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m. 13 Nov 1785
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[gracewoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[huldawoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[huldawoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[sethwoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[sylvesterwoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[fain0002 w SW merges.FTW] [faingambol.FTW] [gracewoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[huldawoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[huldawoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[sethwoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT.[sylvesterwoodard.ged]
OLIVER STODDARD CHATFIELD (1793-1883): Oliver and Abigail lived in a house which stands on the south side of the road from Seymour to New Haven and is crossed by the boundary line between Seymour and Woodbridge. Oliver thought, when young, he would like to follow the sea, but after one voyage to the West Indies he was content to remain at home. He was Captain of a military company in Bethany. He ran his father's mill, furnishing timber for the older Yale College Buildings, for the first M. E. Church that used to stand on the corner of the New Haven Green, and for other prominent buildings of the period. He was a member of the Morning Star Lodge, F. & A.M. of Seymour, CT and a Royal Arch Mason. At his death he was one of the oldest Masons in CT. He purchased on Apr 6, 1826, from Stiles Johnson and others, several tracts of land bordering on land of Joel Chatfield and others, and on Apr 5, 1832, he purchased from Agur and Polly Tomlinson a smaller tract of land on the north side of the highway "about one mile eastwardly of Humphreysville," the land being bounded westerly, northerly and easterly on land of said O. S. Chatfield. A memorandum on the deed designates the dwelling house as the "Dick House". He owned five farms and worked them for a number of years. He was a hospitable and genial host, a lover of his family and always glad to have his children and his grandchildren about him. His father was one of the wealthy men of his time. He had a set of china made for his wife with the initials of her name, R. C. on each piece, and some of the pieces are still preserved by the descendants. "The Chatfield Family", by William C. Sharpe, 1896, Seymour, CT. References
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