Person:Eliphalet Dyer (1)

Watchers
m. 24 Oct 1717
  1. Mary Dyer1718/19 - 1802
  2. Eliphalet Dyer, Esq.1721 - 1807
  3. Lydia Dyer1724 - 1790
  • HEliphalet Dyer, Esq.1721 - 1807
  • WHuldah Bowen1729 - 1800
m. 9 May 1745
Facts and Events
Name Eliphalet Dyer, Esq.
Gender Male
Birth[2] 14 Sep 1721 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, United States
Marriage 9 May 1745 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, United Statesto Huldah Bowen
Death? 13 May 1807 Windham, Windham, Connecticut, United States
Burial? Windham Center Cemetery, Windham, Windham, Connecticut, United States
Reference Number? Q5361284?
References
  1.   Find A Grave: Windham Center Cemetery, Windham, CT, in Find A Grave
    Eliphalet Dyer.

    In
    memory of
    the Honorable
    ELIPHELET DYER
    who died May 13, A.D.
    1807 aged 86 years.

  2. "Windham Vital Records" (NEHGS), in Connecticut, United States. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records
    p. 81.

    DYER, DYAR
    Elizabeth [-sic-], s. [d?] Thomas & Lydia, b. Sept. 14, 1721 [1:39a]
    [Note: the original right side says "Eliphelet", not Elizabeth, but was apparently misinterpreted by Barbour, leading to his doubts about the gender.]

  3.   Eliphalet Dyer, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.

    the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

    Eliphalet Dyer (September 14, 1721 – May 13, 1807) was a lawyer, jurist, and statesman from Windham, Connecticut.<ref></ref> He was a delegate for Connecticut to many sessions of the Continental Congress, where he signed the 1774 Continental Association.

    Dyer was born in Windham and attended Yale where he graduated in 1740. He read law and was admitted to the bar in 1746. He became a member of the militia, then in 1747 was elected justice of the peace and a member of the colonial assembly. He was also involved in several of the land development schemes for the Susquehanna and Wyoming Valley areas.

    In the French and Indian War, Dyer was a Lt. Colonel in the militia. He participated in the expedition that captured Crown Point from the French, as a Colonel of the Third Connecticut Provincial Regiment in 1755. In 1758, he led his regiment to Canada in support of Amherst’s and Wolfe’s operations.

    In 1763, he visited London as an agent for the Susquehanna Land Company in a failed attempt to gain title for a colonial venture to the Wyoming region. Connecticut sent Dyer to New York City for the Stamp Act Congress. This Congress of protest was an important precursor to the American Revolution. In 1766, he was elected a justice of Connecticut’s superior court. He held that post until 1793, serving as chief justice after 1789.

    As the Revolution began, Dyer was named to the state’s Committee of Safety and named a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1774. He served in the Congress during 1774–1775, 1777–1779, and 1782–1783. John Adams, in his diary, characterized Dyer as "...longwinded and roundabout, obscure and cloudy, very talkative and very tedious, yet an honest, worthy man; means and judges well."

    Dyer retired from public life in 1793. He died at home in Windham on May 13, 1807, and is buried in the Windham Cemetery. His daughter Amelia was married to Joseph Trumbull, who officially served with Dyer in the Continental Congress but did not attend any sessions.

    This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Eliphalet Dyer. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.