Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[blocks in formation]

Ens: John Miles,

Thomas Mix, John Mix, Nathanael Mix, Daniell Mix, Caleb Mix, John Morris, Eleazer Morris, Joseph Morris, Mr. John Moss,

Joseph Moss,

Mercy Moss, 's heirs,

Mathew Multrop,

Ens: Samuell Munson,
Richard Newman,
John Newman,

Mr. Jerr: Osbourn's, heirs,

Mrs. Mary Osbourn,
Mr. Jerr: Osborn,. Junr.
Mr. John Prout,
William Pain's, heirs,
John Pain,

George Pardee, Senr.
George Pardee, Junr.
Mr. William Peck,
Joseph Peck,

Benjamin Peck,
Edward Perkins,
John Perkins,
Jonathan Perkins,
David Perkins,
John Perry,
Thomas Pimore,
John Ponderson,
John Potter,
Nathanael Potter,
Edward Preston,
Joseph Preston,
William Pringle,
Joseph Pringle,
Ely Robberts,
William Robberts,
Mr. Richd Rosewell,
John Roe,

John Sacket's heirs,
John Sacket, Junr.
Thomas Sandford,
Ens: Dan Shermon,
Thomas Smith,
John Smith,
Samuell Smith,
Joseph Smith,
Ebenezer Smith,
Nathan Smith,
Richard Sperry, Senr.
John Sperry,
Richard Sperry, Junr.
Nathanael Sperry,
Thomas Sperry,
John Steevens,
Henry Steevens,

Robert Talmage's heirs,
Serjt Thos. Talmage,
Enos Talmage,
John Talmage,
James Taylor,

William Thorps, heirs,

Nathanael Thorp,

John Thomson's heirs,
John Thomson, marriner,
John Thomson, farmer,
John Thomson, Junr.
Mr. William Thomson,
John Thomas,
Daniell Thomas,
Samuell Thomas,
Joseph Thomas,
John Thomas, Junr.
Christopher Todd,
John Todd,
Samuell Todd,

Mr. Thomas Trowbridge,
John Trowbridge,
Mr. William Trowbridge.
William Trowbridge, Junr.
Thomas Trowbridg, Junr.
James Trowbridge,
Isaac Turnor,
Thomas Tuttle,
Jonathan Tuttle,
Joseph Tuttle,
David Tuttle,
Nathanael Tuttle,
John Tuttle,
Samuell Tuttle,
John Umphervile,
John Watson,
Samuell Whitehead,
William Wilmott,
Serjt John Winston,
John Winston, Junr.
William Wooden's heirs,
Jerremiah Wooden,
John Woolcott,
Mr. John Yale,

Mr. Nathanael Yale,
The Trustees of the

School Estate.

[ocr errors]

This List of names Compared with the List of 1685, and is a true Coppy, attested

by uss.

NATHAN ANDREWS,
WILLIAM THOMSON,

}

Select men

JONATHAN ATWATER, of New Haven.

This List of the Proprietors of the Lands in the Township of Newhaven, was Exhibited in the Generall Assembly on the Twentieth day of October, in the third year of her Majesties reigne, Annoq. Dom: 1704, at the Same time when a release of all the Lands in said Township to the said proprietors was read and approved and ordered to be signed in the name of the Gouernor and Company of her Majesties Colony of Connecticutt. Test. ELEAZER KIMBERLY, Secry.

The aboue written, with what is Contained in the two next aforegoing pages, relating thereunto, is a true Coppie of the Origenall, being therewith Examin'd and Compared, and here recorded, May 20th, 1707. Pr me ELEAZER KIMBERLY, Secry.

[The foregoing is recorded in the Connecticut " Colony Records of Deeds," Vol. III. fol. 397-399.]

STATE OF CONNECTICUT, SS., OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF STATE.

I hereby certify, that the foregoing is a true copy of record in this Office. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Seal of said State, at Hartford, this sixth day of March, A. D. 1847, and in the 71st year of the Independence of the United States of America.

L. S.

[blocks in formation]

MEMOIR OF ENOCH PARSONS, ESQ., OF HARTFORD, CT.

The name of PARSONS is found among the earliest emigrants to New England, and it designated a family of high respectability in the parent country. As early as 1481, John Parsons was Mayor of Hereford in the county of Herefordshire, and Sir Thomas Parsons of Great Milton, from one branch of the family, received the honor of knighthood from Charles I., about the year 1634, and his descendants are still found at Great Milton and in the city of Lon don. The Coat of Arms granted to Sir Thomas is thus described: "He beareth gules, two chevrons ermine, between three eagles displayed, or;" Crest: "an eagle's leg erased at the thigh, or, standing on a leopard's head, gules."

These armorial bearings are retained in the Parsons Family in the United States, and by the descendants of Sir Thomas in London, among whom were Sir John and Sir Humphrey Parsons, the former Lord Mayor of London in 1704, and the latter in 1731 and 1740; also by the branch of the family that settled in Barbadoes, of which Rev. John Parsons, M. A., of Beybrook House in the county of Gloucester, Vicar of Marden, county of Wilts, is a descendant, being the son of Daniel Parsons, M. D., of Barbadoes.

ENOCH PARSONS, Esq., of Hartford, Ct., the particular subject of this memoir, was born at Lyme, Ct., Nov. 5, 1769. He was the third son of Samuel Holden Parsons, an Aid to General Washington, a Major-General in the Revolutionary army, and subsequently, Chief-Justice of the North Western Territory. Mr. Parsons was also grandson of the Rev. Jonathan Parsons, a distinguished clergyman first of Lyme, Ct., and secondly of Newburyport, Ms. His mother, who was a daughter of Richard Mather of Lyme, was lineally descended from the Rev. Richard Mather, the first clergyman of Dorchester, Ms., ancestor of the Rev. Messrs. Increase and Cotton Mather of Boston. His grandmother was sister to the Hon. Matthew Griswold of Lyme, formerly Governor of the State, and was lineally descended from Henry Wolcott, 1st, of Windsor, the progenitor of all who bear that name in Connecticut.*

Mr. Parsons was distinguished in youth for mental vigor and accurate discrimination, and for his devotedness to the more abstruse and severe sciences, particularly the mathematics. This laid the foundation of his future eminence as a financier. He did not receive a collegiate education, but his academical course pursued at the Institutions at Pomfret and Plainfield, was extensive and thorough. His favorite studies naturally inclined him to commercial pursuits; and to qualify himself for these, he engaged in the year 1785 and 1786, in the service of Messrs. Broome and Platt, who, at that time, owned a great commercial house in New Haven, where he acquired a complete mercantile education. His proficiency and accuracy as

*A more extended genealogical account of the Parsons Family may be expected in some future No. of the Register.

an accountant soon brought him into notice, and in the year 1787 he was employed by the late Gov. Oliver Wolcott, Jun., who was at that time State Auditor of accounts, to arrange and prepare for adjustment the Revolutionary claims of Connecticut upon the United States. This was an arduous task for a young man, requiring great methodical accuracy and precision, and it was performed with ability and acceptance.

But Mr. Parsons was not confined to his favorite pursuits; he had a thirst for knowledge generally, and improved every opportunity for research in the various departments of science and the arts with a proportionate zeal and accuracy. Evidences of this are furnished in a Journal* which he, at the age of only nineteen, kept while on a tour to the North Western Territory during the spring and summer of 1788, in company with his father, who was about that time appointed by President Washington Chief-Judge in and over the Territory, which included the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan. The geology of the country, the customs, manners, and language of the native sons of the forest, are described and commented upon with a minuteness and vivacity interesting alike to the geologist, the antiquary, and the philosopher.

He was, we believe, one of the original investigators of the tumuli at Marietta, the first and at that time the only settlement of importance in that region of country. A description of one of these remarkable mounds, excavated and explored by him, he com

*In his Journal, Mr. Parsons gives the following statistics of the Aborigines, at that time inhabiting the Territory, which may not be uninteresting to compare with their present condition. We present the extract entire :

"The Delawares live at Sandusky, in a N. W. course and about 180 miles from this place, (Marietta.) Their number is 400.

"The Wyandots, living partly in the same region and partly at Detroit, 300 miles from Marietta, are about 260 in number.

"The Munsees live on the Alleghany river, about 340 miles N. E. from M. and number 100. "The Miami tribe live at Miami town, W. S. W. 250 miles, and are about 100 in number. "The Shawanoes live on the Miami river, S. W. 250 miles, and number 150.

"The Cherokees, or Chickewagas, live on Paint Creek, S. S. W. 250 miles, and are about 100 in number.

"The Wiahtanoes live on the Wabash river, W. S. W. 500 miles, and number 600. "The Kickapoes live also upon the Wabash, S. S. W. 500 miles, and number 1100. "The Piankishaws live upon the same river, S. and S. W. 600 miles-number 400. "The Kaskaskias live on the Mississippi, S. S. W. 800 miles. Their number is 150. "The Peorees live upon the Illinois river, W. S. W. 900 miles. Number 150. "The Meadow Indians live also upon the Illinois, about 900 miles W. by S. Number 500. "The Iowas live upon the Illinois, S. W. 900 miles, numbering 300. "The Foxes live on the S. side of Lake Superior, W. N. W. 900 miles-number 1000. "The Chippewas live W. of Lake Michigan, W. N. W. 800 miles from M. "The Potowatomies live E. of Lake Michigan, W. N. W, about 450 miles. "The Ottawas live N. E. of Lake Michigan, N. W. 400 miles. Number 1000. "The Sieux live N. W. of Lake Superior. N. W. from Marietta 950 miles. Number 6000." In his Journal we have also a specimen of the fertility of the soil, and the rapidity of the vegetation of the Territory, in the following extracts:

Number 4000.
Number 4000.

"June 7. Rode out with my father to his three-acre lot, which was sowed with rye in December last. About twenty days ago, it was four inches high. Ten days since, when we visited it, it was three and a half feet high; and to-day we found it seven and a half feet in height.

"June 13. Measured a spear of flax growing on my city lot, and find that in six days it has grown seven inches. Mr. Converse informs me that about three weeks ago, he planted corn, which is at the present time four feet high."

On subsequent pages of the Journal, Mr. P. has extended remarks on the philosophy of vegetation.

We have further space only for the following curious extract:

"June 15. Last night the dogs made a most hideous clamor, and seemed to be exceedingly excited. Mr., who lives about forty rods N. of the Stockade, was about getting up to see what disturbed them, but did not; and in the morning, on opening the outer door to let in his dog, he found in his mouth a purse filled with Brooches and Rings."

municated in 1789 to President Stiles of Yale College, and is preserved among his manuscripts in the College Library.

May 14, 1789, Mr. Parsons was appointed by Gov. Arthur St. Clair, Register and Clerk of the first Probate Record Office, established in the county of Washington, which was the first county erected north-west of the river Ŏhio. He there remained, faithfully discharging the duties of this appointment, until April, 1790, when he resigned and returned to Middletown, Ct., his family residence, and was appointed by the General Assembly of the State at their ensuing session, in May, High Sheriff of Middlesex County. This office he accepted, being then only twenty-one years of age; and he continued to perform its duties with fidelity and public acceptance, till he attained the age of 49, a period of twenty-eight years; when he was compelled by ill health and various imperative avocations, to relinquish its fatigues and solicitude.

During the period of his official duties as Sheriff, Mr. Parsons was also actively engaged in various other public avocations, and in mercantile business. He was called to preside over different local institutions and organizations in the place where he resided; acted a while as Secretary to an Insurance Company, and was repeatedly elected an Alderman of the city of Middletown, and Representative in the General Assembly of the State. He was also presented by his Congressional friends as a rival candidate of the late President Harrison in the year 1791 for the office of Secretary and ex-officio Lieut. Governor of the N. W. Territory, but he declined the nomination. He likewise declined the honor, though repeatedly solicited, to represent his fellow-citizens in the councils of the nation. His own private affairs too much required his attention to permit him to engage in this high trust.

In the year 1816, when the late Bank of the United States was incorporated, Mr. Parsons, believing that the establishment of a Branch in Connecticut, (by many deemed impracticable,) would materially promote the commercial interests of its citizens, visited Philadelphia in company with other gentlemen, with a view to this object. By the most persevering efforts, and through his active and efficient influence and exertion, a Branch was located in Connecticut at Middletown. He was chosen a Director of the institution immediately upon its organization, and continued in the direction during the existence of the Charter.

In 1818 he was elected President of the Connecticut Branch, on the resignation of the Hon. Samuel W. Dana, then a Senator in Congress; and was annually elected, until it was transferred from Middletown to Hartford, in the spring of 1824. Having removed thither himself about the same time, he was re-elected, and continued to preside over the institution with acknowledged impartiality, ability, and firmness, and the most unflinching integrity, during the operations of the Branch in Connecticut, and until the expiration of the Charter.

Though educated a merchant and eminent as a financier, Mr.

Parsons was also a sound lawyer; not by profession or practice, but by the acquisition of the requisite legal knowledge. The office of Sheriff, when he was called to fill it, was one of honor as well as profit. Its incumbent was the companion of the Judges. He attended at their "chambers" as well as in the "court-room." He listened to, and participated in, their deliberations and discussions. Thus Mr. Parsons breathed a legal atmosphere. Being by his official duties, through a period of twenty-eight years, in familiar intercourse with the Bench and the Bar, and having read the best elementary writers, endowed, as he was, with a remarkably retentive memory and a logical and inquisitive mind, it is not surprising that he retained to the close of life the principles and maxims of jurisprudence thus deeply implanted. Though not a member of the Bar, his opinions on elementary points were seldom questioned.

Mr. Parsons wrote some, but reflected more. His published writings are few and chiefly political. His unpublished manuscripts are numerous and mostly in an epistolary form, relating principally to the subject of finance.

In all the relations of domestic and social life, Mr. Parsons was beloved and respected. He was twice married, and left three children by the first marriage, and one by the second; two only of whom survive him; namely, one residing in Hartford, Ct., Samuel H. Parsons, Esq., and one in the State of Ohio. In these relations, he was ever the generous and affectionate husband, and the kind and faithful parent. His habits and feelings were social and communicative; and in his intercourse with his fellow-men, dignity was seen blended with the utmost courtesy and kindness. He was a true gentleman of the olden school, and every son of New England will understand what this means.

His personal appearance was dignified and commanding. His stature large and well-proportioned; high forehead and bald, with dark blue eye, and a countenance indicative of his mental characteristics of thought, deliberation and energy, blended with mildness.

He

Mr. Parsons was a firm believer in the Christian religion. adopted the principles of the gospel as the standard of human action; and frequently remarked, that through life he had made it an invariable rule never to close his eyes in sleep without first communing with his God.

About a year previous to the close of his interesting life, his system became generally debilitated, and during the last three or four months he was unable to leave the house. He expressed himself perfectly resigned to the will of Heaven, and gradually sunk into a lethargy, which continued until the morning of July 9, 1846, when he slept in death, in the 77th year of his age.

« AnteriorContinuar »