Everything about The New Haven Colony totally explained
The
New Haven Colony was an
English colonial venture in present-day
Connecticut in
North America from
1637 to
1662.
Quinnipiac Colony
A
Puritan minister named
John Davenport led his flock from exile in
the Netherlands back to
England and finally to America in the spring of
1637. The group arrived in
Boston on the ship
Hector on
June 26, but decided to strike out on their own, based on their impression that the
Massachusetts Bay Colony was lax in its religious observances.
That fall
Theophilus Eaton led an exploration party south to the north shore of
Long Island Sound in search of a suitable site. He purchased land from the Indians at the mouth of the
Quinnipiac River. In the spring of 1638 the group set out, and on April 14 they arrived at their
'New Haven' on the Connecticut shore. The site seemed ideal for trade with a good port between Boston and
New Amsterdam and access to the furs of the
Connecticut River valley. However, while the colony succeeded as a settlement and religious experiment, its future as a trade center was some years away.
In
1639 they adopted a set of
Fundamental Articles for self-government, partly as a result of a similar action in the river towns. A governing council of seven was established, with Eaton as chief magistrate and Cunningham as pastor. The articles required that
"...the word of God shall be the only rule..." and this was maintained even over English
common law tradition. Since the Bible contained no reference to trial by jury, they eliminated it and the council sat in judgment. Only members of their church congregation were eligible to vote.
United Colonies of New England Confederation
The colony's success soon attracted other believers, as well as those who were not Puritans. They expanded into additional towns (then called plantations):
Milford and
Guilford in 1639,
Stamford and
Southold across
Long Island Sound to the south on the North Fork of
Long Island in 1640 forming the original component of the confederation which called itself "The United Colonies of New England.".
Later
Branford joined in
1643 and was the last the official "plantations" in the New Haven Confederation . They based their government on that of
Massachusetts but maintained stricter adherence to the Puritan discipline.
New Jersey, Philadelphia and the Pacific Ocean
In 1641 the colony claimed the area along the of what is now southern
New Jersey and
Philadelphia after buying the area south of Trenton along the
Delaware River from the
Lenape tribe. Among the communities that were to be founded were
Cape May, New Jersey and
Salem, New Jersey.
The treaty which placed no westward limit on the land west of the Delaware was to be the legal basis for a Connecticut "sea to sea" claim of owning all the land on both sides of the Delaware from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean.
In 1642 fifty families on a ship captained by George Lamberton settled at the mouth of
Schuylkill River around to establish the trading post at what is today Philadelphia. The Dutch and Swedes who were already in the area burned their buildings. A Swedish court was to convict Lamberton of "trespassing, conspiring with the Indians."
The New Haven Colony wouldn't get any support from its New England patrons and Puritan Governor
John Winthrop was to testify that the "Delaware Colony" "dissolved" owing to summer "sickness and mortality."
The Phantom Ship
In the first years of the colony it only had ships capable of coastal travel. Trade with England was done with the
Massachusetts Bay Colony as the middleman. In 1645 the Colony built an 80-ton ocean-going ship to be captained by Lamberton. The ship disappeared in a 1646.
According to legend a year and half later in 1647 following a thunder shower an apparition of the ship appeared on horizon. Those on shore were said to have recognized their friends on deck. The ship's masts then appeared to snap, and in the pitch the passengers were thrown into the sea and the ship capsized. Town fathers were to say the event gave them closure.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote the poem "The Phantom Ship" about the event which includes the lines:
» A ship sailed from New Haven,
And the keen and frosty airs,
» That filled her sails at parting,
Were heavy with good men's prayers.
» "O Lord! if it be thy pleasure"--
Thus prayed the old divine--
» "To bury our friends in the ocean,
Take them, for they're thine!"
» But Master Lamberton muttered,
And under his breath said he,
» "This ship is so crank and walty
I fear our grave she'll be!"
The disasters in Philadelphia and sinking of its ship were to weaken the Colony's future negotiating position.
Pursuit of the Regicide Judges
Eaton stayed as governor until his death in
1658, when leadership of the Colony was given to
Francis Newman, followed by
William Leete in
1660.
In 1661, the judges who had signed the death warrant of
Charles I of England in 1649 were pursued by
Charles II. Two judges, Colonel
Edward Whalley and Colonel
William Goffe, fled to New Haven to seek refuge from the king's forces. John Davenport arranged for these "
Regicides" to hide in the
West Rock hills northwest of the town. A third judge,
John Dixwell, joined the other regicides at a later time.
Merger With Connecticut Colony
An uneasy competition ruled their relations with the Connecticut River settlements centered on
Hartford. The colony published a complete legal code in
1656, but the law remained very much church-centered. A major difference between the New Haven and Connecticut colonies was that the Connecticut permitted other churches to operate on the basis of "sober dissent" while the New Haven Colony only permitted the Puritan church to exist.
When a royal charter was issued to Connecticut in
1662, New Haven's period as a separate colony ended and its towns were merged into the government of
Connecticut Colony in
1665.
Many factors were to contribute to the loss of power including the loss of its strongest governor Eaton, the economic disasters of losing its only ocean going ship and the Philadelphia disaster. Also there was the regicide case. The New Haven Colony harbored several of the regicide judges who sentenced King Charles I to death. The New Haven Colony was absorbed by the Connecticut Colony partly as royal punishment by King Charles II for harboring the regicide judges who sentenced King Charles I. At the same time the Connecticut Colony had seen its star rise.
Newark
A group of New Haven colonists led by
Robert Treat moved to establish a new community in
New Jersey in 1666. Treat wanted to name the new community after Milford, Connecticut. However Abraham Pierson was to urge that the new community be named "New Ark" or "New Work" which was to evolve into the name
Newark, New Jersey.
Further Information
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