Showing posts with label Lord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lord. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2010

Connecticut Founders

EAST HADDAM


WILLIAM VENTRES (1623-1701)
DANIEL BRAINERD (1641-1715)

William Ventres and his wife Elizabeth emigrated from England and were original founders of the town of Haddam in 1668.

Deacon Daniel Brainerd, also an English immigrant, was another Haddam founding father. He and his father John purportedly came from Braintree, England. Daniel’s grandson, Daniel III, was Grampy Herbert Clarke’s 4th great grandfather.

In 1669, Brainerd, James Wells, and George Gates (listed in the plaque above), together were charged with the task of mapping the lands on the east side of the Connecticut River.  They laid down the first roads in the area, and sold off the lands to a variety of families without ever having seen much of it.  In 1673, Robert Chapman (recent immigrant from Yorkshire and my 8th great grandfather), put the first house down along the river, just to secure his claim on the lands.  In 1685, the first settlers of East Haddam began doing the same.  By 1700, there were 30 families settled in East Haddam.  The family names of Clarke, Chapman, Seldin, Brainerd, Ventres, and Warner, all ancestors to Grampy Clarke, were known as the founding fathers of East Haddam, CT.

These settlers still needed to cross the Connecticut River westerly every Sunday to attend church in Haddam.  Captain John Chapman (Robert's son) built a ferry service for that purpose.  Some controversy arose regarding the need for travel, as the population started to grow.  As early as 1697, the Gates family petitioned the Connecticut Colony General Assembly to form an Ecclesiastical Society separate from Haddam.  There appeared to also be a disagreement on who should be pastor at the Haddam Church.  In 1704, East Haddamites finally got their own church, the First Congregational Church of East Haddam.  One of the very first baptisms performed by the Church was for Susannah Ventres-Brainerd, founder Daniel Brainerd's daughter in law, and my 7th great grandmother.  Many of my Fuller ancestors were also baptised here in the early years, starting with the children of Timothy Fuller, one my 7th great grandmothers on my father's side.


FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF EAST HADDAM
(ESTABLISHED 1704)

In 1734, East Haddam was finally incorporated as its own town.  It then began the process of expansion into the much larger town it's known as today.

HARTFORD & NEW HAVEN


GRAVE OF THOMAS LORD




HARTFORD CITY FOUNDERS PLAQUE
(portion showing ancestor William Parker)


William Parker and Thomas Lord were two of the founders of Hartford, CT, and are both direct ancestors of Niles Clark, Grampy’s father.



GRAVE OF DEACON WILLIAM PECK


WILLIAM PECK (1601-1694), an eighth generation ancestor to Niles M. Clark, was a merchart in London and it is believed that he came to America with his wife, ELIZABETH, and young son, JEREMIAH, on the good ship HECTOR, arriving in Boston on June 26, 1637. He was probably part of the Eaton-Davenport Company who migrated to New Haven in 1638/39. He signed the Fundamental Agreement of Quinnipiack in 1639 and became a freeman on October 29, 1640 in New Haven. From 1659 to his death, he was a deacon of the First Church of New Haven. His homelot was on George Street. Although his estate showed that he was not wealthy, he was highly respected.

He was one of three who inventoried the estate of Sgt. Thomas Jeffrie in 1661. In December of 1662, at a town meeting in New Haven, Deacon Peck informed those present that the town "elders" were not getting enough to eat -- that there was not enough wheat & malt to go around.

Deacon William Peck & another ancestor, ROGER ALLING, were appointed a Committee of Trustees for a trust that totalled £918 being authorized to direct the affairs of the Collegiate Grammer School in New Haven.

After Elizabeth's death in 1683, he married Sarah, widow of William Holt around 1684. While visiting his son, JOSEPH, in Lyme, he died in 1694. Lyme Vital Records gave his age at death as 93, while New Haven record says 90 years. However, his tombstone gives his age at death as 93 years.

STRATFORD

William Hayden (1602-1669) and William Wilcoxson (1601-1652), both eighth generation ancestors to Niles M. Clark, were English settlers who arrived in Connecticut in the 1630's.  They were part of the first families of Stratford Connecticut, formerly known as Cupheag Plantation, and prior to that, Pequonnocke.  Their children, Daniel Hayden and Hannah Wilcoxson (who became stepsiblings when Hayden married Wilcoxson's widow Margaret), settled in Killingworth, CT and later Windsor, CT.  Their daughter Hannah Hayden married William Phelps of Windsor, and had their son Charles Phelps (1708-1745), who was my 6th great grandfather, and was the first Phelps to settle in Lyme, CT.

John Coult, Revolutionary War Patriot

GRAVE OF JOHN COULT
DUCK RIVER CEMETERY
OLD LYME, CONNECTICUT



John Coult (1725-1784), Revolutionary War soldier, was my sixth great grandfather, and an ancestor to my Connecticut Clark family.  His father was Deacon Benjamin Coult, of the Hartford Coults, who had been there since the 1630s...yet I cannot find the colonial migrant ancestor yet (he may be descended from one of the Colture or Coltman colonists).  John's mother was Miriam Harris, whose grandfather Daniel Harris migrated from Gloucestershire, England in the late 1600s.

According to Sons of the American Revolution applications and the Connecticut Military Archives, he was enlisted as a Marine under Captain Hall with 100 men, on September 18, 1775 and was in service for three months.  He also was listed as a conductor of teams for transporting supplies from Connecticut to the Continental Army from 1779 to 1781.

His grave, however, mentions the Lexington Alarm, which was part of the Powder Alarms of the first battle of the Revolution, the Battle of Lexington and Concord, and he apparently loaned money to the Continental Congress. He married his 2nd cousin, Mary Lord. He is buried in Duck River Cemetery in Lyme, CT. 

His entire family were veterans.  His grandfather was army Captain John Coult (1658-1751).  His son, Dr. Amherst Coult, also fought in the Revolution in the 6th Connecticut Regiment, and had enlisted four times total.  Amherst had commanded a post on the Connecticut River.  His other sons, John Jr. and Gardiner, served as a Captain in the Revolution and a Seaman, respectively.  He had a brother, Harris who was a Captain, and a nephew, Peter, who was Commisary of the Eastern Dept.

His daughter Esther Coult was my fifth great grandmother.  She married Mather Peck, also a Revolutionary War patriot.

John Coult’s page on Daughters of American Revolution website