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Lower CT River Valley: Settled: 1645: Incorporated: February 13, 1667: Government • Type: Selectman-town meeting • First selectman ... Lyme is a town in New ...
East Lyme: CT 1664 Residential One of the oldest wood-frame houses in Connecticut still in its primitive state. Deacon John Moore House: Windsor: CT 1664 Residential Moore was also a woodworker known for using the foliated vine design, which depicts vines and blossoms carved in shallow relief with flat surfaces. Reverend James Keith Parsonage
Pages in category "1667 establishments in Connecticut" ... out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. L. Lyme, Connecticut; W. Wallingford, Connecticut
The Captain Enoch Lord House, also known as Red House, is a historic house at 17 Tantummaheag Road in Old Lyme, Connecticut.Built about 1748, the house is significant both for its long historic association with the colonial Lord family, who were influential participants in the founding of both the Connecticut Colony and the Saybrook Colony, and for its transformation in the late 19th century ...
The witch trials in Connecticut, also sometimes referred to as the Hartford witch trials, occurred from 1647 to 1663. [1] They were the first large-scale witch trials in the American colonies, predating the Salem Witch Trials by nearly thirty years. [2]
Fenwick negotiated the colony's sale to Connecticut in 1644 after interest in colonization dried up due to the investors' involvement in the English Civil War. The colony's founding document, the Warwick Patent, was used to justify the existence of the Connecticut Colony, which lacked a formal charter until 1662.
The Old Lyme Historic District encompasses the historic village center of Old Lyme, Connecticut.Located mainly on Lyme Street south of Interstate 95, the village, settled in the mid-17th century, has an architectural history dating to the early 18th century, flourishing as a shipbuilding center and home to many ship captains.
The Thomas Lee House is located in southwestern East Lyme, on the south side of CT 156 just east of Rocky Neck State Park. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story structure, with a post-and-beam timber frame erected on six 2-story wall posts, and covered by a steeply pitched roof with a large brick central chimney. Its exterior clapboards appear to be original.