Town
Studies of the Colonial Period
As
we have noted this book is not a bibliography of local history.
Readers are referred to the "Bibliography" section above
for lists of town histories. For the past generation, however,
professional historians have found the reconstruction and analysis
of colonial New England towns and society a fruitful garden to
cultivate, and a number of works of special usefulness and interest
have been produced. The list below is an attempt to provide researchers
with a selection of the most recent works by professional historians.
It consists of only those works limited to the colonial origins
of Connecticut towns. Unfortunately, this limitation prevents
us from giving full attention to some excellent local studies
by professional historians, such as Thomas Farnham on Weston or
Christopher Bickford on Farmington
A
short, convenient summary is available in Dorothy Deming's Tercentenary
pamphlet VI (1933), The Settlement of Connecticut Towns;
and her Settlement of Litchfield County, Tercentenary pamphlet
VII (1933). The former is a straightforward reliable study of
the chronology of town settlement, with discussion of the modes
of settlement. The latter deals with the northwestern towns which
were surveyed sold and settled in a manner unlike the others.
An earlier variation occurred when, as a legal expedient in 1687,
all the ungranted lands in Connecticut were hastily assigned to
various towns in order to avoid their being taken over by the
king under the Andros regime. Fourteen towns were surveyed--they're
the ones with the orderly rectangular shapes. This story is also
told by Anthony Garvan (cited below). A longer general overview
is provided in Bruce Colin Daniels' The Connecticut Towns:
Growth and Development 1635-1790 (Middletown: Wesleyan University
Press 1979). Daniels' work is a basic resource for anyone beginning
a town study, and no one should attempt one without first familiarizing
himself with Daniels' materials. Look also at Nelson Prentiss
Mead, "The Land System of Connecticut Towns" Political
Science Quarterly 21(1906), to see how the proprietors divided
up their grants.
Another
study of interest to the serious scholar is a doctoral dissertation
by Joseph S. Wood, "The Origin of the New England Village"
(Pennsylvania State University, 19781. Wood a geographer, describes
in derail the development of the spacial characteristics of many
Connecticut towns. Anthony Garvan's Architecture and Town Planning
in Colonial Connecticut (New Haven: Yale University Press
1951) is a marvelous study; not nearly so technical as it sounds
which includes many fine illustrations, maps, and town lay-outs.
Only after reading Daniels and Garvan, along with Andrews' Colonial
Period vol II, is one prepared to undertake a study of the
colonial origins of a town. Other studies which can be used as
models for writing a colonial history or which should be read
for an understanding of the era are these:
Andrews,
Charles M. The River Towns of Connecticut Baltimore: John
Hopkins Studies in Historical and Political Sciences, 1889. Windsor,
Hartford and Wethersfield and the story of their settlement by
a prequantifying master.
Bissell,
Linda Auwers. "Family, Friends, and Neighbors: Social Interaction
in Seventeenth-Century Windsor, Connecticut" Doctoral dissertation,
Brandeis University, 1973. This is a work of "cliometrics."
Careful readers will need to know some statistics and be sophisticated
about quantitative techniques. Bissell concludes that "the
early years in Windsor were ones of great flux best characterized
by the dramatically high rates of geographic and economic mobility
.... The status network was a miniature model (lacking both ends)
of that found in England." (from the abstract) Aspects of
the work are included in the author's "From One Generation
to Another: Mobility in Seventeenth Century Windsor, Connecticut"
William and Mary Quarterly. 3rd series 3(January, 1974)1:99-111.
Feinstein,
Estelle. Stamford from Puritan to Patriot: The Shaping of a
Connecticut Community, 1641-1774. Stamford: Stamford Bicentennial
Corporation, 1976. This is a well-informed treatment by a professional
historian whose area of expertise is the Gilded Age.
Grant
Charles. Democracy in the Frontier Town of Kent New York:
Columbia University Press, 1961; reissued by AMS, 1970. This is
the granddaddy of all modern Connecticut town studies and is one
of the most frequently cited works in the whole body of recent
colonial literature. Demographers and quantifiers have gone well
beyond Grant's methods, but this seminal work remains very important.
The dissertation upon which it is based (Columbia, 1957) includes
some appendix material not found in the book. Grant's conclusions,
generally stated, are that the founders of Connecticut's late-settled
western towns were motivated largely by speculative interests.
There was plenty of land for the first generation, but some of
the sons and many grandsons got left out as the town filled up.
Many moved west, but those who remained constituted what Grant
perceived as an incipient peasantry.
Handsman,
Russell C. "Early Capitalism and the Center Village of Canaan,
Connecticut: A Study of Transformations and Separations."
Artifacts 9(Summer, 1981)3:1-19. Handsman is an anthropologist
and historical archaeologist The research, he writes, "was
concerned with delineating the village' s settlement history as
well as the relationships between this process, concurrent social
and economic change, and the historic archaeological record associated
with Lawrence Tavern." This is a model of its genre, but
replication of it will be limited to professionally trained historians,
archaeologists, or anthropologists. Its methods and conclusions
place it beyond the bounds of traditional local history and give
it significance for New England studies generally.
Labaree,
Leonard W. Milford Connecticut: The Early Development of a
Town as Shown in its Land Records Tercentenary pamphlet XIII(1933).
An oft-cited work with a much-reproduced map of dispersed land
holdings in seventeenth-century Milford. The author later became
editor of the Public Records of the state and a distinguished
professor of history at Yale.
Stark,
Bruce Purrington. "Lebanon, Connecticut A Study of Society
and Politics in the Eighteenth Century." Doctoral dissertation,
University of Connecticut, 1970. This work of more than 500 pages
is an exhaustive analysis of mobility, politics, geography, religion,
and the economy of a town much more influential in the eighteenth
century than it is today "One quality that characterized
life in Lebanon was widespread popular participation in the decision-making
process, when important issues were involved. Although this participation
was largely symbolic, nevertheless, important decisions represented
the popular will" (from the abstract)
-Lyme
Connecticut: From Founding to Independence. Old Lyme: Old
Lyme Historical Society, 1976. This is an effort at popularization
by a scholar. It is more scholarly than popular, however. Citations,
bibliography, no index. A 100-page paperback.
Thompson,
Marvin Gardner. "Litchfield, Connecticut and an Analysis
of its Political Leadership, 1719 to 1784." Doctoral dissertation,
University of Connecticut 1977. Begins with the first settlement
of the town of Litchfield and carries it to a point when that
village was the focus of the political life of the state. "Litchfield,"
says Thompson, "like other colonial towns, was characterized
by deference and was run by a select group of its populace. It
was a system, however, that appears to have satisfied most of
the community." (from the abstract)
Willingham,
William Floyd. "Windham, Connecticut A Profile of a Revolutionary
Community, 1755-1788. "Doctoral dissertation, Northwestern,
1972. "The major purpose of this study is to measure the
degree of continuity and change in political practice, economic
opportunity, and social stratification on a local community."
Willingham concludes that "despite the turmoil and upheaval
of the Revolutionary War and its aftermath, the deferential political
structure of Windham remained intact" (from the abstract)
One
Connecticut town broke off in a huff and went its own way until
absorbed by Massachusetts See Simeon E. Baldwin, "The Secession
of Springfield from Connecticut" Publications of the
Colonial Society of Massachusetts, vol. XII; reprinted as a fifty-page
pamphlet (Cambridge: J. Wilson and Son, 1908).
See
Also John Waters in "Society and Daily Life."
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