Town Clerk Lori Kaback reported six properties that changed hands.
Important: Please note that the Town Clerk’s report contains limited information. For details, read the document on file in the Wilton Town Clerk’s office. These land transfer reports are available on the town website.
GMW makes an effort to find current photos from recent real estate listings, websites such as Zillow.com, or mapping services such as Google Maps. In some cases, photos may be from previous real estate listings or town appraisal/land records.
Key Highlight: Spring sales were in the air as six residential properties changed hands this week, including one gem of a property on Middlebrook Farm Rd. and the purchase by the Wilton Historical Society for $1.075 million of the adjoining property.
The historic property at 3 Deerfield Rd. purchased by the WHS contains a home that dates to the 1850s and is contiguous with the current Historical Society campus.
According to the society’s Executive Director Nick Foster, the house was part of a much larger plot of land that included what is today the Historical Society’s museum campus. It changed hands several times in the early 20th century, until the 1940s when it was owned by the Waters family, beginning with Helen Greenwell Waters. Her husband, George Fite Waters, was a prominent sculptor and a student of Auguste Rodin. He had a studio on the property and created several portrait busts of many notable political figures and artists while living at the house.
This home is the third acquisition of a historic property made by the organization within the last decade, including the mid-19th century Orem’s Barn (originally located at 211 Danbury Rd.) in 2018, and portions of the early 19th-century John C. Walley House (home of a formerly enslaved man originally located at 232 Danbury Rd.) extracted during the demolition of that house in the summer of 2025.
The Wilton Historical Society, an independent non-profit that receives no town or state funding, funded the purchase through its endowment, which has been created through donations. “Since 1938, the organization has been educating those who look to the past to shape the future. The Historical Society is pleased to keep the community’s oldest buildings across its three campuses as thriving parts of this special town,” the WHS said in a press release about the purchase.
73 Old Kings Highway: Michael and Jillian Deutsch to Benjamin and Sarah Tisdale for $1,500,000.

30 Wild Duck Rd.: Ilene G. Kaufman to Michael Itzkowitz Deutsch and Jillian Deutsch for $1,850,000.

30 Freshwater Ln: Patricia E. Dziama to MDI Construction LLC for $650,000.

33 Middlebrook Farm Rd.: David R. Anspach to Dean and Rebecca McCotter for $2,335,000.

178 Linden Tree Rd.: Michael I. O’Connell and Elizabeth A. Nagle to Brian Douglas and Saida Agneta Dick for $1,560,000.

3 Deerfield Rd.: David Fite and Cynthia Drosdak Waters to Wilton Historical Society Incorporation for $1,075,000.



