History of Windham County, Connecticut, Part 26

Author: Bayles, Richard M. (Richard Mather)
Publication date: 1889
Publisher: New York, Preston
Number of Pages: 1506


USA > Connecticut > Windham County > History of Windham County, Connecticut > Part 26


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116


Windham had previously manifested a desire to be annexed to Hartford county. She had petitioned the general court to this end, and in May, 1694, the petition was granted, and this town became a factor of Hartford county. The town was now fairly embarked upon its career of ups and downs, and various experiences common to the towns of that period and surround- ings. A military company was founded, of which John Fitch was lieutenant, Jonathan Crane was ensign, and Samuel Hide sergeant. Training days were inaugurated, and ever after cel- ebrated with the usual hilarity. Highways were laid out such as were needed " on or about the hill that lies west of the Pond." A custom was then established by public order, that at subse-


256


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


quent town meetings the moderator should open the delibera- tions with prayer.


Let us now turn for a moment to notice some of the individ- ual members that were swelling the body corporate. William and Joseph Hall, Joshua and John Allen, Nathaniel Bassett, Ben- jamin Armstrong, Samuel Gifford and Robert Smith were now settled at the Ponde; the Halls having come from Plymouth, Bas- sett from Yarmouth, and the others probably from Norwich. Joseph Dingley now occupied the allotment purchased by Cap- tain Standish. William Backus exchanged his house and accom- modations at the Hither-place for Ensign Crane's grist mill. Crane sold the house and lot to Exercise Conant in 1695, and Conant conveyed it to John Abbe, of Wenham, July 3d, 1696, for £70 in silver. Samuel Abbe, probably a brother of John, purchased half an allotment and half a house at the Centre, of Benjamin Howard, in 1697. John Waldo, of Boston, a reported descendant of Peter Waldo, of Lyons, purchased an allotment laid out to Reverend James Fitch, and was admitted an inhabit- ant here in 1698. William Hide, William Moulton, Philip Paine, John Ashby, Josiah Kingsley, Samuel Storrs, Samuel Storrs, Jr., Robert and Joseph Hebard, Isaac Magoon, John Howard and Thomas Denham, were also admitted inhabitants in the year 1698, or before; Shubael Dimmock in 1699, and Abraham Mitchell in 1700. James Birchard sold his right to Philip Paine in 1696, and removed to the West Farms of Norwich. Samuel Abbe died a few months after his arrival here, his son Samuel succeeded to his estate at the Centre, and his widow married Abraham Mitchell. John Cates, the first Windham settler, died in the summer of 1697. He left a service of plate for the communion service of the church, two hundred acres of land in trust for the poor, and two hundred acres to be applied to schools.


The town officers elected for the year 1698 were : Joshua Rip- ley, town clerk ; Joseph Dingley and Joseph Hall, collectors for minister ; Thomas Huntington and Jonathan Ginnings, fence viewers for south end of town ; William More, surveyor of high- ways for south end ; Samuel Lincoln, surveyor for north end ; William Backus, pound keeper and hayward for the great field at the south end ; Benjamin Millard, hayward for fields at Crotch of River ; Lieutenant Fitch and Samuel Birchard, to lay out land. The value set upon allotments at this time was £35 each.


257


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


During this period one of the chief questions which agitated the corporate mind was the location and erection of a meeting house and the collection of taxes to pay the minister, these things being, according to the custom and sentiment of the time, legitimately under the care of the town in its capacity as a po- litical organization. After much social commotion on the sub- ject, a site was decided upon, and January 30th, 1700, the front part of William Backus's home lot at the southeast quarter was purchased by Mr. Whiting and Ensign Crane, and made over by them to the town, for a " meeting-house plat or common." This was the nucleus of Windham Green, on which the first meeting house was soon after erected. The thousand-acre right which had been reserved for the minister was soon afterward made over to Reverend Mr. Whiting, the first settled minister of this town church, a more detailed account of which will be given in its appropriate place.


The territory of this town was enlarged by the addition of two considerable tracts of adjacent land. The tract which lay between the former bounds of the town and the limit of Nor- wich, called the Mamosqueage lands, reserved by Joshua for the benefit of his children, was contested by Owaneco, and only after a long and troublesome controversy secured by Joshua's son, Abimileck, who sold it to John Clark and Thomas Buckingham. This tract, embracing about ten thousand acres, lying west of Nipmuck path, was purchased in 1698 by Messrs. Crane and Huntington, in behalf of the proprietors of Windham, and in 1700 made over to Reverend Samuel Whiting and Jonathan Crane, who assumed the whole charge of it, laying it out in shares and selling it to settlers. Their right was challenged by Lieutenant Daniel Mason, who had received a deed of the land from Owaneco, and in spite of the decision adjudging it to Abim- ileck, Mason in 1701 openly proclaimed his right to the lands at Mamosqueage, and warned all people against cumbering the same. In September of that year, however, the general court confirmed the land to Messrs. Whiting and Crane and granted them a patent for it. The other tract referred to was the broad stretch of meadows west of the Willimantic river, which was not included in the former grant to Windham or to Lebanon. Residents of both these towns had purchased land in this section, and as settlers took possession the question arose as to which town they belonged. Upon application to the general court, a


17


258


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


committee was sent to consider the situation and report. Upon their report it was decided that the tract in question should be attached to Windham, which decision appears to have been agreeable to all concerned. The boundary line between the two towns was satisfactorily and permanently settled by a commit. tee from each town, September 23d, 1701.


About the year 1700, settlement in the quarter now known as Scotland was begun by Isaac Magoon, who had been admitted as an inhabitant in 1698. A hundred-acre division of lands in the town was made in 1700, each proprietor being allowed consider- able of latitude in his choice of location, with certain qualifica- tions, one of which was that they were not to choose land within one mile of the meeting house.


With the increase of population came the establishment of various trades and enterprises for the benefit, real or imaginary, of the people. In 1700, Benjamin Millard was allowed to set up the trade of a tanner. Lieutenant Crane received permission from the court at Hartford " to keep a public victualing house for the entertainment of strangers and travelers and the retail- ing of strong drink." Sergeant Hide had license to keep an or- dinary at the Ponde, and "retale his mathagiline so far as ye towne have power." Liberty to build a saw mill on Goodman Hebard's brook, and the privilege of the stream for damming or " ponding," was granted to several petitioners, or, " if that would not answer, take any other stream." It was decided that the miller should grind corn for the people every Monday and Tues- day, and if more was brought than he could grind in the speci- fied days, he was to keep on grinding till all was finished. In December, 1702, the town for the first time made provision for a school, directing the selectmen to agree with a school master or mistrees, the " scollars to pay what the rate falls short."


Soon after this it began to appear to the people that the town was too large to be advantageously managed under one local government. Movements toward division which began in 1701 were consummated in May, 1703, by the division of the territory into two parts, called the northern and southern parts, though more properly they were the eastern and western. The western part of the town, comprising forty-one square miles, was erected into the township of Mansfield. A part of its original territory is now included in Chaplin. A patent was granted by the gen- eral court to the new town of Mansfield, likewise a new patent


259


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


to the town of Windham, thus reconstructed of one-half of the original Joshua's tract and the Clark and Buckingham tract added to it.


The town thus reduced in size was able to give closer atten- tion to the details of its own territory and organization. The boundary line on the east was for many years a matter of disa- greement and litigation with Canterbury. In 1703 the town also agreed to have but one "ordinary" within it; that one to be kept by Lieutenant Crane. Lieutenant Fitch was chosen town clerk at this time, a position which he continued to hold for many years. When the Indian war broke out in 1704, the free- holders were all required to remain in the town under penalty of forfeiture of their estates, or a fine of ten pounds to be lev- ied on any other male persons, not freeholders, over sixteen years of age, who should leave the place. Knapsacks, hatchets and snowshoes were provided by the selectmen, to be ready for emergencies, and ten pounds in silver were expended for a stock of ammunition. The militia was reorganized, Windham now having population sufficient to form a full train band. John Fitch was appointed captain, Jonathan Crane lieutenant, and Joseph Cary ensign. A watch was maintained along the front- iers, and houses were fortified according to law, but the threat- ened danger passed without giving the people any serious in- convenience. In 1705 an allotment of four hundred acres to the right was made, to be laid out west of the tract adjoining Canterbury which was in dispute with that town. The disputed tract was also laid out, Windham vigorously persisting in exer- cising possession of it. This disputed land was a gore piece ly- ing between two lines which had been run as the eastern bound- ary of Windham. The west line was the line run by Bushnell according to the direction of Uncas, as the eastern boundary of Joshua's tract, and it followed the Nipmuck path, running a lit- tle west of south. The east line was a due south line from Ap- paquage, which had been run in 1691 by a committee appointed to run out the east line of the town. At that time there was no settlement claiming on the east of Windham, so the last men- tioned line remained undisputed until 1700, when Plainfield, be- ing laid out, claimed to the Nipmuck path. The settlement of what is now Scotland was at this time steadily increasing, and the value of land was rising. Saw mills and grist mills were erected on the powerful stream near Willimantic falls. But the


-


260


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


settlement at the "Crotch," which had promised to become the center, ceased to hold its precedence, and with the removal of the gatherings for public worship to other parts of the town, fell into comparative obscurity. Two of its settlers, Broughton and Howard, removed to other parts of the town, and their home- steads passed to other permanent residents. Mr. Whiting still occupied the house built for him, but no village grew up around it. A twenty-acre land division was laid out here in 1707.


In 1706 a division of four hundred acres to the right, in the northeast part of the town, was laid out. In January, 1709, David Canada, William Shaw, Robert Moulton and Edward Col- burn, all of Salem, purchased one hundred acres of land on both sides of Little river, of William More, for £23, and began the settlement of a remote section, which is now included in the township of Hampton. A road passing through "the burnt cedar swamp," led from Windham to this settlement, and thence to the old Connecticut Path. That part of the town known as Windham Green soon became the chief center of business and public affairs. Here were gathered together the principal offi- cial men of the town, the meeting house, school, shops, training field and Lieutenant Crane's "ordinary," as the tavern was called.


By a land distribution in 1712 the northeast section of the town was opened for settlement. This section gained steadily in population and importance, notwithstanding its remoteness and difficulty of access. Its soil was good and land was cheap, its situation pleasant and the outlook commanding. This sec- tion, then called Canada Parish, now known as Hampton, soon became so strong as to warrant the organization of its people into a distinct society. This was done under an act of the assem- bly in 1717. In 1718 this parish was also granted liberty to organize and maintain a military company within its borders. The people of the parish were also empowered to levy an annual tax for the parish expenses, of ten shillings on every hundred acres of unimproved land lying within its borders. This was strongly objected to by the Windham proprietors living in other parts of the town who owned land in this section. Their objec- tions, however, were over-ruled by the assembly, but they never- theless caused a great deal of trouble to the new society in col- lecting such taxes.


About the year 1725 the population of the Windham town was rapidly increasing. So great was the increase in Canada


261


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


parish that a full military company was formed there, with Stephen Howard for captain, Nathaniel Kingsbury for lieuten- ant, and Samuel Gardner for ensign, and sixty privates between the ages of sixteen and sixty. Schools were also provided there and selectmen, surveyors and other officers were chosen for that section, so that the parish was every way well established and accommodated, and its inhabitants only needed to repair to Windham Green for town meetings. The society had been granted respite from paying taxes toward the general expenses of the colony for four years, in accordance with the usual custom of dealing with young organizations. But drought, short crops and other discouragements prompted the Canada people to ask the further favor of the assembly in this direction. In response that body granted "one year and no more," after which the society was expected to pay its share of the common expenses.


During the early half of the last century the town grew apace. Settlement at Scotland progressed as did also that at Windham Green. A court of probate was established here in October, 1719, for the towns of Windham, Lebanon, Coventry, Mansfield, Canterbury, Plainfield, Killingly, Pomfret and Ash- ford, and this added much to its business and importance. Cap- tain John Fitch, already the honored town clerk of Windham, was appointed the first judge of probate, still retaining, how- ever, his clerkship. In 1721 the town street was widened to eight rods from the southeast corner of Deacon Bingham's house-lot to the northeast corner of Gentleman Mitchell's house. A new pound was built near the meeting house. The popula- tion of the town had now increased so that a second military company was organized, with Eleazer Carey for captain, Edward Waldo for lieutenant, and Nathaniel Rudd for ensign. Jeremiah Ripley was then lieutenant of the first company.


The sons of the first settlers were now active in public affairs. Jonathan Huntington, son of Joseph, was practicing medicine, the first regular physician of Windham town. His brother Joseph had married Elizabeth, daughter of Joshua Ripley. Joshua Ripley, Jr., married a daughter of John Backus. John Backus, Jr., married a daughter of Mr. Whiting. Jonathan Crane's son Isaac, married Ruth Waldo, of Scotland. Among the new inhabitants of Windham was Thomas Dyer, who removed hither in 1715, when twenty-one years of age, mar- ried Lydia, daughter of John Backus, was first a shoemaker


262


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


and farmer, but soon engaged in public affairs and became one of the most prominent and wealthy citizens of the town. Eleazer Carey, nephew of Deacon Joseph Carey, removed to Windham in 1718. Deacon Joseph died in 1722.


John and Samuel Abbe were among the very early settlers of this town, and the name has been a prominent, influential and respected one in the subsequent history of the town. Through the male and female branches the blood has been widely dissemi- nated, and is diffused through almost the entire range of Wind- ham families. It is supposed that they came from Wenham, Mass., their ancestors having come from the county of Norfolk, England. John purchased of Lieutenant Exercise Conant the seventh home-lot at Windham Centre with a house on the west side of the town street and the thousand-acre right belonging to it, July 3d, 1696, all for seventy pounds in silver. He was ad- mitted an inhabitant December 9th of the same year, and was one of the original members of the Windham church, organized in 1700. He died suddenly December 11th of the same year. Samuel Abbe, brother of the last mentioned, bought of Benja- min Howard of Windham, for £22, 10s., one half an allotment of land-a five hundred acre right-being number two at the Centre, with half the house, etc. He was admitted an inhabi- tant December 21st, 1697, and became the ancestor of the most numerous branch of the Windham Abbes, and all of the name now living in Windham or vicinity are descended from him. He died at Windham in March, 1698. One of his female de- scendants, Rachel Abbe in 1738-9 married General Samuel McClellan, and so became the great-grandmother of the late General George B. McClellan, of national renown. Paul and Phil- lip Abbot came from Andover, Mass., and settled here, in the section of the town now Hampton, about 1722. Their descend- ants have been largely involved in the history of this town. Joseph Allen, the ancestor of representatives of the same name still living in this town and Scotland, bought land in this town, now Scotland, January 13th, 1731. Samuel Ashley in April, 1717, purchased two hundred acres of John Fitch in the north- east part of Windham, on both sides of Little river. This homestead farm is in the North Bigelow district in Hampton, and has remained in the family ever since. Jonathan Babcock was probably the second permanent settler of that portion of Wind- ham which is now included in the village of Willimantic. He was


263


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


the common ancestor of most of the Coventry and Mansfield Babcocks. He bought the thousand-acre right which had been laid out by Captain John Mason and had passed through several hands previous to his purchase in 1709. The home farm, con- taining 154 acres, had been laid out on this right, April 17th, 1706. It lay just beyond the western limits of the borough of Willimantic, near the village cemetery, and the first house erected upon it was probably the second one built in Williman- tic. Babcock was admitted as an inhabitant in 1711. William Backus settled in Windham as early as 1693. His father, Lieutenant William Backus, was one of the original Norwich legatees of Joshua, and had three of the thousand-acre shares, one of which he gave to his son William, of whom we are speak- ing. The home lot was number seven, at Windham Centre. It was in the center of the present village of Windham. One acre of it was purchased, January 30th, 1700, by Reverend Sam- uel Whiting and Ensign Jonathan Crane, and presented by them to the town for a "Meeting Plot or Common." This was the original "Windham Green." Many of the descendants of this settler still remain. ' Deacon John Baker, probably son of Samuel Baker of Hull and Barnstable, came to Windham with his sons Samuel and John (as is supposed), at some time before 1746, and located in that part of Windham now the south part of Scotland. When the descendants had become somewhat numerous the place where the families settled was called "Baker Town."


In 1726 the courts of the new county of Windham were held in this town. Being thus made the shiretown its prosperity re- ceived a fresh impetus. The growth of the village at Windham Green was especially quickened. The court house and jail were soon erected, with stores, taverns and numerous private residen- ces, and much business, private as well as public, centered here. A grammar school, authorized by the general court, was estab- lished after some delay. Improvements were also in progress throughout the town. Ichabod Warner, in 1727, was allowed to make a dam across Pigeon Swamp brook, and John Marcy and Seth Palmer to make one on Merrick's brook. The first dam was built across the Willimantic the same year, near the site of the present stone dam of the Linen Company. The Iron Works bridge was also erected. The forge and the iron works were at that time in operation, but from the frequent change of owners


26-


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


we judge that they were not very successful. Badger soon sold his share to Ebenezer Hartshorn, son of Thomas, the first Wil- limantic mill owner. Hartshorn conveyed it to Joshua Ripley, and he to Thomas Dyer, together with the adjacent dwelling house, May 27th, 1731. Dyer retained it till 1735, and then sold out to Hathaway, one of the founders of the company. These Willimantic Iron Works were maintained many years, and em- ployed a number of laborers, but were never very thriving. The privilege occupied so early by Thomas Hartshorn was made over by him to his son Ebenezer, of Charlestown, who in 1729 sold the grist mill, saw mill, water privilege and forty-acre lot to Joseph Martin of Lebanon, for £410. Thomas Hartshorn, the first settler of Willimantic, then purchased a house of Ebene- zer Jennings, and removed to Windham Centre. An early set- tler in this vicinity, not previously recorded, was Stephen, son of the Captain John Brown, who received a thousand-acre right from Captain Samuel Mason in 1677. The home lot pertaining to this right was laid out in 1706, abutting southeast on Willi- mantic river, near the northern boundary of the town, and was · improved and occupied prior to 1720, by Stephen Brown.


The Scotland settlement was rapidly growing in strength, and with its growth developed the desire to become a distinct society. Ecclesiastical organization was the basis of civil or- ganization, and the Scotland settlers as early as 1726 began to discuss the question of being independent of the other part of the town. In May, 1732, that part of the town was endowed with society privileges by act of the general court. Further particulars concerning it will be found in connection with the history of the town of Scotland.


The growth of the town required an enlargement of the num- ber of town officers. In 1746 there were chosen a town clerk and treasurer, five selectmen, three collectors of town rates, four constables, six grand jurors, seven listers, four branders, three leather sealers, six fence viewers, eight tithing men and ten sur- veyors. Penalties at this time were extremely severe. Heavy fines, whippings and imprisonment were administered for slight offenses. Those unable to pay fines and lawful debts were often bound out as servants. In one case a year's service satisfied a judgment of £23. In another case it took five and a half years to satisfy a debt of £50. Another was bound servant for eight years for a debt of £120.


265


HISTORY OF WINDHAM COUNTY.


An intimation of the progress of education in the town is fur- nished us in the records of 1750, which tell us that a good gram- mar school was ordered to be kept the whole of every year " by a master able and sufficient for that purpose." This school was moved about from one society to another, each of the three so- cieties in the town being entitled to have the school kept within its bounds during a portion of the year, corresponding to the proportion of money contributed by it to the support of the school, the basis of both being their lists of property valuation.


Jonathan Trumbull was judge of the probate district of Wind- ham in 1746. John Ripley was chosen town treasurer in 1750. Samuel Gray succeeded Eliphalet Dyer as town clerk in 1755. A receiver of provisions for the colony tax, an excise collector and a packer of tobacco were now added to the town officers. The deputies sent by Windham to the general court between 1746 and 1760 were Thomas Dyer, Eleazer Cary, Jabez Huntington, Eliphalet Dyer, Jonathan Huntington, Nathaniel Skiff, Jedediah Elderkin, Nathaniel Wales, Thomas Stedman, Jonathan Rudd, Joseph Kingsbury, Samuel Murdock and Samuel Gray.


Among the tavern keepers scattered over the town about the middle of the last century were James Brewster, David Ripley, John Backus, Eleazer Fitch, Isaac Warner, Benjamin Lathrop and Isaac Parish. The social life of the town was said to be at that time very hilarious and enjoyable. Nearly all the families in the town were connected by intermarriage, and the most friendly and open intercourse was maintained. A free and generous hospitality prevailed among all classes. Merry-mak- ings of every description were frequent. The residents of Windham Green were especially noted for love of fun and frolic, bantering and jesting. Traditions of these golden days represent Windham with her two parishes like Judah and Israel in the days of Solomon-" many as the sand which is by the sea in multitude, eating and drinking, and making merry."




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.