USA > Connecticut > New Haven County > Derby > The history of the old town of Derby, Connecticut, 1642-1880. With biographies and genealogies > Part 16
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6 12 0
Samuel Brinsmead's land, 1681. s. d.
7₺ acres, 15s. per acre, £5 12 0
Stephen Pierson's land, 1681.
s. d.
3₺ acres, home lot, £3 10 O
I acre Island meadow, O IO O
2 acres, James meadow, I
o O
5 0 0
John Beach's land, 1681.
s. d.
I} home lot,
£1 10 0
Abell Holbrook's land, 1681.
s. d.
4 acres home lot,
£4 0 0
John Pringle's land, 1681.
s. d.
7 acres plow land,
£5 5 0
Joseph Hawkins's land, 1681.
s. d.
19 acres plow land,
£19 0 0
I¿ Island,
15 0
2} Upon the hill, 13
o
3 acres meadow, 3
o O
5 acres mowing land, 5 0
O
7 acres waste land, 0 7 0
28 15 O
Jerimiah Johnson's land, 1681.
s. d.
32 acres home lot, £3 10 0
4 acres Sentinel hill,
2 o O
3 meadow Rimmon land, I IO o
5 acres plow land, 2 10 0
9 10 0
John Tibball's land, 1681.
s. d.
23 acres home lot,
£2 10 0
Jonas Tomlinson's land, 1681. s. d.
IO acres of land,
IO acres plow land, 15 per acre,
7 10 0
17 10 0
Sargent [Ebenezer] Johnson, 1681.
s. d.
I0} in field, £5 5 O
21 waste land in field, I
I
3 acres home lot, 3
O I acre in meadow, O IO
8 acres Rimmon, 4 0 O
13 16
Isaac Nichols, sen, land, 1681.
s. d.
I acre home lot,
£1 0 0
7₺ acres field, 5 12 O
6 12 0
Philip Denman's land, 1681.
s. d.
32 acres meadow,
acre plow in med, § £3 15 O
I} plow, home lot, I IO O
I acre home lot, I
O
I acre Island, 15 0
70 0
Phop. Isaac Nichols's land, 1681. -
s. d.
8 acres, 15 s. per acre, £5 19 0
Daniel Collins, 1681.
s. d.
3₺ acres home lot, £3 10 0
George Beaman's land, 1681.
2 acres home lot, £2 0 0
Abel Gunn's land, 1681.
s. d.
6 acres meadow, £6 0 0
3ª plow land, in meadow, 1 15 0
2 acres home lot, 2
0 0 4} acres at the plains, 3 10 0
1} bought of Jonas,
I 5
o
I acre in pastor, I
O
O
I acre Cankrod hill,
0 12
16 2
84
HISTORY OF DERBY.
DERBY LIST IN THE YEAR 1681, PERSONAL ESTATE.
Sar. Wooster.
Joseph Hawkins.
I Person,
£18
I Person, 2 horses, £26
4 Horses,
16
2 oxen, 2 four year olds, 18
2 Two year old horses, 4
2 three year olds, 6
2 Oxen, 4 cows,
26
5 Cows, 20
3 Three year olds,
9
2 two year olds, 4
2 Two year olds,
4
4 yearlings, 4
3 Yearlings,
3
8 swine, 8
8 Swine,
8
Land, 28 15
Land,
34 10
Samuel Riggs.
122 IO
I Person, £18
Sar. Hulls.
3 persons,
£54
3 horses,
I4
2 three year old, and I two year old, 8
I Three year old,
3
4 yearlings,
4
5 Cows,
20
9 swine,
9
2 Three year olds,
6
Land,
20 IO
I two year old,
2
I yearling,
I
Joseph Peck of New Haven.
£4
Land,
28
Francis French.
I Person,
£18
Ebenezer Johnson.
3 cows,
I2
2 Persons,
£36
2 three year olds,
6
3 Horses,
12
I two year old and 2 yearlings, 4
3 oxen,
I5
5 hogs,
5
3 Cows,
12
Land, IO
5
I three year old, 3
3
Thomas Wooster.
I Person, £18
2 horses,
8
2 oxen,
IO
3 cows,
I2
IO swine,
IO
I two year old,
2
Jeremiah Johnson.
2 Persons,
£36
I OX,
5
Widow Harger.
2 four year olds,
8
I Person, £18
I three year old, I two year old,
5
2 horses,
8
2 Yearlings,
2
2 oxen,
IO
I horse, I three year old,
7
2 cows,
8
4 swine,
4
Io swine,
IO
Land,
9 10
Land,
IO
80 IO
64 5
I two year old,
2
6 swine,
6
I Two year old,
2
Land, 13 16
104 16
4 acres of land,
2
62
I Cow,
4
93 10
16 Swine,
16
I COW,
I53
I ox, I horse,
3
2 horses and 2 oxen, 18
4 four year old, 16
2 oxen,
IO
114 15
64
I three year old horse,
85
AMOUNTS OF GRAND LIST.
The amount of the General list of estates for the town, as sent to, and preserved by, the General Court, possesses special interest as showing the very gradual growth as to property and persons in the town. The number of persons paying taxes, was not reported after 1710. It is quite surprising that the in- crease of persons paying taxes in the town, from 1685 to 1710, twenty-five years, was only twelve.
Paugassett was taxed separately under New Haven jurisdic- tion in 1660, £1 8s. 8d., in 1661, £1 6s. 2d., in 1662, £1 18s. 5d.
After this the proprietors paid taxes as individual members of the town of Milford until 1775, when organized as a town, then out of the next ten years the General Court released them eight years from country taxes.
LIST OF ESTATES AND PERSONS :
PERSONS.
PERSONS.
1685
£2041
38
1705
£2749
65
I686
1893
39
1706
2697
57
1687
2051
4I
1707
2855
53
1689
I 304
38
1708
2825
50
1690
1337
39
1709
28 56
49
1691
1963
41
1710
2927
1692
1559
37
I7II
3006
1693
1630
34
1712
3367
1694
1695
1804
42
1717
3667
1696
1696
42
1718
3823
1697
1719
3994
1698
1863
40
1720
4287
1699
1920
40
1721
4389
1700
2109
51
1722
4615
1701
2389
47
1723
4506
1702
2327
53
1724
4494
1703
2377
60
1725
5310
1704
2756
56
1713
3241
The meeting-house was framed in the spring of 1682, as ap- pears from a vote of the town to allow the men who should do the work, three shillings a day for this work, and it was prob- ably completed in the plainest manner that summer. No ac- count has been seen of the seating of this house, or any work done on it until 1707, when after having voted to build a new meeting-house, they concluded to repair the old one, which con- tinued to serve them until 1718.
86
HISTORY OF DERBY.
The support of the minister in addition to all taxes was quite an item.
"November 21, 1681. The Town for the providing Mr. Bow- ers wood this year do agree that every man shall cary for his proportion as it was agreed upon last year (viz)
Sar Wooster
5 loode
Phillep Denman
4 loode
Sar Riggs
5 loode
John Tibbals
4 loode
Joseph Hawkins
5 loode
Da Collins
2 loode
Thomas Wooster
4 loode
Stephen Pierson
4 loode
Jonas Tomlenson
4 loode
Abel Holbrook
2 loode
Sar Harger
4 loode
Sar Johnson
4 loode
Sar Jo Hulls
5 loode
Abell Gun
4 loode
Wm Tomlinson
2 loode
Frances French
2 loode
Jo Pringle
2 loode
Ephraim Smith
2 loode
Samuell Nical & Isaac
6 loode
Joh Griffen
2 loode
Samuel Brinsmead
4 loode
Joh Beach
2 loode
Phop Isaac
2 loode
David Wooster
2 loode
George Beaman
2 loode
Jer Johnson
4 loode
88
"It is agreed that if any man neglect or refuse to carry in Mr. Bowers's wood by the last of March next he shall carry double to what his proportion is now above written. Further the town have voted to give Mr. Bowers fifty pound for his main- tenance this year.
"Dec. 31, 1683. The town have voted to give Mr. Bowers for his salary this year fifty pounds to be paid in good mer- chantable pay by the last of April next ensuing ; and have agreed to convey Mr. Bowers's wood as followeth :
Philip Denman
3 1.
Sar Johnson
4 1.
Sa Riggs
4
Fran French
3
Abel Gunn
4
Ephraim Smith
2
Geor Beaman
2
Stephen Person
3
Jo Griffen
2
Sar Woster
5
Abell Holbrook 2
John Hulls sen 5
Jonas Tomlinson
3
Widow Hawkins
3
Jer Johnson
4
Henry Williams Jo Pringle
2
Sar Hulls
3
Tho Woster
2
John Tibballs
4
Sam Brinsmead
2
Sa Nicols
3
John Beach
2
Isaac Necols
John Huls
2"
2
Wm Tomlinson
3
87
MR. BOWERS.
It is supposable that the above names represent all who were obligated to support the preaching of the gospel, which in- cluded at that time all who paid taxes in the town.
In September, 1684, Mr. Bowers was very ill, and had a will recorded, which was very brief, giving all his property to his wife Bridget, desiring her to remember "the birthright, if he carry it well to his honored mother." That is that John, the eldest child and son, should have the proportion according to the old English law. But John survived only three years and died in 1687, the record of whose death has been taken for that of his father in all published accounts except Trumbull's. The father lived until 1708, but it is doubtful whether he was able to preach after this illness, as he had done before.
The town record certifies : "Mar 1685-6. Town have voted to give Mr. Bowers sixty pounds this year, for his salary, and Mr. Bowers is to find himself wood; and to give him the rate of all his proper estate of lands and cattle to be added. It is to be meant his rate to the minister.
" Moreover, the town having granted to Mr. Bowers the use of the Town's sequestered land in the meadow while he carried on the work of the ministry in Derby, maintaining the fence that belonged to it, the said Mr. Bowers hath engaged to pay one pound five shillings per year for ten years or so long as he shall enjoy the land." Mr. Bowers, probably, supplied the pul- pit mostly four years longer, possibly securing some assistance, but the above record indicates some change, although his sal- ary was continued as before, only the free use of certain lands was not granted.
Mr. Trumbull says he "removed from Derby and settled at Rye about the year 1688." This was an error, it being Nathan- iel Bowers the son of John, who preached in Rye. He says Mr. Webb preached here twelve years, but this is an error ac- cording to Trumbull himself, in his second volume. It is un- fortunate that no records of town transactions can be found of the years between 1686 and 1690, and therefore we obtain from this source no knowledge of the dismissal of Mr. Bowers or the employment of Mr. Webb. The latter was ordained at Fair- field in 1694, and therefore could not have been in Derby over six years, and the town was seeking another minister in 1692.
88
HISTORY OF DERBY.
He was probably a licensed preacher, while here, but not or- dained, and preached here not over two years.
He was appointed Town Clerk in December, 1690, and served one year with great elegance and correctness. He was a much better scholar and writer than his successor in the pulpit, al- though it is doubtful as to his having been graduated at college. Scarce any writing on the town records equals his, for the first two hundred years.
In 1685, probably the first military company was organized in the town, and Ebenezer Johnson was confirmed by the Gen- eral Court, lieutenant, and Abel Gunn, ensign of Derby Train Band. There had been military men, and military drill and service in the town before this time, but a regular company had not been officered and established of the town. The records show that at various times the town by regular tax, had pro- vided a stock of powder and lead, and obeyed the directions from the General Court as to preparations for defense, but it does not appear that a company was organized before this time. The amount of ammunition required was quite considerable. In 1682, every man was required to purchase as much powder and lead as would cost equal to his rate or tax. The town valued the powder at three shillings per pound, and lead at sixpence per pound ; and so every man to have eight pounds of lead or bullets to two pounds of powder.
From 1680 to 1686, a few new inhabitants were accepted, and grants of land made to them upon the usual conditions. In 1680, Richard Bryan of Milford was admitted, and he pur- chased ninety acres of land, but for some reason did not settle here, and not long after died. In 1682, Samuel Griffin, and in 1685, John, his brother, settled near John Hull's mill at North- end. Samuel Griffin was a blacksmith. In 1685, Hope Wash- born, and in 1687, John Chatfield, became inhabitants. In 1683, Henry Hitt, the new ferry-man. In this same year the town granted to Samuel Riggs, "half that land at Rimmon on the northwest of the said Samuel Riggs's cellar, between that and the rock, and at the same time granted Sar. Ebenezer Johnson the other half northwest of the said cellar." This cel- lar was the first ground broken in the vicinity of what is now Seymour village, or near Rimmon, for the erection of dwellings.
89
SETTLERS AT RIMMON.
It is probable that Ebenezer Johnson and Jeremiah Johnson soon built upon the land they owned in the vicinity. " April II, 1682. The town have granted Sargt. Johnson and Samuel Riggs, liberty to make a fence at Rock Rimmon, from Nauga- tuck river up to the top of Rimmon, and also give liberty to pasture the land they fence ; tho' liberty is granted provided higways be not hindered, & liberty to enjoy it during the towns pleasure ; the town engageth to put up the bars of the said fence if they pass through it ; also the town engageth the same respecting Philip Denmans fence & John Tibbals at Rimmon." It is said that Bennajah Johnson, who was son of Jeremiah, who came from New Haven, and Timothy Johnson, son of Major Ebenezer Johnson, no relation to Bennajah, so far as the records show, were the first settlers in this region, and that they settled near, or at Beacon Falls. The records indicate as above that the first houses were near Rock Rimmon, where this cellar was already built in 1685. Knowing the energy and characters of the men who owned land first in this vicinity, it may be a fair inference that the two or three first settlers, in what is now Seymour, were there before the year 1690.
It is stated' that when the Indian Chuse made his residence at this place, "there were only two or three white families in the vicinity," which is most probably true, but if so then it was Gideon Mauwehu, and not Joseph or " Jo," that superintended the settlement here at first. Agar Tomlinson was married in 1734, and Jo Chuse living with him several years, perhaps five or six, would have been twenty one about 1641 or 2. He lived, at this Chusetown forty-eight years and removed to Kent and soon died. His land at Chusetown was sold in 1792, which was a short time after his death, or making a little allowance for running tradition, he may have removed soon after selling his land. Now in 1741 or 2, there must have been nearer twenty families than three in the vicinity of Chusetown. At that time, Tobie had been in possession of his land a little over thirty years. In May 1682, the town granted to Abel Gunn, " ten acres of land up the Little river above the Nau-
1Hist. of Seymour, by W. C. Sharp, 37.
2 Barber's Hist. Col. 199. DeForest's Hist. of the Indians of Conn. 406.
12
90
HISTORY OF DERBY.
.
gatuck Falls ; or upon the long planes above Naugatuck Falls, on the west side of Naugatuck river where the said Gunn pleaseth." David Wooster purchased of the Indians3 the Long plain a little above Seymour in 1692, and apparently set- tled on it soon after. The Paugasuck Indians had no land left, below this reservation at Seymour, in 1690, except at Turkey hill, and must have removed from the Great Neck some time before 1700; so also the Pootatucks, across the river from Bir- mingham, and the most probable supposition is that they began to gather in the vicinity of Seymour before 1690. Again the story of a Pequot sachem (Mauwee), coming to Derby and tak- ing the rule of the Pootatucks and the Paugasucks, while yet the sachems of these two clans were living, viz., Cockapatana Ahuntaway and Chusumack, descendants of a long line of royal blood, is scarcely to believed. It is far more probable that Gideon Mauwee, was the son of Chusumack, the signer of three deeds with the Paugasucks in Derby, who, by no strange trans- formation for those days, became possessed of the name Mau- wee, his more common name being Chuse, (or " Cush " as at Poot- atuck) from Chusumack. If he or his ancestors came from the Pequots, it must have been very early, apparently before the English settled in Derby.
Since writing the above concerning Chuse, the statement has been seen in print that Chuse settled at Seymour, about 1720, in which case he could not have lived with Agar Tomlinson as stated by Barber, which information he obtained of Chuse's daughter as he informs us. The Indian deed of the sale of the land surrounding Seymour, was dated in 1678, with a reserva- tion of the land Chuse afterwards occupied, and it would seem scarcely possible that there should be no settlers here until forty years later.
3Know ye that we Huntaway and Cockapatany, Indians of Paugasuck . . for a valuable consideration confirm unto David Wooster . . a certain parcel of land on the Northwest side of Naugatuck river in the road that goeth to Rimmon, the Long plain, so called, in the bounds of Derby, be it bounded with Naugatuck river South, and east and north, and west with the great rocks, be it more or less.
April 1, 1692.
Cockapatany,
Huntawa, his mark. his mark.
91
WAR PREPARATIONS.
THE ENGLISH AND FRENCH WAR.
At the breaking out of the war between the English, assisted by the Dutch, and the French, a great effort was made in Amer- ica to secure the aid of the Indians against the English. The French were then in possession of Canada and the Mississippi valley, and although the war was declared between France and England, the principal theater of the war was in the American Colonies, and this theater was extended to wherever an English subject inhabited in this country. As soon as the information was received of the beginning of the war, the General Court was called together and resolved to raise in the Colony as their proportionate number, two hundred English and Indians ; and if that number could not be secured by volunteers, then they should be drafted from the militia. Officers were appointed in various parts of the state for the militia and volunteers.
"Ebenezer Johnson is chosen captain of such volunteers as shall go forth against the enemy, and is to be commissioned accordingly, and he hath liberty to beat the drum for volun- teers to serve under him in every plantation in the county of Fairfield and New Haven." This was in September, 1689, and this army was ordered, mostly to protect English subjects from the Indians who might join the French. In the following April the court was again convened, under pressing entreaties for help to defend Albany, which was threatened by the French and the western Indians. "All which was considered by the court, and the court did see a necessity of utmost endeavors to prevent the French of attacking or settling at Albany, and therefore did order that two foot companies shall be with all speed raised and sent to Albany, to take all advantages against the enemies to destroy them."4 One company was to be raised in Hartford and New London counties, and commanded by Capt. Fitch appointed for that purpose. "The other company is to be raised in the counties of New Haven and Fairfield, and is to consist of sixty English and forty Indians, if so many In- dians shall be found willing to go, and Ebenezer Johnson is appointed their captain. The companies to be raised are so
4I Col. Rec.
92
HISTORY OF DERBY.
many volunteers as shall appear, and the rest to be prest sol- diers."
"A COMMISSION GIVEN TO CAPTAIN EBENEZER JOHNSON.
" This Court having ordered and appointed you to be captain of a com- pany that is to go forth against the enemy. and for the county and city of Albany. for his majesty's interest, there being sundry soldiers already who have enlisted themselves for that service, as we are informed ; These are to appoint you to make what haste you can to those planta- tions of the seaside, and to inform the said volunteers that the General Court hath appointed you to be their captain, and Samuel Newton to be their Lieutenant, and Ager Tomlinson to be their Ensign, and that you will take care and charge of them to lead them out against the enemy, and that your commission shall be sent after you to the seaside speedily, that so you may proceed with the best expedition you may, and you have liberty to raise of the English to the number of sixty, of Indians not above forty in all, which you are to raise as you may by volunteers, so far as you can, and the rest by press, and you may expect that for your encouragement you shall have besides wages the benefit of what you shall obtain by plunder, and all smiths in those plantations of the seaside are hereby required to apply themselves to mend such arms as shall be brought to them which are to be employed in this ex- pedition. These soldiers are to be raised in the counties of New Haven and Fairfield."
The court ordered a rate to be raised for this beginning of the war of fourpence on the pound. This made the amount for Derby twenty pounds, a sum of some consequence when to be paid, as was the fact, by thirty-nine men, besides fitting out the men who might volunteer or be drafted from the town. Captain Johnson raised his company, went to Albany, remain- ing some time, but was appointed the next spring one of the War Commissioners for the state, to which office he was ap- pointed seven years. For expenditures at Albany in conse- quence of damages by his soldiers and in part for the loss of a horse, the court allowed him six pounds, in 1698.
This war continued until 1710, and was the cause of much expense to the Colonies, and of perpetual fear from treachery of the Indians in allowing or directing unfriendly Indians in their devastations and terrible raids. In 1697, Captain Johnson was ordered to go to New York with sixty men in company
93
EFFECT OF THE WAR.
with Captain Matthew Sherwood of Fairfield, with a like num- ber, to protect that city from a French fleet expected there from the West Indies. In 1703 he was appointed "to have the care and ordering of the Paugasuck Indians, to protect them from other Indians, and to set their bounds beyond which they were required not to go, and to take care that they did not har- bor or entertain unfriendly Indians." It is very probable that Captain Johnson was sent upon several other expeditions dur- ing this war since the soldiers of New Haven and Fairfield were appointed in such expeditions, and since also the consid- eration granted Captain Johnson would indicate further services. In 1698, the court granted him " (over and above the interest in the grant to the volunteers) two hundred acres of land, to be taken up where it may not prejudice any former grant to any township or particular person." In 1700, however, the court order that the amount should be three hundred acres, and that Mr. Samuel Sherman and Ephraim Stiles should lay out the same. The town afterwards gave him one hundred and fifty acres in consideration of his public services.
The effect of the ten years' war from 1689 to 1699 was quite perceptible upon Derby and its prosperity, for during this time the tax-payers increased only two, and the Grand List increased only one-third of the whole, and during the next ten years the increase was about the same. For the twenty years ending 1709, the increase was only eleven, and most of these were raised in the town, but few coming in ; some going out, and a few dying. Among these last were Edward Wooster and Fran- cis French, two of the first settlers of the town. They were more public in the work they did than in offices or display as public servants. They began life empty-handed, and during forty years appear to have worked hard; enduring the wilder- ness ten years almost alone, fighting against wild beasts, watch- ing, kindly, the natives of the forest, and trusting them to a marvelous degree ; clearing the land of timber and stone by the hardest work; rearing considerable families; and when they had departed, some portion of their real estate had to be sold to meet claims that could not be otherwise met. This is a comment on the times in which their lot was cast, by a hand whose counsels none understand. Could they have had cash in
94
HISTORY OF DERBY.
hand, one dollar in twenty of their equals in the present day, they would have died wealthy! To whom shall it be said, "Well done, thou faithful servant ?" Abel Gunn and Joseph Hawkins, two of the second class of settlers had gone; men of the most solid worth, seeking not high places, but when called to them could meet the responsibility with great manliness and much ability.
Abel Gunn was the town clerk twenty-one years, but so modest, that so far as seen, he never wrote or recorded that he was elected to that office. We learn the fact when at first he says "Abell Gun his book," and then in the same hand writing records the doings of the plantation and the town. He after- wards, in a few instances, signed papers as recorder. He was a fair speller, and a much better writer than some who follow him in that office. Ebenezer Johnson, Samuel Riggs, and Ephraim Smith of the second class of settlers were still living, and in the zenith of their glory.
While this war was going on, bringing not a farthing to the Colonies, but great expense, and much sacrifice of life, the in- habitants of Derby were making noble, although slow progress purchasing lands of the Indians and extending their settlement north and north-west. The agents of the town purchased a tract of land north of the Four-mile river, said to belong to the Wesquantuck and Pootatuck Indians, and received a deed of them.5 Here the Pootatuck and the Paugasuck Indians unit-
"5In consideration of twenty-one pounds; have sold one parcel of land lying in the great neck at Derby, bounded on the southeast with four mile brook and another little brook that falls into the Little river, north & northeast with the Little river that runs into Naugatuck river, and Northwest and west with the eight mile brook, and west and southwest with the west channel of the Pootatuck river, and Wood- bury path from the six mile brook to the four mile brook. Aug. 6, 1687,
Indian Witnesses Nanoques, Curex.
Cockapatonce, his mark.
John Banks, his mark.
Cockapotany, his mark. Meskilling, his mark.
Stastockham, his mark.
Sunkaquene, his mark.
Pussecokes, his mark.
Nanawaug, his mark.
Tackamore, his mark.
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