The history of Redding, Conn., from its first settlement to the present time : with notes on the Adams, Banks Stow families, Part 1

Author: Todd, Charles Burr, 1849- cn
Publication date: 1880
Publisher: New York : The J. A. Gray press
Number of Pages: 272


USA > Connecticut > Fairfield County > Redding > The history of Redding, Conn., from its first settlement to the present time : with notes on the Adams, Banks Stow families > Part 1


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GENEALOGY COLLECTION


ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 01150 5895


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The warriors name, The Real and claimed on all the longues of fame. Sounds lojas harmonious to the grateful mind. Than his when fashions and improves mankind.


Columbia Book 8 th line 126.


Painted by R. Buiten.


Engraved by A. Smith A.R.A.


THE HISTORY


OF


REDDING,


CONN.,


FROM ITS


FIRST SETTLEMENT TO THE PRESENT TIME.


WITH NOTES ON


THE ADAMS, BANKS, BARLOW, BARTLETT, BARTRAM, BATES, BEACH, BENEDICT, BETTS, BURR, BURRITT, BURTON, CHATFIELD, COUCH, DARLING, FAIRCHILD), FOSTER, GOLD, GORHAM, GRAY, GRIFFIN, HALL, HAWLEY, HILL, HIERON, HULL, JACKSON, LEE, LYON, LORD, MALLORY, MEADE, MEEKER. MERCHANT, MOREHOUSE, PERRY, PLATT, READ, ROGERS, RUMSEY, SANFORD, SMITH, AND STOW FAMILIES.


BY CHARLES BURR TODD, AUTHOR OF "A HISTORY OF THE BURR FAMILY."


NEW YORK : THE JOHN A. GRAY PRESS AND STEAM TYPE-SETTING OFFICE, CORNER OF FRANKFORT AND JACOB STREETS. 1880.


1242428


PREFACE.


AN interest is attached to the place of one's birth which change of scene rather enhances than removes, and which increases rather than diminishes in intensity as one ap- proaches the later stages of life : this home feeling has been largely instrumental in the production of this work, and to it is due nearly every thing of interest or value that the book possesses.


A history of Redding has been long contemplated by the author as a service due his native town, and as long shrunk from because of the labor, the expense, and the difficulty of its compilation. Whether well or illy done, it is now completed, and goes out to the somewhat limited public for whom it was written.


The materials for the work have been drawn largely from the ancient records of the town and parish, from the rec- ords of the colony, and from the files of musty papers in the State Library at Hartford. Tradition and oral infor- mation have not been neglected, and every reasonable effort has been made to render the work as far as possible a thorough and reliable history of the town. That errors and discrepancies will be found, is to be expected ; but it is not believed that they are sufficiently numerous or impor- tant to destroy its historical value. In the preparation of the book the compiler has aimed to preserve the character of a local historian, and has confined himself chiefly to the


iv


PREFACE.


narration of local facts and incidents. In harmony with this principle, an extended biography of Joel Barlow, at first intended for this work, has been excluded. The sketch of the poet so grew on the author's hands, that it was found it would make a volume by itself, and con- tained so much of general interest and detail that it could not be made to harmonize with the local character of this work. A concise sketch of the poet's life, however, and the original portrait from Fulton's oil-painting, that formed the frontispiece of the Columbiad, are included in its pages.


The compiler has not aimed at making a large book : many facts in few words is what a busy age demands of the historian, and in deference to this demand only suchi matter as was of real value and interest has been admitted. The church histories and the genealogical notes are, per- haps, the most important, if not the most interesting, por- tions of the work. It would have added to the value of the ecclesiastical history, no doubt, if it had been prepared by the pastors of the different churches represented ; but, with one exception, these had so recently assumed the care of their charges, that they did not feel at liberty to undertake it, and the task fell to the lot of the compiler. If this department is not what it might have been, the cause may be found in the disadvantages which a layman must labor under in attempting to write ecclesiastical history. The Rev. Mr. Welton, rector of Christ Church, very kindly consented to prepare the history of that church, and his paper will be read with interest by our citizens.


In preparing the notes on the early families of the town, it was the writer's intention at first to make them much more complete and extensive. But the little in- terest in the matter manifested by the families concerned, and the great labor and expense involved in compiling any thing like a complete history of the thirty or forty


-


V


PREFACE.


families mentioned, led him to abridge the work, and to give the matter in the form of notes taken chiefly from the town and parish records. The fact that the record of some families is given more fully than that of others, is not owing to any partiality on the author's part, but to the fact that these families interested themselves enough in the matter to furnish the data called for.


By reference to the title-page it will be seen that the modern method of spelling the name of the town-Redding -is adopted rather than the ancient-Reading. Legally, no such town as Reading exists in Connecticut, since, both in the act of incorporation and on the probate seal, the name is spelled Redding ; and inquiry elicits the fact that the majority of the citizens prefer the latter method of spelling. It is the opinion of the writer, however, that the original name of the town was Reading, and that if historical precedents are to be followed it should be so named now. In all old documents among the State ar- chives, and in the ancient records of Fairfield (where the name first occurs), the orthography is Reading. In the town and society records it is spelled either Redding or Reding, rarely Reading. Rev. Moses Hill, a gentleman well versed in the antiquities of the town, informs me that at the time of its incorporation, in 1767, a meeting was held, at which it was voted that the name of the new town should be Redding ; and the fact that in the original bill incorporating it the name Reading has been crossed out and that of Redding substituted, would seem to point to some such action on the part of the town. I find no entry of any such action, however, in the town records.


The books consulted in the preparation of the volume have been Barber's "Historical Collections of Connecti- cut," Hollister's "History of Connecticut," De Fer- rest's "Indians of Connecticut," Teller's "History of Ridgefield," the Congregational Year-Book, and Stevens'


vi


PREFACE.


" History of Methodism." The author's thanks are due Mr. Lemuel Sanford, our efficient town-clerk, for ready access to the town records, and for many valuable hints and suggestions ; also to Messrs. Thomas Sanford, William E. Duncomb, Daniel Sanford, David S. Bartram, James Sanford, and David H. Miller, for efficient aid in the prep- aration of the work. He is also indebted to Rev. Moses Hill, of Norwalk, for data of the Hill and Barlow families ; and to Mr. A. B. Hull, of Danbury, for many papers and documents relating to the history of the town.


REDDING, March 1, 1880.


C. B. T.


CONTENTS.


CHAP.


PAGE


I. PRELIMINARY SETTLEMENT


1


II. REDDING AS A PARISH


23


III. TOWN HISTORY


32


IV. REVOLUTIONARY HISTORY AND INCIDENTS.


V. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.


75


VI. CHRIST CHURCH.


90


VII. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCHI


113


VIII. BAPTIST CHURCH IN GEORGETOWN.


129


IX. METHODIST PROTESTANT CHURCH


133


X. HISTORY OF SCHOOLS


13%


XI. MANUFACTURERS


143


XII. MISCELLANEOUS


149


XIII. REDDING IN THE CIVIL WAR


159


XIV. THE EARLY FAMILIES OF REDDING


173


XV. BIOGRAPHICAL.


223


PHYSICAL HISTORY.


"READING, 60 miles south-west of Hartford, about 5 miles long by 63 wide, with an area of 32 square miles. The Saugatuck River crosses it through the middle, north and south ; and the Norwalk River is in the west part. The forest trees are oak, nut trees, etc. Population in 1830, 1686."-United States Gazetteer, 1833.


" Like many of the New England villages, it is scattered, aud beautifully shaded with elms, maples, and syca- mores."-Lossing, Field-Book of the Revolution.


" The geological character of the town, as throughont Western Connecticut is metamorphic. Granitic and por- phyritic rocks, and especially micaceous schists, predom- inate. The minerals are such as are familiar in such rocks-hornblende, garnet, kyanite, tremolite, etc. In the western part of the town are deposits of magnesian lime- stone (or dolomite), much of which is quite pure, though some of it contains tremolite and other impurities. The other mineral features of the town are not specially noteworthy, or of general interest. The soil is probably, in the main, the result of the disintegration of the under- lying rocks."-Notes of Rev. John Dickinson.


HISTORY OF REDDING.


CHAPTER I.


PRELIMINARY SETTLEMENT.


THE history of the early settlement of Redding differs radically from that of any of the neighboring towns. A new settlement was generally formed by a company of men, who purchased of the Indians a tract of land in the wilderness, had it secured to them by a charter from the General Assembly, and also surveyed and regularly laid out, and then removed to it with their wives and families. Dan- bury, Newtown, and Ridgefield were settled in this manner ; but Redding at the time of its first settle- ment was a part of the town of Fairfield, and so continued for nearly forty years-a fact which makes it much more difficult to collect the frag- ments of its early history and to accurately define its original metes and bounds. Fairfield formerly ex- tended to the cross highway leading from the Centre to Redding Ridge, and the entire southerly portion of Redding was given by that town on the erection of the former into a parish in 1729. This portion of Redding was probably surveyed as early as 1640, being included in the purchase made by the proprie- tors of Fairfield in 1639. Between Fairfield north


2


2


HISTORY OF REDDING.


bounds and the towns of Ridgefield, Danbury, and Newtown was an oblong tract of unoccupied land, whose bounds were about the same as those that now exist between Redding and the towns above named : this tract was variously called, in the early records, the "oblong," the "peculiar," and the " comon lands." It was claimed by a petty tribe of Indians, whose fortified village was on the high. ridge a short distance south-west of the present resi- dence of Mr. John Read. This tribe consisted of disaffected members of the Potatucks of Newtown, and the Paugussetts of Milford, with a few stragglers from the Mohawks on the west.


Their chief was Chickens Warrups, or Sam Mo- hawk, as he was sometimes called. President Stiles says in his "Itinerary" that he was a Mohawk sagamore, or under-chief, who fled from his tribe and settled first at Greenfield Hill, but having killed an Indian there he was again obliged to flee, and then settled in Redding. All the Indian deeds to the early settlers were given by Chickens, and Naseco, who seems to have been a sort of sub-chief. The chief, Chickens, figures quite prominently in the early history of Redding ; he seems to have been a strange mixture of Indian shrewdness, rascality, and cunning, and was in continual difficulty with the settlers concerning the deeds which he gave them. In 1720 he was suspected by the colonists of an attempt to bring the Mohawks and other western tribes down upon them, as is proved by the following curious extract from the records of a meeting of the governor and council held at New Haven, September 15th, 1720 :


3


HISTORY OF REDDING.


" It having been represented to this board that an Indian living near Danbury, called Chickens, has lately received two belts of wampumpeag from cer- tain remote Indians-as it is said, to the west of Hudson River-with a message expressing their de- sire to come and live in this colony, which said mes- senger is to be conducted by aforesaid Chickens to the Indians at Potatuck, and Wiantenuck, and Po- quannuck, in order to obtain their consent for their coming and inhabiting among them ; and that here- upon our frontier towns are under considerable ap- prehensions of danger from Indians, fearing that the belts have been sent on some bad design :


" It is Resolved, That Captain John Sherman, of Woodbury, and Major John Burr, of Fairfield, tak- ing with them Thomas Minor, of Woodbury, or such other interpreter as they shall judge meet, do repair immediately to said Indians at Potatuck and Wian- tenuck, and cause the said Chickens, to whom the belts and messengers were sent, to attend them, and to make the best inquiry they can into the truth of said story, and what may be the danger of said mes- sage, and as they shall see cause, take proper order that the said Indian with the belts, and the principal or chief of the Potatuck and Wiantenuck Indians, attend the General Court at its next session, to re- ceive such orders as may be useful to direct them in their behavior in relation thereunto ; and that Major Burr return home by way of Danbury, that the in- habitants there and in those western parts may be quieted as to their apprehensions of danger from the Indians, if upon inquiry they find there is no just ground for them."


The first deed or grant of land in the ". oblong" within my knowledge was given to Mr. Cyprian Nichols in 1687. This grant, in Secretary Wylly's handwriting, reads as follows :


4


HISTORY OF REDDING.


"' At a General Court held at Hartford, October 13, 1687.


" This Court grants Mr. Cyprian Nichols two hundred acres of land where he can find it, provided he take it up where it may not prejudice any former grant to any particular person or plantation ; and the surveyors of the next plantation are hereby ap- pointed to lay out the same, he paying for it.


CALEB STANLEY."


Captain Nichols "took up" his grant in that part of the "oblong" which is now Lonetown, as is shown by the following document :


"MARCH 1, A.D. 1711.


" Then laid out ye Grant of two hundred acres of land granted by ye General Court to Capt. Cyp- rian Nichols, Oct. 13, 1687, as follows, viz., be- ginning at a great Chestnut tree marked on ye south and west side, and J. R. set upon it, standing at ye south end of Woolf Ridge, a little below Dan- bury bounds, thence running west one hundred rods to a Walnut tree marked on two sides, then running south one mile to a red oak tree marked, then run- ning east one hundred rods to a black oak tree marked, then running north one mile to the Chest- nut tree first mentioned. An heap of stones lying at ye root of each of ye trees. We say then thus laid out by us,


THOMAS HOYT, DANIEL TAYLOR, Surveyors of ye Town of Danbury.


" Entered in ye public book of En-


trys for Surveys of Land, folio 14, per Hezekiah Wyllys, Secretary, March 21, 1711."


The next two grants in this tract of which we have any record were made, the first, May 7th, 1700, to Mr. Daniel Hilton, and the second October 10th,


5


IIISTORY OF REDDING.


1706, to Mr. Richard Hubbell. They were laid out nearly at the same time, and side by side with the preceding grant, as follows :


"MARCH 3RD, A.D. 1711.


" Then laid out ye Grant of two hundred acres of land made by ye General Court to Mr. Daniel Hil- ton, May 7, 1700, and ye Grant of one hundred acres, granted October 10th, 1706, by ye General Court to Mr. Richard Hubbell, all in one piece as followeth, viz., Beginning at a Walnut tree marked, and J. R. upon it, standing a little way North East from ye Hog Ridge, between Danbury and Fairfield. thence running two hundred and eighty rods north- erly to a Red Oak tree marked, on ye West side of Stadly Ridge, thence running easterly one hundred and eighty-four rods to the Little River at two Elm Staddles and a Red Oak, marked, thence running Southerly, west of ye river, and bounded upon it, two hundred and eighty rods to a bitter Walnut tree marked, thence running one hundred and sixty rods westerly to the Walnut tree first mentioned, thus and then laid out by us,


THOMAS HOYT, DANIEL TAYLOR, Surveyors of the Town of Danbury."


These grants were purchased, probably before they were laid out, by Mr. John Read, one of the earliest actual settlers of Redding. Mr. Read was a gentle- man of education, and later became an eminent law- yer in Boston. He was withal something of a wag, as is proven by an Indian deed given him about this time, which he drew up, and which was-what rarely happens -- a humorous as well as a legal pro- duction .* It reads as follows :


" For this paper and several others that follow, I am indebted to Mr. George Read, of Redding, a lineal descendant of Colonel Read.


6


HISTORY OF REDDING.


" Know all men by these crooked Scrawls & Seals, yt. we Chickens, alias Sam Mohawk, & Naseco, do solemnly declare yt. we are owners of yt tract of land called Lonetown, fenced round be- tween Danbury and Fairfield, and Jno. Read, Govr. & Commander in Chief there of, & of the Domin- ions yr-upon depending, desiring to please us, hav- ing plied the foot, and given us three pounds in money, & promised us an house next autumn. In consideration yr'of, we do hereby give and grant to him and his heirs the farm above mentioned, corn appertaining, & further of our free will-motion & soverain pleasure make ye land a manour, In- dowing ye land with ye privileges yr of, and create the sd. John Read, Lord Justice and Soverain Pon- tiff of the same to him and his heirs forever : Wit- ness our crooked marks and borrowed Seals, this seventh day of May, Anno Regni, Anno Dei, Gratia Magna Brittannia, and Regina Decimo Tertio, Anno Dom'r, 1714.


" CHICKENS, alias SAM MOHAWK,


his X mark.


his


NASECO X mark.


Sealed and delivered in presence of


his


WINHAM, X mark. his


LIACUS, ? crook. NATHAN GOLD.


her


MARTHA HARNEY, X mark. "The above mentioned Chickens & Naseco- personally appeared & acknowledged ye above


2


HISTORY OF REDDING.


Instrument yr free act and chearful deed in Fair- field, ye 7th of May, 1714,


before me. N. GOLD, Dept. Gour."


About 1723 Captain Samuel Couch of Fairfield appears as a large landholder in Redding, and his operations there seem to have caused the settlers no little uneasiness. The General Court of 1712 had ordered that all the lands lying between Danbury and Fairfield, not taken up by actual settlers, should be sold in Fairfield at public vendue. The land, however, was not sold until the August of 1722, when it was bid off by Captain Couch for himself and Nathan Gold, Esq. No notice of the vendue was given to the settlers at Redding, and when news of the sale reached them they became very much excited and indignant, and Mr. Read at once drew up the following protest and petition, which was signed by the farmers and presented to the next General Court at New Haven. It is noteworthy from the fact that the Quaker system of dates is used.


" At a General Court held at New Haven, 8th, 10th, 1723.


." To the Honor'ble the General Court :


" John Read in behalf of himself and the rest of the farmers or proprietors of farms between Dan- bury and Fairfield, humbly sheweth,


"That the Hon'ble Nathan Gold, Esq., late de- ceased, and Peter Burr, Esq., as Agents for ye Col- ony, held a Vandue lately at Fairfield about ye time of ye Superior Courts sitting yr in August last, and sold to Capt. Samuel Couch, who bid for himself and


8


HISTORY OF REDDING.


for s'd Nathan Gold, Esq., all ye land between Fair- field and Danbury not before disposed of for the sum of Yr humble pet'rs conceive the same ought not to be ratified : because ye same was done so unexpectedly, and without sufficient notice, none of us most nearly concerned knew any thing of it : if ye order of ye General Court had been freshly passed, ye less notice was need full, but lying ten or twelve years, sufficient notice was not given, and well con- sidered it cant be good. The inconveniences are in- tolerable ; the place is now growing to be a village apace. Ye lands purchased are but ye


over and over for farms.


" The remaining Scraps will be a very lean and scanty allowance for a comon, and (are) absolutely necessary to accommodate the place with hiways, and some strips left on purpose for ye use and ye surveying of the farms-Several farms interfere through mistakes and such interfers must be sup- plied elsewhere ; now in such circumstances it was never the hard fate of any poor place to have ye shady Rock at their door, and ye path out of town or about town sold away from them by ye General Court. Therefore humbly praying ye Hon'ble Court to grant ye same to ye proprietors of farms there in proportion for a common and hiways, or if the same seem too much, since some persons have bid a sum for our hiways we pray to buy them at first hands, and will pay this Hon'ble Court for the same as much as ye Court shall sett upon, and remain your honor's most obedient servants.


" JNO. READ."


When the matter came before the Court, Mr. Read produced several witnesses to show that the vendue was conducted in an unseemly and illegal manner ; among them Mr. Jonathan Sturges, who deposed as follows :


9


HISTORY OF REDDING.


" Some of the Company began to bid for s'd land, 'and some of the Company desired that Mr. Stone who was there present, would pull out his watch and that the time for bidding should be but ten minutes, and the watch was laid down on the table : for a little time the people bid but slowly ; but when they perceived the ten minutes to be near out, they began to bid very briskly, and when it come to the last minute, the people bid more quickly, and at the last they bid so quick after one another that it was hard to distinguish whose bid it was; at the very minute the tenth minute ended ; but I, stand- ing near the watch, spoke and said, ' the time is out, and it's Capt. Couch's bid,' but I am certain Thomas Hill bid twenty shillings more.'"


Mr. Read did not succeed in his attempt to have the sale set aside, and the lands were adjudged to the purchasers. Captain Couch seems to have disposed of an interest in a part of his purchase to Thomas Nash, of Fairfield, and in 1723 the two received a joint patent for the same : this patent is a curious and valuable document and is given entire :


" Whereas, the Governor and Company of the English Colony of Connecticut, in General Court as- sembled at Hartford, the 8th day of May Anno Domini 1712, did order and enact that all those lands (lying within the said Colony) between Danbury on the north, and the towns of Fairfield and Norwalk on the south, should be sold at Public Vendue, and by said act did fully authorize and empower the 'Honble Nathan Gold and Peter Burr Esq. both of the town of Fairfield aforesaid, to make sale and dispose of the s'd same lands accordingly, and whereas the s'd Nathan Gold and Peter Burr in pur- suance and by force and virtue of the aforesaid act, did by their deed in writing, executed in due form


10


HISTORY OF REDDING.


bearing date this first day of May, Anno Domini, 1723, for a valuable sum of money paid by Samuel Couch and Thomas Nash, both of the town afores'd, Grant, sell, and convey unto them the s'd Samuel Couch and Thomas Nash, one hundred acres of s'd land bounded and butted as follows, that is to say, lying within six rods of the north bounds line of the townships afores'd, and on both sides of the road that leads from Norwalk to Danbury, and lying the whole length of the one hundred acres formerly laid out to s'd Thomas Nash and bounded westerly by the s'd Thomas Nash, and from the north east corner of s'd Nash, his bound being a black oak stump, that stands on the land, and a small box wood tree marked in course, running northerly, sixty eight degrees, eastwardly thirty two rods to a white oak staddle, thence South forty three degrees and thirty minutes, eastwardly fifty rods to a rock, and stones on the same, that stands on the eastward side of a brook that runs by the southerly end of Umpawaug Hill, between the s'd brook and Danbury road, and from s'd Rock to run North sixty eight degrees, Eastwardly eighty six rods to a mass of stones, then South twenty two degrees, Eastwardly, one hundred and thirteen rods to a white oak sap- ling, marked, standing on the aforementioned North bounds line of Fairfield, then by s'd line one hundred and forty rods up to the South East corner of s'd Nash, his one hundred acres, Danbury road being allowed in above measure of six rods wide, and the hiway by the Township's line of six rods wide, and whereas the s'd Samuel Couch, and Thomas Nash, have humbly desired that they may have a particular grant of s'd Governor and Company made (by Patent) unto them, their heirs and assigns for the same land bounded butted and described, under the seal of the s'd Colony, know ye therefore, that the Governor and Company of the s'd Colony, in pursuance, and by virtue of the powers granted unto


11


HISTORY OF REDDING.


them by our late Sovereign Lord, King Charles the Second of blessed memory, in, and by his Majestie's letters patent under the great seal of England bear- ing date the three and twentieth day of April, in the fourteenth year of his s'd Majestie's Reign, have given and granted, and by these presents, for them their heirs and successors do give grant, ratifie, and confirm unto them the s'd Samuel Couch and Thomas Nash, their heirs and assigns forever, all the s'd peice or parcell of land containing one hundred acres be the same more or less, butted and bounded as afores'd, and all and singular, the woods, timber, under woods, lands, waters, brooks, ponds, fishings, fowlings, mines, minerals and precious stones, upon or within the s'd piece or parcell of land, here by granted or mentioned, or intended to be granted as afores'd, and all and singular, the rights, members, hereditaments and appurtenances of the same, and the reversion or reversions. remainder or remainders, -profits, privileges whatsoever, of and in the s'd peice or parcell of land or every or any part thereof. To have and to hold the s'd one hundred acres of land hereby granted with all and singular, its appur- tenances unto them the s'd Samuel Couch and Thomas Nash, their heirs and assigns to and for their own proper use, benefit, and behoof from the day of the date hereof, and from time to time, and at all times forever here after, as a good, sure, lawful, absolute, indefeasible estate of Inheritance in Fee simple, without any condition, limitation, use, or other thing to alter change, or make void the same. To be holden of our Sovereign Lord, King George, his heirs and successors, as of his Majestie's Manor of East Greenwich, in the county of Kent, in the King- dom of England, in free and common soccage and not in cappitee, nor by Knight service ; they yield- ing and paying therefor to our Sovereign Lord the King, his heirs and successors forever, only the fifth part of all the oar of Gold and Silver, which from




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