Richard Treat
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Richard Treat | |
Deputy to the Connecticut Legislature 1644-1657
Patentee — Royal Charter of Connecticut, 1662 |
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Born | August 28, 1584 Pitminster, England |
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Died | February 14, 1669 Wethersfield, Connecticut, USA |
Spouse | Alice Gaylord |
Richard Treat (or Trott) (1584 - 1669) was an early New England settler who emigrated from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1637. His son, Robert Treat, served as governor of Connecticut from 1683 to 1698. Treat was an extensive landowner in Wethersfield, Connecticut[1] (over 900 acres)[2] and served as town deputy from 1644 to 1648, the year Mary Johnson was convicted of witchcraft and executed.[3] Treat was an original patentee of the Charter of the Colony of Connecticut by King Charles II in 1662.
[edit] References
- ^ Dexter, Franklin Bowditch (1885). Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale College : With annals of the college history (in English). New York: Holt. OCLC 1167704.
- ^ Treat, John Harvey. The Treat Family: A Genealogy of Trott, Tratt, and Treat for Fifteen Generations, and Four Hundred and Fifty Years in England and America, containing more than Fifteen Hundred Families in America, Salem, MA (Salem Press) 1893, p. 26-29. Note that Richard's son, Richard Jr., inherited the land and gave most of it away during his lifetime.
- ^ List of New England witchcraft cases