John Read (Connecticut politician)

John Reed
Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Norwalk [1]
In office
May 1715  October 1715
Serving with John Betts
Preceded by Joseph Platt,
Samuel Comstock
In office
October 1717  May 1718
Serving with Samuel Hanford
Succeeded by John Bartlett,
Samuel Marvin
Personal details
Born 1633[2][3]
Wendron, Cornwall, England [2]
Died 1730[2][4]
Stamford, Connecticut Colony [2]
Resting place Reed's Farm, Rowayton, Connecticut [2]
Spouse(s) Anne Samson Derby (widow of Francis Derby) (m. 1652, Providence, Rhode Island),[2][3] widow Scofield of Stamford
Children John Reed, Jr., Thomas Reed, William John Reed, Mary Reed Tuttle, Abigail Reed [2][3]
Residence Providence, Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations,
Rye, Province of New York (1684–1687),
Norwalk (present day Rowayton), Connecticut Colony (1687)[3]
Occupation Lawyer
Military service
Allegiance Roundhead
Rank Colonel
Unit Army of the Protector[3]
Battles/wars English Civil War,
Corfe Castle (1649)

John Reed (1633 – 1730) was a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from Norwalk, Connecticut Colony in the May 1715 and October 1717 sessions.

He was the son of James Reed.[2]

He was an officer in Oliver Cromwell's new model army, and a soldier from the age of sixteen.[4] When Charles II of England was restored to the throne, Reed left for America. He settled first in Providence, Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.[4] In Providence, he married Anne Samson Derby.[4] He later moved to Rye, Province of New York, in 1684, where he lived for three or four years.[4] He then established himself in the western part of Norwalk, at a house he built on the eastern side of the Five Mile River, north of the Old Post Road and nearly two miles from the Long Island Sound at a place called Reed's Farms.[4] His name is found among the records of the town of Norwalk in 1687.[4] John Reed was admitted to the bar in 1708 in Norwalk, Connecticut. His house was used for a meeting place for some years. His wife died and he married again to the Widow Scofield from Stamford.

He died in Norwalk, in the ninety-eighth year of his age, in 1730, and was interred in a tomb on his own farm.

Notable descendants

References

  1. Nathaniel Bouton (1851). An Historical Discourse in Commemoration of the Two-hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Norwalk, Ct., in 1651: Delivered in the First Congregational Church in Norwalk, July 9, 1851. S.W. Benedict. pp. 78–.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/SGBJ-BYR : accessed 2014-05-17), entry for John /Reed/.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Jacob Whittemore Reed (1861). History of the Reed family in Europe and America. pp. 445–.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Representative Men and Old Families of Rhode Island: Genealogical Records and Historical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens and of Many of the Old Families ... J.H. Beers & Company. 1908. pp. 618–.
Preceded by
Joseph Platt
Samuel Comstock
Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Norwalk

May 1715–October 1715
With: John Betts
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Norwalk

October 1717–May 1718
With: Samuel Hanford
Succeeded by
John Bartlett
Samuel Marvin
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