by Daniel Cruson
Newtown’s Settlement
The history of Newtown really begins in 1708, when 36 men petition the
colony’s General Assembly for permission to settle a town in an area north
of Stratford. Although at least seven individuals had been given
permission to settle in this area before this date, the 36 “petition
proprietors” were really the first settlers of Newtown. The term
proprietor had a specific meaning in colonial Connecticut. It defined the
inhabitants of a town who owned its common land and were entitled to share
in its division when the town chose to put that land into private hands.
Having received their charter for settlement, the proprietors chose
four men to constitute a Committee for Newtown whose job was to lay out
the town. Early in the next year, 1709, a “Town Plat” was established
containing a 132 foot wide north-south road (modern Main Street),
intersected by a northern and southern Cross Highway (West Street – Church
Hill Road and Route #302-Glover Avenue respectively). Arranged around
these three roads, four acre home lots were distributed in 1710 to the
individual proprietors, now increased to 48 men. A 49th parcel
was reserved for the minister when he was chosen.
Coming primarily from the towns of Stratford and Milford, the men were
in their late twenties to late thirties. All were farmers and, being
second and third generation immigrants from Britain, were finding the
coastal areas cramped. They, therefore, moved to the interior where land
was more plentiful and larger farms could be built.
Most came to their home lots with their families and built houses near
the main street, usually a saltbox or at least a one and a half story
cottage. In back of their dwelling, a barn and other small outbuildings
such as privies, were soon erected, and small gardens were laid out for
growing vegetables and herbs. Further back, an orchard was planted.
Together the early proprietors and their home lots constituted a compact
village carved out of the wilderness.
Farming, however, could not be carried out solely on four acre parcels.
Many more acres were needed to raise sufficient food crops and cattle
fodder necessary to sustain the average farm family The early proprietors
were therefore entitled to several other parcels of land. They first
received a four acre Meadow Lot located to the south of the village,
around Deep Brook. Next, they were entitled to a four acre Pitch, a parcel
of land to be turned into crop fields around the edges of the village.
Finally, they got a 20 acre division of the land located “in the hills
about the town”. In addition, as the remaining outlying lands were divided
up, each proprietor received his fair and equal share. Thus within two
decades after the village was initially laid out, all but a small fraction
of its land was divided and in private hands.
With land holding so scattered, travel to and from these holdings to
utilize them, was obviously difficult. Within a decade of when the village
was settled, various proprietors began to move out to their distant
holdings. To overcome the sense of isolation derived from leaving the
village, several proprietors with land in the same location tended to move
out together. As a result, small communities began to form in the outlying
areas of the town.
One area that was settled away from the village first was Sandy Hook.
There, the water power of the Potatuck River lured several early settlers
who were intent on setting up the saw and grist mills which were necessary
for the town’s continued growth. Although Sandy Hook would not grow
dramatically until the industrialization of the mid 19th
century, there was a small but important community here within a year of
Newtown becoming a town.
By looking at when school districts were established, you can get some
idea of the rate of diffusion to the other outlying settlements. By 1738,
the area around Taunton Lake was large enough to demand its own school.
Ten years later the areas of Zoar in the east and Land’s End to the north
had also prospered and increased in population to the point of needing a
school of their own. In 1748, Palestine wanted its own school, and by 1755
Hanover had joined the group. Thus by 1760, there were seven school
districts including two in the village itself.
By 1794, when school districts were made corporate entities by the
state, the number in Newtown had grown to 20. Although the old school
districts were abolished in the early 1920’s, their names have survived
and are still used in designating different areas of the town. The little
communities with engaging names such as Dodgingtown, Hattertown, Lake
George, and Head O’Meadow are all fossils of the settlement patterns of
Newtown’s proprietors as well as quaint reminders of our agricultural
past.