HomeSearchConnecticut Heritage Gateway
1636-17661776-18181822-18611870-18871893-19051905-19291929-19591965-1996
Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
The Bible Commonwealth | Revolutionary Voices


10,000 B.C.
Native Americans settle Connecticut

1636
Thomas Hooker's congregation arrives in Hartford

1637
Pequot War

1638
New Haven settled by English Puritans

1639
Fundamental Orders adopted

1650
General Court adopts first Code of Laws

1662
John Winthrop secures Royal Charter

1687
Charter Oak episode

1698
General Court reorganized

1701
New Haven becomes Connecticut's co-capital

1741
Great Awakening sweeps Connecticut

1765
Stamp Act protests

1766
Sons of Liberty take control of General Assembly

 

Searching for the
Common Good,
1634-1776
Click on images for larger version

   
1. Witch's hanging engraving
   

The Bible Commonwealth

In 1647, Alice Young of Windsor became the first person executed for witchcraft in Britain's North American Colonies. Picture 1, 2

As the pressures on available land mounted, the "proprietors" in each town (the original settlers or their descendants) fought to retain control over undistributed town land and called upon the General Assembly to uphold their traditional rights. Picture 3

In the Great Awakening, a religious revival of the 1740's, impassioned evangelical ministers like George Whitfield attracted crowds of thousands. Convinced the colony had strayed dangerously from its early religious principles, they cried out for a return to the strict Puritanism of the 17th century. Whitfield's popularity threatened traditional church leaders, and the General Assembly promptly banned traveling preachers and even deported one. Picture 4, 5


Revolutionary Voices

"Bare naked power is an awful thing and very unamiable to a people that have been used to be free."

Governor William Pitkin, 1765

 

"No one dares, and few in power are disposed, to punish any violences that are offered to the Authority of the Act - in short, all the springs of Government are broken and nothing but anarchy and confusion appear in Prospect."

Jared Ingersoll, Royal tax collector, 1766

 
         
    2. The Code of 1650, Connecticut's first body of laws passed by the General Court    
         
   
3. Title page of a 1723 law governing proprietors meetings
   
         
   
4. Arresting a tobacco user, an 1822 view of "Blue Law" enforcement during the colonial period
   
         
   
5. Engraving of George Whitfield preaching
   
             
         

Return to top