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Fitch, Ebenezer

Male Abt 1726 - 1735  (~ 9 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Fitch, Ebenezer was born about 1726 in of Stamford, Fairfield, Connecticut (son of Fitch, Gov Thomas and Hall, Hannah); died in 1735.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Fitch, Gov Thomas was born on 16 Jan 1700 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut (son of Fitch, Thomas and Boardman, Sarah); died on 18 Jul 1774 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; was buried in E. Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • Education: 1721 Graduate of Yale College

    Notes:


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    Thomas Fitch
    Governor of the Colony of Connecticut, 1754-1766
    Born: 1696, Norwalk, Connecticut
    College: Graduated from Yale in 1721
    Political Party: No declared political party
    Offices: Norwalk Justice of Peace, 1727-1733, 1736-1737
    Deputy, Connecticut General Assembly, 1726-1728, 1729-1731, 1772-1773
    Assistant, Connecticut General Assembly, 1734-1736; 1740-1750
    Deputy Governor, 1750-1754
    Chief Justice, Connecticut Superior Court, 1750-1754
    Governor, Colony of Connecticut, 1754-1766
    Died: July 18, 1774, Norwalk, Connecticut

    Governor Thomas Fitch guided the Colony of Connecticut through the turbulent economic and political times before the Revolutionary War but never lived to see the colonies become an independent nation.

    Born in Norwalk, Connecticut about 16961, Thomas Fitch was the oldest son and the first child of Thomas Fitch and his first wife, Sarah (Boardman) Fitch. He was the fourth-generation "Thomas" in Connecticut, and is sometimes called "Thomas IV". The Fitches were a wealthy and noble family of Bocking, Essex, England, from which Thomas IV's great-grandfather, Thomas I, emigrated to Connecticut with his mother and two brothers in the 1600's; Thomas I and his brother Joseph were among the founders of Norwalk.

    After early schooling in Norwalk, Thomas IV went to Yale to study law. He was there during a period when some Yale professors left the Congregational Church (the established church) for the Episcopalian Church, shocking the Congregational-based society of Connecticut. Even Thomas admitted to sympathizing with some Episcopalian teachings. After graduation he went on to obtain a Master's degree.

    In 1724, Thomas Fitch married Hannah Hall, born January 31, 1702 at New Haven, a daughter of Richard Hall and Hannah Miles. Thomas and Hannah Fitch had six boys and four girls, with two children dying young. The first child, a son born in 1725, was also named Thomas.

    In 1726, during a period of "difficulties arising in the town about ye Reverend Mr. Buckingham," the minister of the Norwalk Congregational Church, Thomas Fitch was among those who occasionally substituted until a new minister could be found. He was paid thirty shillings a Sunday for his preaching. Fitch's experience in "supplying the pulpit" (acting as a substitute preacher) of his home church demonstrated that in spite of some earlier Episcopalian leanings, his views were now acceptable to the established Congregational faith. In addition, the experience provided a forum for his considerable oratorical skills.

    Thomas Fitch's political career began shortly thereafter, in May of 1726, with his election as a Deputy (representative) from Norwalk to the General Assembly; he was re-elected for the Assembly sessions through 1728 and in 1729-1731. He served as an Assistant from 1734-1736 and from 1740-1750. From 1727-1733 and 1736-1737 he also served as a Justice of the Peace.

    Several projects during the late 1730's and in the 1740's earned Fitch the increased regard of his colleagues. He was part of a group that tried to set up a much-needed steel factory in Connecticut. He represented Connecticut in various crucial legal cases, arguing for Connecticut in 1738 in the long-running (1671-1771) Mohegan land case, a dispute between the Mohegans, the heirs of John Mason, and the Connecticut colony. His impressive legal skills prompted Timothy Dwight, an early president of Yale, to call him "probably the most learned lawyer who had ever been an inhabitant of the Colony." He was on military committees and other committees of importance, such as that petitioning the British Crown to reimburse Connecticut troops in the victory of Louisburg (Nova Scotia, 1745), and the committee to represent Connecticut in the Massachusetts-Connecticut border controversy (1750).

    Fitch's greatest accomplishment before becoming governor was his 1749 revision of the laws of Connecticut. Revisions had been done in 1702 and in 1715, but by 1742 there were many new laws, and another update was badly needed. Fitch was on a committee that started the task in 1742, but that group did not accomplish much. In 1744, Fitch was given sole responsibility for the work. He did much of the revising himself but also called on three others to help him -- Ebenezer Silliman, Andrew Burr, and Captain Robert Walker. The General Assembly accepted the completed revision in May, 1749.

    The new compilation, 256 pages long, was in great demand. An initial printing of about 150 copies fell far short of the thousand copies needed. Such a large printing was a huge undertaking at a time when paper was handmade, sheet-by-sheet. Connecticut did not yet have a paper mill, and the nearest one was in New York. Hand-turned presses required that each page be typeset by hand and printed one sheet at a time. It was four years later, in late 1753, before the full number of copies was printed.

    The law revision behind him, Thomas Fitch's political star began to rise in 1750. In November, Governor Jonathan Law died and the General Assembly elected Roger Wolcott, the Deputy Governor under Law, as Governor and Fitch as Deputy Governor, both to serve until the regular election of May 1751. The pair was re-elected at that time, and Fitch, in accordance with the custom of the time, was also appointed Chief Judge of the Superior Court of Connecticut.

    It was unfortunate for Roger Wolcott that one of the first major scandals to shake the government of the Colony of Connecticut began in November of 1752, when a damaged Spanish ship limped into New London harbor with its valuable cargo of gold doubloons and indigo. The cargo was off-loaded and placed in local secured storage, but portions of it still disappeared before the reconstructed ship finally left in January of 1755. Many felt that Governor Wolcott was too lax in prosecuting the thefts and in not providing sufficient protection to the cargo. His perceived poor handling of the situation caused him to lose votes in the 1754 elections, and Thomas Fitch was elected Governor of Connecticut.

    The French and Indian War marked the first years of Fitch's administration. This struggle between Britain and France for American lands lasted until the French and their Native Americn allies surrendered to the British in 1760. Connecticut gave large amounts of money, manpower, and supplies to the conflict, sometimes beyond what it could afford. Tradition states that in 1755 Col. Thomas Fitch V, the governor's son, received the present of a song as a joke from a British surgeon, Dr. Richard Shuckburgh. Using a popular old marching tune, Shuckburgh is said to have written lyrics making fun of Col. Fitch's troops: "Yankee Doodle went to town, a-riding on a pony...." According to tradition, Col. Fitch is the original "Yankee Doodle". Years later, during the Revolutionary War, colonial troops turned the tables by adopting it as one of their favorite marching songs and playing it in front of the English troops after Burgoyne's defeat at Saratoga.

    The conclusion of the war ended the money and manpower drain on Connecticut but found the state greatly in debt, and a depression arose that lasted for several years. King George III came to the throne in 1760, and, with timing that was very bad for the American colonies, decided to recoup the costs of the French and Indian War by increasing taxes. The Sugar Act of 1764 was the first step and was very unpopular in the colonies in general. This act required colonists to buy sugar only from British Caribbean sugar producers, excluding French planters. This allowed British planters to raise their prices, with the Crown getting a share of the increased profits.

    Connecticut and the other colonies protested, but the Crown held firm, assuming the complaints would pass. They did not, and the announcement of the Stamp Act in March 1765 only made things worse. It required that anyone buying any type of legal paper, or even paper for printing newspapers and books, had to also buy a certifying stamp from the British, with the money going to the Crown. Since the Crown had limited the number of paper mills that could be built in the colonies, paper was sometimes difficult to get, and people often had to import it from England. The act raised the price of paper and made it even harder to obtain.

    News of the forthcoming Stamp Act set off violent protests throughout New England and widened existing political divisions in Connecticut. Western Connecticut had more people and more money, traded easily with New York, and also had more representatives in the General Assembly. It favored the "Old Lights" in the religious controversy of the Great Awakening. It did not favor the Stamp Act but felt that it was best to comply with it for the time being, and Governor Fitch, a Norwalk resident, agreed.

    Eastern Connecticut, on the other hand, had fewer people, was underdeveloped, and favored the "New Lights". It resented the continuing efforts of wealthier western Connecticut merchants to keep major trade away from eastern merchants. The compliant attitude of western Connecticut towards the Stamp Act was the last straw for eastern towns. Eliphalet Dyer and Jonathan Trumbull led a militant group of men from the Norwich area, the "Sons of Liberty", in discrediting advocates of the Stamp Act and working to place eastern Connecticut men in power. They staged protests and attacked supporters of the Stamp Act, including Governor Fitch, in the newspapers; they hung effigies of key politicians in trees and then burned the effigies.

    In their determination to prevent the Stamp Act from becoming law, the Sons of Liberty continued their agitation by leading a mob of over 400 men and capturing Jared Ingersoll, the Royal Stamp Distributor, as he was on his way to Hartford to speak to the General Assembly about resigning. The Sons of Liberty forced him to sign a resignation then and there, took him to Hartford, and made him read the resignation to the General Assembly. At that point, Governor Fitch placed Ingersoll under his personal protection and issued a general proclamation against "turbulent" behavior. The Sons of Liberty responded by visiting Fitch at his home and declaring that he would either let them in to seize and burn the stamped paper there or his house would be burned down.

    The Stamp Act was to become law on November 1, 1765. As that day approached, Great Britain took extra measures to ensure compliance, requiring all colonial governors to take an oath to enforce the act or pay a fine of five thousand pounds and be dismissed from office. Governor Fitch delayed taking the oath until two days before the deadline, in a vain hope that the act would be recalled. It was not, and in the presence of witnesses, he signed the Stamp Act on behalf of Connecticut. Jonathan Trumbull, William Pitkin, and a few others were so upset at this that they left the room in disgust just before the act was signed.

    The unpopular Stamp Act lasted only a few months, as King George II officially withdrew it on March 19, 1766. An unintended benefit of the act was that eastern Connecticut did something about the paper situation. By December 1766, Christopher Leffingwell of Norwich had started the first paper mill in Connecticut and the Connecticut Gazette (New Haven) was being printed on paper from that mill. Eastern Connecticut had control of one Connecticut industry, at least. Then, on the one-year anniversary of the repeal, the feisty Sons of Liberty celebrated by putting up a special "Liberty Pole" and placing a commemorative announcement in the Connecticut Courant (Hartford), asking the blessings of heaven on His Royal Majesty for that repeal.

    The times were changing, and Fitch was on the wrong side of the emerging political scene. Just before the election of 1766, he published an anonymous pamphlet defending his signing of the Stamp Act, but it was too late. William Pitkin was elected Governor in 1766, with Jonathan Trumbull as Deputy Governor. Trumbull, sympathetic to the views of the Sons of Liberty, assumed the governorship in 1769 and remained in office throughout the Revolutionary War.

    Following his 1766 defeat, Thomas Fitch served in the General Assembly. His supporters attempted to have him re-elected as governor in the 1770's but were unsuccessful. In 1769, he served on a committee, and in 1772, was the Deputy from Norwalk to the General Assembly. He retired after that and spent much time reading under an elm tree he had planted in 1749. The tree, which came to be called "King Elm", lasted until about 1900 when it was destroyed by beetles.

    Governor Thomas Fitch died on July 18, 1774 and was buried in East Norwalk Historical Cemetery, now the oldest cemetery in Norwalk. The Fitch house was partially burned in the July 11 and 12, 1779 British invasion of Norwalk, so only one wing remained. Fitch's wife, Hannah, having been evacuated from Norwalk at the time of the British raid, probably returned to Norwalk before she died in August 17792, at the age of 78. Fitch descendants lived in the reconstructed house until 1945. In 1956, the structure lay in the path of the Connecticut Turnpike (Interstate 95). Through community efforts the small wing that had survived the British raid was saved and moved out of the path of the road. It is today part of the Mill Hill Historic Park in Norwalk.

    Thomas Fitch's family received some of the "Firelands" in the Connecticut Western Reserve in Ohio, lands reserved especially for those who had been burned out by the British in the Revolutionary War. The town of Fitchville, in Huron County, Ohio, was partly built on land that was given to the family of Governor Fitch and so was named for him. Mill Hill Historic Park, Wall Street and East Avenue, Norwalk, (phone 1-203-846-0525) includes the Governor Fitch law office (set on rocks from the original Fitch home's foundation), the earliest Norwalk cemetery, a schoolhouse, and the Townhouse Museum.

    Portrait

    There is no known portrait of Thomas Fitch.

    Footnotes

    1 Various sources give different birthdates, ranging from 1696 to 1700. The epitaph on Fitch's headstone ends with the sentence: "Having served his generation by the will of God, [he] fell asleep July 18, Anno Domini 1774, in the 78th year of his age."

    2 Connecticut Journal and New-Haven Post-Boy, August 18, 1769.

    Bibliography

    Caulkins, Frances Manwaring. History of Norwich, Connecticut, pp. 365-367. Hartford: Press of Case, Lockwood & Brainard, 1873 [CSL Call number F 104 .N93 C3 1874].

    Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College...October, 1701-May 1745. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1885 [CSL call number HistRef LD 6323 .D5].

    Encyclopedia of Connecticut. New York: Somerset Publishers, Inc., 1994 [CSL Call Number GIS Ref F 92 .E53 1994].

    The Fitch Papers, 2 Vols., in Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, VII (1918) and XVIII (1920) [CSL Call Number F 91.C7].

    Fedor, Ferenz. The Birth of Yankee Doodle. New York: Vantage Press, 1976 [CSL call number 974.62 N83f].

    Fitch, John T. Descendants of the Reverend James Fitch, 1622-1902. Rockport, ME: Picton Press, 1996- [CSL call number CS 71 .F545 1996].

    _______________. A Fitch Family History: English Ancestors of the Fitches of Colonial Connecticut. Camden, ME: Picton Press, 1990 [CSL call number CS 439 .F512 1990].

    Fitch, Roscoe Conkling. History of the Fitch Family, A.D. 1400-1930. N.p.: The Fitch Family, 1930 [CSL call number CS 71 .F 545 1930].

    Highways & Byways of Connecticut. Hartford: G. Fox & Co., [1947] [CSL call number F 94 .H54 1947].

    National Cyclopedia of American Biography. New York: James White & Company, 1900, s.v. "Fitch, Thomas", vol. X, p. 327 [CSL call number E 176 .N27].

    Norton, Frederick Calvin. The Governors of Connecticut. Hartford: Connecticut Magazine Co., 1905 [CSL call number HistRef F 93 .N 88 1905].

    Raimo, John W. Biographical Directory of American Colonial and Revolutionary Governors 1607-1789. Westport, CT: Meckler Books, 1980 [CSL call number E 187.5 .R34].

    Originally prepared by David O. White, Museum of Connecticut History, Connecticut State Library. Edited and revised by CSL Staff , October 2002. Copyright © 2002.

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    Gov married Hall, Hannah on 4 Sep 1724 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut. Hannah was born on 31 Jan 1702 in New Haven, Connecticut, United States; died on 7 Aug 1769 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1769 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States of America. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Hall, Hannah was born on 31 Jan 1702 in New Haven, Connecticut, United States; died on 7 Aug 1769 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1769 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States of America.
    Children:
    1. Fitch, Col. Jonathan was born on 12 Apr 1725 in Norfolk, Litchfield, Connecticut, United States; died on 12 Sep 1793 in New Haven, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, United States.
    2. Fitch, (Col) Thomas was born on 12 Aug 1725 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 16 Jan 1795 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; was buried in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States.
    3. 1. Fitch, Ebenezer was born about 1726 in of Stamford, Fairfield, Connecticut; died in 1735.
    4. Fitch, Hannah was born in 1728 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 24 Aug 1744.
    5. Fitch, Mary was born on 20 Sep 1733 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 30 Sep 1776 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.
    6. Fitch, Timothy was born on 22 Dec 1735 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States; died on 18 Sep 1802 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.
    7. Fitch, Elizabeth was born about 1738 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 29 Mar 1825 in Fairfield, Connecticut; was buried in Old Fairfield Burying Ground, FAIRFIELD, FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT.
    8. Fitch, Esther was born in 1741 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 12 Mar 1771 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.
    9. Fitch, Giles was born in 1745 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died in Apr 1747 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.
    10. Fitch, Hezekiah was born about 1748 in of Salisbury, , Connecticut; died on 24 Dec 1797 in Salisbury, Litchfield, Connecticut.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Fitch, Thomas was born in 1652 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut (son of Fitch, Samuel and Mygatt, Susannah); died on 17 Oct 1704 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; was buried in Oct 1704.

    Notes:

    Thomas lived in Wethersfield, CT. He was a constable in Dec 1679 before his marriage to Abigail. After Abigail's death in 1684, daughter Abigail went to live with her maternal grandparents. Thomas married Sarah Bordman and had several more children; they resided on the east side of Broad St. between ch. and Fletcher's Lane. Thomas was a schoolteacher in 1699 and a leather-sealer in 1702.

    Footnotes:
    James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England. USGenNet. scanned and edited. (July 1994) (http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/newengland/savage: Nov. 2000).
    Vital Records, RECORDS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT; R. R. Hinman.
    Quality: 0.
    Mr. Thomas FITCH d. 17 Oct 1704

    [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jdevlin/ct/wethsfld_a-f.htm]

    Manwaring, Charles W., A Digest of the Early CT Probate Records ((Hartford, CT, R.S.Peck & CO, 1904-1906)), Vol. 2, p. 62.
    Quality: 0.
    Page 125-6. Fitch, Thomas, Wethersfield. Died 18 October, 1704.
    Invt. £111-03- oo. Taken 13 November, 1704, by John Curtis, Sen., John Goodrich, and Daniel Boardman.
    The children: Samuel Fitch, Abigail the wife of Abraham Kimberly, Sibbell the wife of Joseph Hurlbut, and Martha Fitch.
    Court Record, Page 68 — 26 April, 1705 : Sarah Fitch, widow, relict of Thomas Fitch, late of Wethersfield, decd., exhibits invt. Adms. granted to Mrs. Sarah Fitch, widow.
    Page 156 (Vol. VIII) 7 September, 1713: Samuel Fitch, a minor son of Thomas Fitch, late of Wethersfield decd., made choice of William Whiting to be his guardian.
    Page 216 — 4 October, 1714: Sarah Fitch of Wethersfield, Adms. on the estate of Mr. Thomas Fitch, late decd., exhibits now in this Court an account of her Adms. Paid in debts, subsistence of the family, and illness of the daughter for some years, £90-06-3%. And received of debts due to the estate, £28-11-06. Which account this Court allow and order to be kept on file. Dist. File: 9 April, 1717: To Sarah Fitch, widow; to Samuel; to Abigail, wife of Abraham Kimberly ; to Sibbel, the wife of Joseph Hurlbut; Joseph Kimberly of Newtown, Joseph Hurlbut his attorney, all sealed. Inventory and Will in Vol. VIII, Page 5.

    Sherman Adams, The history of ancient Wethersfield, Connecticut : comprising the present towns of Wethersfield, Rocky Hill, and Newington : and of Glastonbury prior to its incorporation in 1693, from date of earliest settlement until the present time (New York: Grafton Press, 1904), vol. 2: p. 373.
    Quality: 3.
    Vital Records, RECORDS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT; R. R. Hinman.
    Quality: 0.
    Mrs. Abigail FITCH d. 8 Nov 1684

    [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jdevlin/ct/wethsfld_a-f.htm]

    Manwaring, Charles W., A Digest of the Early CT Probate Records ((Hartford, CT, R.S.Peck & CO, 1904-1906)), vol. 1, p. 203.
    Quality: 0.
    Page 175. Goodrich, Ensign William. Invt. £915-01-06. Taken 14 November, 1676, by John Belden, Samuel Wright, John Robbins. The children: John, age 23, William 17, Ephraim, 14, David 10. The daughters are married.

    Court Record, Page 158-9 — 6 December, 1676: Adms. to the widow. Order to Dist. to the widow £100, Personal, forever; and 1-3 of Realty for life. To John, Eldest son, £230; to William, £150; to Ephraim, £140; to David, £130; to Mrs. Hollister £100 already paid ; to Mrs. Welles, wife of Robert Welles, £100 ; to Mrs. Fitch, wife of Thomas Fitch, £90 ; to Mrs. Butler, wife of Joseph Butler, £80. Samuel Talcott, Overseer.

    [Probate records of William Goodrich]

    http://freepages.misc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~shopefamily/Tree/famf870.html

    ================================

    Thomas married Boardman, Sarah. Sarah was born on 4 Mar 1655 in Wethersfield, Hartford Co., Connecticut; died on 18 Oct 1704 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Boardman, Sarah was born on 4 Mar 1655 in Wethersfield, Hartford Co., Connecticut; died on 18 Oct 1704 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut.
    Children:
    1. Fitch, Sibell was born in 1686 in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; died in 1752 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut, United States; was buried in 1752.
    2. Fitch, Samuel
    3. Fitch, Martha was born in 1687 in Wethersfield Twp, Hartford, Connecticut; was buried on 2 Feb 1712/1713 in Wethersfield Twp, Hartford, Connecticut.
    4. 2. Fitch, Gov Thomas was born on 16 Jan 1700 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 18 Jul 1774 in Norwalk, Fairfield Co., Connecticut; was buried in E. Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.
    5. Fitch, Abigail was born in 1686 in Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Fitch, Samuel was born on 9 Nov 1626 in Bocking, Essex, England; was christened on 9 Nov 1626 in Saint Mary's Church, Bocking, Essex, England (son of Fitch, Thomas I and Reeve, Anne); died in 1659 in L., Hartford, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch Id: M8KB-438
    • Death: 1658/1659, of, Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut

    Notes:

    Susannah/Mary was previously married to William Whiting-they lived in Hartford, CT and had several children before his death. Susannah and Samuel married in Hartford where Samuel taught school 1650-1653. "Parents were required to provide 'either a little load of wood or three shillings toward procuring it". He was also a representative to the General Court in 1654 and 1655.
    After Samuel's death after only nine years of marriage, Susannah married again, to Alexander Bryan and lived in Milford, CT. She died at the home of a daughter.

    There was a Samuel Fitch who was in Milford, CT in 1644, but he supposidly moved to Norwalk, CT. The Samuel, son of Thomas of Bocking, was born in 1626- far too young to be married to Susanna.

    1. James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England. USGenNet. scanned and edited. (July 1994) (: Nov. 2000).
    2. Ibid., vol 4: wm whitin.
    Quality: 3.
    3. Document, Court records.
    Quality: 0.
    June 1662: "Mr. Allexander Briant and Mrs. Susannah ffitch" signed an agreement transferring to the children of her first husband William Whiting, certain property that had been in her possession as his widow..."
    [from "Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan)" p. 292]
    4. James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England. USGenNet. scanned and edited. (July 1994) (: Nov. 2000), d. bef. him [her third husband], at the ho. of her d. Collins, and was bur. at Middletown, 8 July 1673.
    Quality: 0.
    5. Document, letter written by John Winthrop Jr. on July 15, 1673.
    Quality: 3.
    "Old Mrs. Bryan, Mr. Whitings mother, died at Middleton Sabath day was seven night, where she was buried the Tuesday following; had not beene sick above a weeke"
    [as quoted from "Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan)" p. 192]
    6. Historical Catalogue of the First Church in Hartford 1633-1885 (Published by the Church 1885, 274 pages), p. 236.
    Quality: 3.
    1650/1651 "Mr. Samuel Fitch maryed Mrs. Mary Whiting"
    7. James Savage, Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England. USGenNet. scanned and edited. (July 1994) (: Nov. 2000).
    8. Vital Records, RECORDS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT; R. R. Hinman.
    Quality: 0.
    Mr. Thomas FITCH d. 17 Oct 1704
    [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jdevlin/ct/wethsfld_a-f.htm]

    Samuel married Mygatt, Susannah on 2 Jan 1650 in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States. Susannah (daughter of Mygatt) was born in 1609 in England; died on 8 Jul 1673 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut, United States; was buried on 8 Jul 1673 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mygatt, Susannah was born in 1609 in England (daughter of Mygatt); died on 8 Jul 1673 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut, United States; was buried on 8 Jul 1673 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _COLOR: Blue
    • FamilySearch Id: 9V7Z-SK6

    Notes:

    Will: 27 Nov 1654
    I Joseph Mygatt of Hartford do make this my last Will & Testament : Whereas, in a Writing bearing date 27 November, 1654, I have already engaged the manner of a dispose of my Estate after my Death, I do now for the substance thereof fully consent thereunto, only some things mentioned needing some explication I thought good to mention, 1st, that I have already paid the marriage portion for my son Jacob as is expressed in the Agreement, & have built a house for him of more value than was promised, & have truly fulfilled that first particularly.

    2nd, Whereas it is mentioned in the Agreement with Mrs. Susannah Fitch, & the Trustees

    in behalf of her Brother,

    that the Estate by her should be let out to procure a farm, that it might have been so but they conceived that it might be more advantageous to adventure the Money abroad, being at that time in a way of Trade, the which with their desire I consented too, - these things being confiscated, I do dispose of my whole Estate as is there mentioned, only my Mind is that in Case the £12 be not paid to my wife (as is expressed), that so much of my Lands be sold (that may best be spared) as may enable the true performance of the yearly Annuity willed to her during her natural life.
    I give unto Joseph Deming, my gr. son, all my Wearing apparrel. I appoint my gr. child Joseph Mygatt to be my Executor. I desire my friend Paul Peck sen. and my son John Deming to be Overseers. Witness: Jos: Haines, Jo: MYGATT. Ls. Paul Peck.

    http://freepages.misc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~shopefamily/Tree/famf790.html

    ==================================
    She d in Milford, Feb'y 20,1661, and he m. 2"^ Susannah Fitch,
    wi.loNV of Mr. Samuel, of Hartford. Susanah was V wite ot
    William Whitin-, who with Lords Say and Brooke, and George
    Wyllys bought the interest of the Bristol men in Piscataqua
    about 1631 to 1633. From 1641 to his death he was treasurer o
    Conn. Colony, and in 1642 one of the magistrates. He was styled
    "The Worshipful William Whiting." She m. 2°Mn IboO, Mr.
    Samuel Fitch, of Hartford, many years teacher there by whom
    sh. had two sons. He d. 1659 and she m. 3"^ 1663, Mr. Bryan.
    She d. at Middletown, Conn., July 8 1673, at the home of her son-
    in-law, Rev. Nathaniel Collins, of that place.
    http://archive.org/stream/alexanderbryanof00bald/alexanderbryanof00bald_djvu.txt
    =========================================================

    !MARRIAGE: (1) William WHITING (2) 1650 Samuel FITCH (3) Alexander BYRON
    !Rec of Doris Ball- Union, OR;

    !Margaret Neuffer- 2003 Valley View Dr. Columbia, MO 65201: Susanna.....Whiting md (2) 1650 Samuel FITCH of Hartford and had 2 more children. Mr Fitch died 1659 and she md (3) Alexander BRYAN of Milford Conn., but died before him at the house of her daughter, Mary Collins of Middletown, Conn. and was buried in Middletown 8 July 1673. Susannah surname Wiggins. (Margaret Neuffer 9-92):

    !Families of Early CT-Lucius Barnes Barber; Society of Colonial Wars- shows William married Susannah Wiggins. She is not in IGI US or Eng 88. Catherine Whiting, William's sister md Thomas Wiggins in London.

    DOCUMENTATION (by Margaret Neuffer):

    !MARRIAGES: Source - Torrey, Clarence Almon, "New England Marriages Prior to 1700, page 111" (1) William WHITING; (2) 2 Jan 1650/51 Samuel FITCH
    (3) Alexander Bryan 27 Jun 1662."
    !DEATH: Source - Mass. Historical Society Collections, fifth series, Vol.8, page 148. Governor John Winthrop, writing from "Hartford, July 15, 1673" to his son Fitz-John Winthrop, says: "Old Mrs Bryan, Mr Whitings mother, died at
    Middleton Sabath day was seven night, where she was buried the Tuesday following: had not been sick above a weeke.."

    !Barbour, Lucius Linus, "Families of Early Hartford, Conn", page 675 states, "Susanna was called Mrs Mary in Hartford town records, Susannah Wiggin in Soc C Wars papers (Trowbridge)"

    Sources of Information:
    1. Notebooks of Naoma Manwaring Harker and Mark Whiting.

    Notes:
    1. She may have died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Collins, at Middletown.
    2. Her maiden name could be Wiggins, but this is not documented.
    3. She apparently had two sons by her husband Samuel Fitch.
    ==========================


    4. A family tree found on FamilyTreeMaker concerning the Descendants of John Whiting states that William Whiting was born in Boxford "Sussex" and died in 1647 in Hartford, Connecticut. His wife Susannah Wiggin was born in 1609 in Milford, Connecticut and married William in 1635 in Hartford. This pedigree seems to contain multiple errors and speculation.

    GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Susanna

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut, United States.
    =========================================
    Next >>
    p.292 (301) p.293 (302)
    FAMILY OF ALEXANDER BRYAN
    On page 7 of this work the Judge states that he purchased in London a deed which has been preserved among the papers of the descendants of WilHam Penn. This deed is printed on pages 8 to 10 of the Bryan pamphlet. This document dated July 20, 1663, is a conveyance from Richard Bryan of Milford in New England and his father Alexander Bryan also of Milford to Edward Baldwyn of Beconsfield in the county of Bucks in consideration of i 40 "All those twoe messuages or tenements and garden with all the outhouses " appurten nts thereunto belonging situate lying " being in the North Streete of Wendover, in the said county of Bucks, and now or late in the occupation of the widow Ovyatt (?) or her underten nt or underten nts which said messuage or tennements were given to Anne Bryan, mother of the said Richard Bryan deceased, " to the said Richard Bryan " their heires by the last will " testament of Richard Baldwyn of Dundridge, in the said County of Buck, deceased." From these documents it will be seen that Anne wife of Alexander Bryan, the emigrant and head of the Bryan family of Milford, was daughter of Robert Baldwin of the Baldwin family of Buckingham County, England. "Anne Briant" was admitted to full communion in the Milford Church, August 23, 1640. The record also states that she died February 20, 1661. Alexander Bryan married, second, Susanna widow of both William Whiting and Samuel Fitch of Hartford. There is no record of this marriage, but it probably took place soon after June 27, 1662, when "M"" Allexand"^ Briant and M" Susannah ffitch" signed an agreement transferring to the children of her first husband William Whiting, certain property that had been in her possession as his widow and administratrix, and requested the court to appoint new administrators on the estate.-^

    Mrs. Susannah Bryan was admitted to the Milford Church December 6, 1669. Following the record of her admission on the Church book is this entry : "buried at Middletown July 8.73" John Winthrop Junior, Governor of Connecticut, in writing to his son Fitz-John Winthrop from "Hartford, July 15: 1673", said ' Hartford, Conn., County Court Records, vol. 3, reverse end, p. 69.

    ALEXANDER BRYAN
    "Old M''^ Bryan, M^ Whitings mother, died at Middleton Sabath day was seven night, where she was buried the Tuesday following: had not beene sick above a weeke.""*

    Alexander Bryan made his will April 24, 1679 and July 22 following he made a codicil thereto. In the document he referred to himself as being weak of body. To his grandson Alexander Bryan he gave " 500 in addition to what he had already received. The house and home-lot where the testator then dwelt were to be considered a part of the i 500. He also gave him the old warehouse and one-half of the pasture land in Milford. These bequests including all previous payments were to be appraised and the value thereof in excess of i 500 was to be paid by the legatee to Samuel Bryan, another grandson of the testator. Alexander Bryan, child of the testator's grandson, Alexander, was given all the interest in the house and land at Eaton's Neck, Long Island, of which he was to come into possession when he became nineteen years old.

    Hannah Harriman, grandchild of the testator, was given i 40, part of which she had already received.

    The testator had previously given to his granddaughter Sarah Fitch, i 40 in a house which the testator had bought of Samuel Baldwin's widow. "My son in law Samuel Fitch" was directed to pay to the testator's grandson, Samuel Bryan, the amount due for the rest of the said house and lot.

    Said Samuel Bryan was also given the testator's house and land in Milford opposite his son Richard's dwelling house, also the new warehouse and land at Indian Side, formerly belonging to Samuel Baldwin.

    To his grandson, Richard Bryan Junior, he gave a house and home-lot bought of Samuel Eells, said Richard to come into possession thereof at the age of nineteen years.

    If Richard should die under that age, the property was to go to the executor. The three grandchildren, Richard Bryan, Frances Bryan and Abigail Bryan, were given the household goods, plate, brass, pewter and all moveable goods in equal shares. If either child should die before coming of age or unmarried, the share of such child was to go to the survivors.

    Mass. Historical Society Collections, series 5, vol. 8, p. 148.

    APA: Starr, Frank Farnsworth. (2013). pp. 292-3. Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan) Goodwin of Hartford, Connecticut (Vol. 2). London: Forgotten Books. (Original work published 1915)
    MLA: Starr, Frank Farnsworth. Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan) Goodwin of Hartford, Connecticut. Vol. 2. 1915. Reprint. London: Forgotten Books, 2013. 292-3. Print. Next >>
    p.292 (301) p.293 (302)
    FAMILY OF ALEXANDER BRYAN
    On page 7 of this work the Judge states that he purchased in London a deed which has been preserved among the papers of the descendants of WilHam Penn. This deed is printed on pages 8 to 10 of the Bryan pamphlet. This document dated July 20, 1663, is a conveyance from Richard Bryan of Milford in New England and his father Alexander Bryan also of Milford to Edward Baldwyn of Beconsfield in the county of Bucks in consideration of i 40 "All those twoe messuages or tenements and garden with all the outhouses " appurten nts thereunto belonging situate lying " being in the North Streete of Wendover, in the said county of Bucks, and now or late in the occupation of the widow Ovyatt (?) or her underten nt or underten nts which said messuage or tennements were given to Anne Bryan, mother of the said Richard Bryan deceased, " to the said Richard Bryan " their heires by the last will " testament of Richard Baldwyn of Dundridge, in the said County of Buck, deceased." From these documents it will be seen that Anne wife of Alexander Bryan, the emigrant and head of the Bryan family of Milford, was daughter of Robert Baldwin of the Baldwin family of Buckingham County, England. "Anne Briant" was admitted to full communion in the Milford Church, August 23, 1640. The record also states that she died February 20, 1661. Alexander Bryan married, second, Susanna widow of both William Whiting and Samuel Fitch of Hartford. There is no record of this marriage, but it probably took place soon after June 27, 1662, when "M"" Allexand"^ Briant and M" Susannah ffitch" signed an agreement transferring to the children of her first husband William Whiting, certain property that had been in her possession as his widow and administratrix, and requested the court to appoint new administrators on the estate.-^

    Mrs. Susannah Bryan was admitted to the Milford Church December 6, 1669. Following the record of her admission on the Church book is this entry : "buried at Middletown July 8.73" John Winthrop Junior, Governor of Connecticut, in writing to his son Fitz-John Winthrop from "Hartford, July 15: 1673", said ' Hartford, Conn., County Court Records, vol. 3, reverse end, p. 69.

    http://www.forgottenbooks.com/readbook_text/Various_Ancestral_Lines_of_James_Goodwin_and_Lucy_Morgan_Goodwin_of_v2_1000837773/301
    ================================================

    Children:
    1. Fitch, Samuel was born about 1650 in Hartford, Connecticut; died about 1690.
    2. 4. Fitch, Thomas was born in 1652 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; died on 17 Oct 1704 in Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut; was buried in Oct 1704.