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Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
Exploration & Conflict | Settlement of Connecticut towns | The Revolution Approaches


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

 

Significant Events
& Developments,
1634-1776
Click on images for larger version

   

1. F.E. Church, Hooker and Company Journeying through the Wilderness from Plymouth to Hartford in 1636
   

Exploration & Conflict

Bitter conflicts with Connecticut's native peoples occurred almost immediately. Defeated in a merciless attack on their main village in Mystic in 1637, the Pequots fled south to Fairfield where they were crushed in a second fierce battle. Picture 1, 2, 3

Settlement of Connecticut
Towns, 1635-1761

Problems of settlement dominated the General Assembly's agenda virtually from the first. "Outlivers" petitioned to split off from established towns. New settlers and speculators sought to establish new towns from the colony's undistributed land. Connecticut was rapidly filling up, and the General Court was called upon to set up the ground rules for settlement. Picture 4

"The Concern is not, as heretofore, to accommodate themselves to the Worship of God, but Where they can have most Land and be under best advantages to get Money."

Rev. William Russell 1730

The Revolution Approaches

With the Stamp Act of 1765, England sought to recover the enormous expenses she had incurred defending her American colonies from the French in the Seven Years War. Picture 5

Connecticut split sharply between those who accepted this new tax policy and those eager to resist. Opponents formed the Sons of Liberty and nominated a dissident slate for the Upper House in 1766. Their victory demonstrated the capacity of Connecticut's representative government to accommodate bitterly divergent views and set the colony on the path to independence. Picture 6

 

         
   

2. Fairfeld Swamp Massacre engraving
   
         
   

3. New Haven's protective palisade
   
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4. Map of incorporated towns
   
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5. The Funeral of Miss Americ-Stamp, 1765
   
         
   

6. Liberty Pole demonstration
   
           
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