New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 28, 1919, Page 6

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ptly dec 1t 'may be true that some of bnen are exuberant after™ ‘their iege in the trenches when sacri- as the order of the day. It may be true that a few are overstep- he bounds of propriety at their ected dom. It follows rea- b anticipate this. But ask- to stretch the imagination too conceive of American soldiers into thugs at free it is and ly transformed HE “MORRISON CODE”. the be ca b General bly will probably lled ldispose of is one relating to the the state school centralizing the measures up- nization of through the in the When Morrison of Board of Edu- Secretary ity State Assistant the state board become The ex C utlined now what has as the “Morrison Code’” other newspapers little ind that fault i the opinion be found with it unless it was Since the gueness of the author. Ir. Morrison £ his code and opinion has had has opened bortunity (o solidify on its and defects and there is a belief that the pill was candy linz the remonstrance against L ootion of the code have bheen 1001 teachers and they have so fully bitter denounced its provisions in the General if the insist discussion will probably result authorities on It is reported that school their of sui educ the decided but ation has Torrison ard offer Code’ esent a modified substitute may prove more acceptable the material publicity the Connecticut pughou the press by htion of Teachers’ Organizations rds ntly and “Prussian” one sentence autocrat’ appear and in froposed Commissioner of Tidu- is likened to William Hohenzol- efore the former Kaiser of his The ought up to a high pitch of an- hd if the state board is success- revolutionizing the system it the teachers have was powers. teachers e only after e exhausted uch objeetion has been made teachers that Mr. the measure fur- many the There Morrison has t to explain bind s brought he denies of against him centralization of Mr make lough power through to before endorsing the | ed Morrison’s lat- planation school au- | ies hesitate n es in the measure but whether | toto. There are many good will outweigh objectionable fea- the to { Assembly | is presented and | | is a matter the for p after bill v scrutinized s LICKED THE the New Champ ( in Times York utterance that writer task “we takes to htless Jermans rly s thoug GITRMANS". ‘ | \ | i thie and it devolves the 's critic Allies police Kurope. calls his attention to the | to that we did not “lick the Ger- We assisted in defeating—or if Empires ng it sounds bhetter—the and assistance effect gave our We supplied Allies We al remendous that the hunch the nderance of power. sealed ate of the encmy s with no intention of dispara the zing in war | art our boys played declined that the stemmed and | nks. For long, fought what When ranks Sam's the average citizen has pscribe pd to the theory states alone back the Hun ra y years Allies losing the After the war fray their Uncle ared to bhe a umped wavering. into road . William | 2 Director vears or fo his G. McAdoo, roeads, and Hines, successor, are pledged to “five nothing”. Neither has announced any other Senator block hold policy Cummins does the the forhid them back proposal ir for administration not way il Congress wishes to lines five vears but it will turn the to until they have had an opportunity to prepare for the new conditions of ownership which are certain to be written into legisls tion. AGAINST PERSHING, DRIVE Mz issue of ssachusetts to malke a politi- the in is a demotion of some of France, Pershing cal her curiously officers and, enough, General is the obh- ject of the Bay State’s wrath. It will be recalled that former Sen- announced National ator Dick of Ohio recently the the oraanization of Pershing Republican League for the the of the Convention should purpose of promoting interests General Pershing at Republican National he desire to be nominated for president. Among lea Burrill those invited to join the 1e was Stafe Treasurer Charles L. Massachusetis, a office- Mr. associated Republican Burrill has declined to the holder. movement Dick hecome in angd has sent to ex-Senator the rollowing communication For your information [ desire {o state that there is a deep senti- ment_in Massachusetts as well as in ofher states, in reference fo the status of national guard offi- cers in France We in Massachusetts thorough investigation conditions which led to motion natior guard officers during the month before the ar- mistice and until that is done you will find no deep interest in Gen- eral Pershing's candidacy of the fact still F i of desire of the the d In view that General Pershing is in ance attending strictly to military <iness and has the Dick rather not spoken on stbject My of politics, ex-Senator and Burrill ap- pear to be The time for against the General, Pershing has declarcc for nomination It does not previous of this prop- er activity nature, for or would be after himself in line the seem possible that Massachusetts, the keystone of the Revolution, should care to soil its rec- ord with propaganda against the man who led America's hosts to victory TACTS AND FANCIES, I00d prices are apparently the tailers to act any ‘zoing down' heroic efforts of parachutes Avill serious jolt for the World But re- as pre- yens present New York As a lover Detroit able rows to sat men.—New a of peace to get the York S Henry into mose m FFord enough bellicose of Mr. Fletcher for many Fletcherizer Death at relief to The late ic invalid chronic his vears. been a great City Star. wis a chron- then rest vears, and for the 69 must him. a of have Kansas he n Their address Leavenworth.— De- The ex- friends in America probably is Fort troit [ree Press kniser says st Mr Hoover Europe Ju gram for share in the plowshare.— from feeding nz pro- America's zoing Bulletin the victory Manila is to be the Food Administra- to come in the Hos tion There of this prices innounces, are not down implication which has made be so. an name every- ix animal this would body Kansas City feel Tim I the the really wanis a not send him Dallas News place to the kaiser why Desert ? in Sahara sun, One out about this proposition to make the women give up their jobs and let the men have them is the fact that in most cases the women have done their work so conscientiously well,—Boston Transcript. has | ¥ hey helonged to the estate f Arnold, of Ias n. ! (d 1 § his mec- 320) that Louis Point, er, G ester, of #1648, had fthe inventory fiids. In reply Wis Majesty of 1lyn, Secretary 80, replied that . servants amongst aves, 30 we jud > s Phere comes some- 4in a year from Barbadocs ey are sold usually af the rate of 22 1i apicce, sometimes more and sometimes less, The 30 slaves of increased 700 in 1730, includinz hoth and Negroes. In 1756 the number 87, and in 1774, 6,464. In the vear 1774 the importation of slaves into {he Colony was prohibited, while the law 1784 provided for their gradual emancipation making all slaves after March 1, 1784, free they shall attain the aze of 25 In the vear 1790 there were more slaves in Connecticut than in all of the other New England tes combined There were then no slaves in Maine, Vermont or Massachusetts, while New Hampshire had 158. Rhode Tsland 948 and Connecticut 2,764. Slavery was so general in State that town had one more slaves. dam_ Tolland Willing towns had and T as o 1680 to Tndians was of by horn when vears this overy Had- werve the or ton 1 and tha one each. mshury had 2 stol all other towns having a zreater number. Fairfield, included Bridgeport, had 202, number of one town, [Hartford County alone had Wether which then Newington hordered only which the highest any 263 slaves, included New B the largest number county. Hartford 30 other having a number. Rerlin, which then included New Rritain, had 4 slaves, the cent town umington had 8 Southington The 2.764 1790 dwindled 97 in 18 sficld. and 1in on the cast. had 64 slaves, in the Hart- any 18 town e had 151 ford all towns loss adja- and of down t 17 of Fi 12 slaves in Connectiaut o 941 in 1800, 840, and to only 6 were = old Suflield over probably one of made free in 184S, Many of the Tndians who were in the Pequot War of 1637 slaves, hut the zreafer them were sold outside of this Colon or exchanged for negro slaves A King Philip (1676) John Lattimore, had in 1662 valued at 21 pou Tlisha Williams, the first | neighboring parish of N the recorded 20, to in in 1848, ¥hen they frece forever Mr. Albert Hartford. rendembers Ceaser. who lived where he died sid to have vears old. He the six who to made of named Conn nad himdrad Bates. an slave at ahout s or 6 was one was were cap- were of tured made part son was sold as a Wethers- an slav of slave of field m Ine The 1stor Rev in our had her wington of one of 1715, and Caleb Pendleton, had th Indian amuel. Peter respectively a squaw slave, birth heing in another in 1717 Colchester. in 1740 hoy slaves named S: Tonathan, vahied 18 and pounds cach c Timothy Windso: provided ny girl. shall dom fully 13 years from man. of New William Burnham Spanish Indian 1756 that about 1 them the various children of and il 1 will (1724), Indian faith space Thrall, that *Ma have her allowed garet, liberty provided for her, she wife he this.” Richard ton. and the of Kensington, had Tt writt ndians among Nearly inalish many serve my slaves. was n the 000 in are one-half of families small lTony." and in (Fitch number dwell other half in lans of Prohably Papers.) quite a GOT A JOB FOR 4 SOLDIER? -0 Theyre the Stat W hose Old land With And with Buf what's that “Gol Anybody Got comiv st e torch they hungze lights up our skies, > looking at their you eves G T (e B SR of joy joh? song > Got zot a joh soldier joh? a a job for a hoy We Across And wait or Kisses fing harhor foam hear the singing “Home. Sweel that lyrie Ahoy stand. ony the ing solemn Home.' But no Instead “Gof A Anybody g Got a joh for a soldier hoy sohs sob they jol? one ot a joh jolh You money-hag civilians! You Where Had Now,_ in That “Gol a Got Got a vour across’ working moh rs employ, joh? joh hoy worshippers of be millions wouid not daily nd now these the vou “gone vou Got a livin soldier joh? decont joh for a heart-horn chorus. ever it shall each who perished for us, What do for his pal?” Jim's in the earth. hut Boh, Whom fire could not destroy! Up leaps our As By hore we here stands “Got a joh? Got a joh? Anybody got a job? Got a job for a soldier boy’ ) JOHN O'KEEFE —in New York World. a and the value of 10 pouads in wearing apparel.” One Anthony, a Negro slave, hought his own freedom of his master John Wiard of Weth- ersfield in 1711. John Wright and ~-| | Luke Fortuae of Wethersfield, join! owners of a slave named Abner drews, gave him his freedom and fo”l' later the said Abner paid John 1tobbins 40 pounds slave named Zinrorah, whom Abner took e wife. John Stocking Middletown | in 1746, willed that nesto vants that s 1 s hall g0 out free Newhury, Wiadsor 1 that “my mulatto servant ienoni) when e 1 EW BRITAIN Bl of those living in English fwere slaves. Feater part and a QL fow in an ing's Digest vears of our slaves were for a 1ouschold. Hart one of mentions of all rvive v o1 bate twoen 45 difre he lurse nection the my my slaves wife Rogcr provided (alia the and Records 1700 and ent estate on 750 elongin Thirty these b 10 [ l ninc number arrive at 51 ment released or dut oilab vith any one « is of o5 hall samuel | dischargea service Xt ¥ clothed Andrus of m heirs and ueh per Newington H rzest @umber is tion with the of Hartford. 1710 Collections of Connecticut for the statement that bone, of 1 ‘onn tween 50 e land owner onc-third m ] Phiacas in Januar the N connec- for on il 1, torical of il Lot of s 1l is authority Mal- estate inj 1\“ slaves being convinced © the zeneral in holding during life withont mancipated aged 47 followin manumissio.n of country practice the Neg their P o consent.’ Naugue Godfrey aokiyn. owned 3 Al lunge hisEslHN to 60 slaves, was and paid of ollected b in an an in take is (.(\m\ of Southing- The ment from Timlow's Sketches ton. Conn “Where Burnham taxes tie which resided. 2 Episcopal Church service in furthe Society he built tional Finally bout 1770 he et the Kensington county of Hariford and Connecticut, did many years of Lieut. Richard Boardmaa of New- ington, Peter Tus a Spanish In- dian man, the bearcr hereof, to serve me from the t Purchase 10 the lite. the hill Boardman Now ents, am | unto aid posal these * * In unto established William in the olony of ago Buy subseriber, s 1 avoid f t in order pavin the Capt. William Lewis, ton, who died in 1690 in “Land and Negroes, negroes he ongregationalists of FFarming- had an ut how appear taxes to estate many in the rd had does not hstracts lived and Inn is a the present of the 1675, This iy have found Sarmingion bl led Leowis of ne of my of of b rully 1 Will canses, as said (ppea lu«. whe m his the Capt, Inn e I him now is dining | by of more the built record 1 of 1 irst hinz 1 Indian, who was 1i of the Rey 1731. The slave was named Mingo and helonged Dea, Thomas Clark in 1750, Slaves are rveferred Probate such called but were nel of h carliest house may all part Know mea so that 1 for divers moving 1 Peoter from presents whi he Yol Burn- here- let the be at his own dis- of the date of his natural life whereof 1 have hand and Seal this in the twelfth year our Soverine Lord of Great &ec 1738 and said i me The vas a Span in the fam- rtiss about Waterbury to S s e 0o slave in Sout ton Ve now free ing Jeremiah ( first in Tusco, to the day during wit sot of ness he 13th da the Iteign George the King-Anno Dom Sigaed, Sealed Burnham presence Hart my July of 2nd seldom to the ords bu nes the often shows that The Hartford, 1746 ind all are now my prop- Woodbridge, 2, mentioned in his | dia willed that | Susanah Treat may | girl ng wson her.”” Samuel 42, states in o Re as e like, they m Britain servants. roes or the context in fact slaves Woodbridge, mentions “the children The ey Hartford. 173 negro girl Ly delivered Wil- will of S liam In Thomus Ruth Hart This was Burn- ham of the the first pastor for the people in this part of ancient Farmington Peter was supposed to have n of | of Mr. Burnham's Spanish Indian woman Maria herein before referred to. At the date of this manumission Peter was living with Buraham’s dnughter Hannah the wife of the Jeremiah Curtis of Southington remained with the Curtis family | til his death in 1767. He was buried in Oak Hill cemetery where his tomb stoae may now he seen He accumu lated considerable property which he willed to the Curtis family. LY of will is printed in Sketches in connection with umission, together with copies other maaumissions, one ‘Dan” helonging the Nathaniel Judd of Wallinzford “and released his heirs, of “Minda of neg o woman which Timothy her erty the Gret Rev. William of Swamp Sociefy, will a his and “danghter Tusco a re: be brither Allyn that daughter reckoned The will 1724, di- survives and have said nesro for pay a ahle price Windsor, in his will, 1 “the negro that my Welles had 1 account and her at 30 pounds money Thomas Joanes, of girl to the said <hall hoy tev. Hec un- to of gave Colchester, wife irl appraised a negro his and rected in case his W she e set to his children out slaves. Hartford, value o the eph Talcott Negroes 120 15 entory Bearing on the - Timlow's his inventory of Jo 1741, included pounds; Prince, 100 Rose "o The in of thc Ensign Samuel Talcott, 1739, included a valued at pound Danicl villed to airl in lieu of the the estate of 1741 100 his Jupiter. York, Lillie, man- | pounds ol of pounds pounds a estate of 1785, the released in | widow of | the Rev. Jere- mentioned i instrument mann- | CARRATT by Joshua | nionville in 1816 is print- | Memorial History of Hart- Vol. 2. 199, together ate signed by a Justice and the Selectmen of irmiagton. Mhich i ‘W have and age of slave | pound es- o tate of of Wetherstield man and woman Peter, 45 mpson, 30 pounds Hartford, in 1744 the negro nezro Iy and 200 pounds, | other and a boy 1803, by Aan Merrills, | Samuel ¢ son son | miah fore that A 100 in phen is “A pound Richard a slave Mary “urtis, herein copy of of a Youngs of U * in the ford County with a certif of the Teace the town art reads mined a boy Curtis e an of his Jonathan lives money I'hebe of s lof nission slave One now with pounds items is the inventory of Willard, of Wethersfield, nesro man in 1710, Lord, the Shampane,” the eight negroes f Hartford, were of 10 to whereby I infer that aro slaves advanced ahout hetwe 1710 and 1740 n; £ Wethersfield, freed impson it c of 100 Continental money Tl of the estate of Samuel Bronson, the miller Kensington, in indicates that slaves then advanced times since 1 His as follows 300: Saul onson’s mill clory ol | of il inventoried L ; (o the o as follows, into the health black man, now Youngs and we examination health and forty five twenty five examination ox- Ti- | low price ounds cach, price sai late a slave do find Titus greater or three- John his ne- msideration fold teld ne of upon on | such is in said that L is not good than than tual conviaced made amination and Youngs from iphort of said slave holders their released i years nor loss ag pounds ; years and of said Titus that he is desirous of Iree.” The ohject of cortificate was liability Prior anired upon a ) the ahout sla Lot, 200 inventory we are | being | this ex- to re- ! fo e| to 1 | uppor from such oblizations they complied with the the law Younes impears denc. The Seleetmen would fused to the said certifi- | cate if. in their opinien. “Titus” had | been in the decline of life. Dr. Stiles, | in his History of Ancieat Windsor who 11752 price of six oun os were lieve £00 and pounds; | « Pharoh, where the The in Timoth luded | v Rose, praised slave were life to act Hannah 130, T Paper ventory stood ves for The of now them e of Meriden, 173 Pomp. 160 pounds 190, and Prince, 95 appreciation oods is provided of of the c pro- isions have have 1 | in | Jerome, of fonr slaves 295: Jenny The ervice ing toward ons wills, will zive the fait kindly ated in Vindsor, d 40 shil- negro servant, of 1 of e {he indic 1k hequieth of slaves them re- Job D | “mother's Hart his vari- f lates of o G story slave it he wished passing his few minutes No Massa and their they of in tl was it, prime re flec fered >dom when life he all the offered Nis of lings Dick.” Thoma ington, 1721 willed ant Richavd” 13 turry in town and he leave town it sons, Samuel Arnold considered W he ahout Aficr a cpiicd the meat to his of sory- | tion he | had i | keep Sea “arm- N of land improve it” 1 return fo 1 imos vou have now you i aves were freedom enlist <h, on dition that would country and it them acepted the of Wethersfield released “Caesar” ia June three years servicee ir Arm 1780 of Fast | n desirable thia his ided that i of the miany of Warner slave | Continental in August Freeman, in During Toi cated State slaves, sold offer dam 80 to have Neg His will of 1738 Nesgro [ Prince he shall ing out of that Prince strange Istisha will, 17 his sister thal she mainiain and take my negro maid Detty The samuel Allyn, Hartford 1742 part “My will that my Cyrus and William, inventoried pounds cach not sold my heirs, and also [ liberty of choosing which they will It scems slave its Rev 1 sington. who died in like provision in his Spanish Indian womar Referring to the Mr. Allya that his they had provided Security that his estate, or Hartford man ¢ that Will town his yoos resid ! to en the | Blisha Williams 1sed one Ce 15, to enlist for three | Willig' Regimeat | Revolutionary War, | of the included be thus “Pomp" | the con- Jereminh Hence. “Pomp™” ~ State in II. 427.) ristenin Sceretary servant erviant named cldest man e “man I Jist of nd 10t my of be sold son his wife” be sold e rele o ught {0 any master orhaps tho be loncsome age Col the property town he would years in a town Micks of oftentimes the said Wethersficld, in made certaia beques Goodrich and sold for ! and if tate they liablé to e This was the case with in|#4 Nearo slave beloazing to | fiscated estate of the Tiey Leaming. D. D. of Norwalk upon a proper memorial set at liberty the (Records of Conn. Vol With reference to C'h the report herein We bo ek eat upon condition cave of were will reads a is serva he hut serve 1S the by 1779 heirs them my give of strange of Negro \llyn further fo ut Ken serve. fore n slaves of 1680 stated to choose William a maste the own urnham 1750 will Maria ipation b cited of i tha give f the number but and but two christened of.* But after this to slaves Chester Ne them duly « thercof duly record- Wethersfield church rec- There are quite & number Negro probably no few that we it “hristened weconnt o n blacks, know com- The Weltlers- hristen- date was eman mon above Y have laves, wille after rame should e family of ocs at heirs slaves served that they they would his hei 1744, willed acester tield most of ed and cd ords. were the 10 zive his o would dates burden ler: his ot in the John F that manumitted have his {reedom he desire it.) the 19th day of July 1749, agree- able to to the will of my late deceased | fer father * * * whose servaat he was| Ao® also T give my negro man | church Glocester at the time of his being | ton tdwin Stanley Wil made free the value of 10 pound old | page There is a record of tenor in tools or instrumcnts * * *lhapnsm of at least two slaves 8 baptisms slaves, the Southington tin Kellogg had a and a Negress ‘Pege’ was baptized duly records. recorded in Mar- af church Nes Katern." “negro he cords or (it on recorded in fhe (Census of Newing 1776 by 25 the record- I er i \Major The McMillan Store, Inc. *ALWAYS RELIABLE" OPEN 9:00 A. M. TO 6:00 I*. M. URDAY 9:00 A. M. TO 10: 00 1 P. M. TONIORROW WEDNESDAY, BARGAIN DAY Store Open at 9 A. M. STORE SA co of this Prices Wednesday Just Thmk of Buymg T hese SILK DRESSES Values up to $25.00 SERGE DRESSES SERGE SUITS Wednesday$5 98 WOOL COATS Morning ~ 9J.J0 % VELVET HATS Values up to $3.50 VELOUR HATS FELT HATS 25 STRAW HATS Morning = L00 €2 Clearance Lots of Neckwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Handkerchlefs, N i‘eafiher Goods, Etc. L oo o sy cd church acoh h" a dau Deming, I7eh ve Tan oo T of Jacob Deming gives an in writing to William Bristol, binding Negro him for sixtcen to he tably appears on Put in the Kensington follows, Negro of Scpt. 18, 1758, “Zilpi Negro of Jacoh 1766, Iive the widow instrument Jerome of We don records, | of Deming Simsbury page 140, African ind that Lon- imported the of one time Connecti- the he i Indian wo- Betty and e alled Ind*an now Canton ifter that supported | He died s was a native little Col Wethersfield a when child became John Chester, Sen He * Lt ioverno the black for cut. He madc in of life, presumably hefore isted in 1756. He a of slave o ars later, wa free prime first o zirl “Silpat” to the serve girl and for . History of 1 Abigail Deming owner of the said pears by the Deming’s estate in had d place ¢ vears. clothed page 57 Widow said man in Tife res il ir His wife he the late ided eal died ame a of cate s it a istol Wi still the girl, as ap- of Widow December fol- Negro | about S0 pounds hable. tha The first regord T find of a slave ! different slave ownép within the limits of the name New Britain is the will of Thomas record Stanley of Stanley Quarter, dated . cates that June 3, 1747. By this will his wife Negro London I3sther was Nesro woman Tacoh Priscilla own forever,” | Covenant also the service of his Negro girl | 1755. e Katherine and Negro Richard until | Tndia trade his son Gad shall Rocky Hill wills the Negro hoy son Gad when he is of Guinea The will of Stephen Lee, dated Nov. | History 26, 1747, gives wife ‘‘the service and of my Negro Richard” and also pro- ec his vides that his “voungest son Josiah Rocky shall have liberty to purchase said powder in Negro at his appraised value.” I am | hovs told Quam find inventory of [ up and sit c Lee's estate and therefore | fire he would go state how many slaves he own- | the Mrs, the time of his death stain inventory of the estate (hereinbeforc Nov. 25, 1758 and the following To Richard a To Old Negro To Katherine, a Perhaps the Priscilla and the Simshury in 1787 paupe New Hartford nth ible and slave hec imventory the which, town in th of cizhiece is pe Century age but have the vieinity but 1 find which indi more than onc lowing. one iter not p girl “Silph” valued at is, a It 1t there Ne, of 20 may in London, circumst there a oes i ol no or nces to his to her talke Brandegee “owned the New Britain July 7 enzaged the West ran vessels from was in and He slave He his twenty Richard 1s the of a from North's home- owner named “Quam to Mi he was very 150 said to According of Rerlen sick heaged to to at of his hac one 20 At where the attic th thaf ‘0 Guinea B and mother il me there was nnable Stephen cannot 1t The mas to Y keg anc On mi hoy attic in andegee went up the keg i 1w the boy on the of the Aint named) included of Tho- act of striking a She the and for her of the hoy's Staniey ran roof the life and escaped, bhut was taken house was hlown off found in the in 1764, as of Wethers which reion of Foston mangle body This happened appears hy Stiles' Flistory field. Vol. 1, page 944 somewhat different named in his will and Rich- fair as taken from the Katherine her children, born | of July 30, 1764 Stanley farm Referring again 1790 which gives in of an@ Ephraim had one unable to locate the the other two, and no proof that there were New | tha from has number of slave owner Rev. Mr. Belden and | others hereinbefore named Lemuel Whit of Maple Hill had one slave 1790. Of the 12 in items Nezro man 55 pounds =arden woman 6 pounds negro girl 40 pounds.’ Old Negro woman wi the af- Gazette ard on to the Census of sla four: Jona Hollister each the number Berlin Under Thomas Stanley's Stanley the provision will his wife turn became a the sole owner of Priscilla, son Gad Stanley, who beecame the sole Richard M ! the fown than Barnes Kensington have heen or Cowles as Esther but in slave and slave while own- then the The dated hi of sl will May owners of hence T have age owner ve Sritain first to last in time. Newing had John Patc i mentions =irl Andrews Genealo- | and FEcclesiastical of tritain page 134, that Taterson's were of 1. 1 Rose. 2 on quite a including the iistory slaves lescy the where the opened a Only one Major 1t is no inventory n the papers Probate Court when . hizh 1819 railroad \ Soul An th died buried on ground iel Bradley JTosiah lived%n his house the had Shuttle Me William had construction of one eacl 5 1dow Robinson i I ¢ Hi =kul di men- aves disinterred in wer onc ind in slave is tioned will previously owned others: hi mediate the Rev several predecesso there to | | min Cha An | ftom Trimlows Sketches Records | After one the only | Were seated Dhihat the house . f [ how big 1ted Major | Nobody know nd held | den how that he one hun- Wethersfield vhom London.’ fed in the served from apt. Hitch- the same 1662 from n hence T ¢ he had Conrt he found file the vman. had slave Hartford st page thanksgiving dinner out at ihe one ‘Don't t "Well not how slave examination shows many he his of they that fAled south med will i doors proper end of when exc document ¢ Court in John Pat and Cap hoth of ept. 5, 176 in his Company men, mostly Pete, is God? lat.’ ‘T Why hapman connection wit Know know da he orson v Ma tifle wpo vin in b is just as | hese sa well 's nigge o of the Duplex fed, Chapmian's s wer live like Chapm proverbial. Tw Prince and Peter each of sent eating 2. Andrews states s0 had nearly that to dred from camc bos glon N N London and Farmis amon: his faithful \ Neg Campa April Dec cock’s company ed in . gingert While the Prince hab i | Pet enli nd in were =n of 6 o i live as well as ginger to hread and cider g name ser the Campaign of aEag e i Cap a Marech 1 to Dec ) bheing in command Andrews does slave, and the the service a free man. | heen Major Paterson’s not appear No doubt first f not the only New 3 Negro to serve in the French [ndian War. Furthermore, it anpea from Stiles IHistory of Wethersficld Vol. 1, page 702 and Browns History in rson’s Company cannot lib a Enos gerbread date London® Roszer t the latter er call that 1tes | | not L fact indics he enlisted that he long he servant was in then had ow the he was

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