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Thimble Island Brewing Company [11] – Branford; The Brewery at Maple View Farm [61] - Granby; These Guys Brewing [62] – Norwich; Thomas Hooker Brewing Company [26] – Bloomfield; Top Shelf Brewing Company (out of business) [63] – Manchester; Two Roads Brewing Company [25] [26] – Stratford; Urban Lodge Brewing Company - Manchester
Thomas Hooker (July 5, 1586 – July 7, 1647) was a prominent English colonial leader and Congregational minister, who founded the Connecticut Colony after dissenting with Puritan leaders in Massachusetts.
Thomas Hooker and his people traveling. Despite the refusal of Thomas Hooker's request for removal, settlers continued to pour into the valley. In May 1635 the Saybrook Colony was established at the mouth of the Connecticut River. [22] Considerable amounts of emigrants from Massachusetts also settled in the recently established town of ...
Main menu. move to sidebar hide. Navigation ... Thomas Hooker by Frances Laughlin Wadsworth - Hartford, CT - DSC04918.jpg.
When the Connecticut Colony was established in the 1630s, its religious organizations were dominated by Rev. Thomas Hooker. Following Hooker's death in 1647, issues of church doctrine and governance began to divide his congregation in Hartford. These led to a split in 1670, in which the Second Church was formed by 31 members of that congregation.
The Stony Creek Brewery is a craft brewery established in 2010 by Manny Rodriguez and Peggy Crowley, [1] located in Branford, Connecticut. [2] Until 2012, the company produced only a small number of craft brews through a larger company, Thomas Hooker Brewery. [ 1 ]
John Skinner (1590–1650) was an early Puritan settler in the Massachusetts Bay Colony and one of the founders of Hartford, Connecticut. [1] [2] Skinner was a member of Thomas Hooker's party and probably came to New England from Braintree, Essex, England. [3] He married Mary Loomis, daughter of Joseph Loomis. She later married Owen Tudor. [4]
The name of the town is pronounced "Hartford". In 1620, he left Hertford to study at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, from where he graduated in 1624. [1] He was ordained on July 8, 1626, at Peterborough and a year later became curate at Stisted, Essex. [2] In 1633, Samuel Stone and Thomas Hooker sailed across the Atlantic on a ship named the Griffin.