Connecticut History

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A timeline of key events and information on where to find historical information of Connecticut.

Timeline[edit | edit source]

The following important events in the history of Connecticut affected political jurisdictions, family movements, and record keeping:

1633-1636: Puritans from Massachusetts established settlements on the Connecticut River at Windsor, Wethersfield, and Hartford.

1638:The New Haven colony was established. New London was founded soon after.

1662: A British royal charter established Connecticut as a colony separate from Massachusetts.

1740: By this date all of present-day Connecticut had been settled and organized into incorporated towns, the basic governing units.

1786-1800: Connecticut relinquished its claims to western lands, except for the Wyoming Valley in [[Pennsylvania]] which Connecticut claimed until 1799, and the Western Reserve in [[Ohio]] which it claimed until 1800. Connecticut settlers remained in both areas.

1788: Connecticut ratified the Constitution to become a state.

1840s: As the factory system developed, thousands of foreign laborers began moving into Connecticut.

1861-1865: Connecticut furnished 60,000 troops to the Union Army during the Civil War.

Histories of Connecticut State[edit | edit source]

In addition, an especially helpful source for studying the history of Connecticut is Charles W. Burpee's, Burpee's The Story of Connecticut, Four Volumes. (New York: American Historical Company, 1939; FHL book 974.6 H2b).

The following sites have additional information about Connecticut history:

Contents[edit | edit source]

Histories are great sources of genealogical information. Many contain biographical information about individuals who lived in the area, including

  • Parents' names
  • Maiden names of women
  • Place of birth, death, or marriage
  • Occupation
  • Migration
  • Military service
  • Descendants

Where to find histories[edit | edit source]

To find local histories in the Family History Library, do various Place Searches in the Family History Library Catalog using your ancestor's town, county, state, or country as the search terms.