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Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial ...

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married, October 16, 1735, for his fourth<br />

wife, Eunice Dickenson, who was born<br />

July 22, 1708, and died May 21, 1770, and<br />

was the daughter <strong>of</strong> Eliphalet Dickenson.<br />

He was born in 1676; married November<br />

24, 1697, Rebecca, daughter <strong>of</strong> Jacob<br />

Brunson, <strong>of</strong> Farmington. He died September<br />

9, 1733, and his widow on May<br />

2, 1755, aged seventy-six. His estate was<br />

appraised at six hundred and thirty-three<br />

pounds, one shilling, and one penny. His<br />

father, Sergeant Obadiah Dickenson, was<br />

born in 1641 ; went to Hadley, Massachu-<br />

setts, with his father in 1650; served in<br />

King Philip's War. His hotel was burned<br />

by the Indians ; he was wounded, and<br />

with his children, held captive by the<br />

Indians. Eventually, however, he escaped,<br />

in Canada, and in 1679 returned to Wethersfield,<br />

where, with his second wife, he<br />

joined the church in 1694. In 1687-88,<br />

he received a grant <strong>of</strong> land ;<br />

ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY<br />

he was con-<br />

stable at that time. His second wife<br />

was Mehitable Hinsdale, <strong>of</strong> Hadley, or<br />

Hatfield, Massachusetts. She died prior<br />

to 1702, his decease occurring on June<br />

io, 1698. His estate was valued at six<br />

hundred and seventy-eight pounds, eight<br />

shillings, and eight pence.<br />

His father, Nathaniel Dickenson, who<br />

settled in Wethersfield at an early date,<br />

was the son <strong>of</strong> William and Sarah<br />

(Stacey) Dickenson, <strong>of</strong> Ely, Cambridge-<br />

shire, England, where he was born in<br />

1600. He married Anna Gull, and in<br />

1634 came to Watertown with his wife<br />

and three children. Subsequently, two<br />

or three years later, he removed to Wethersfield,<br />

where he became a prominent<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the community. He was<br />

juryman, October 14, 1642 ; was ap-<br />

pointed town clerk, December 1, 1645.<br />

The first town vote, in the first Wethersfield<br />

records, is in his handwriting. He<br />

was deputy to the General Court, in<br />

1646-56; townsman, 1647-48. His home-<br />

131<br />

stead was recorded to him in 1649. I*1<br />

October, 1654, he was one <strong>of</strong> three ap-<br />

pointed to constitute a committee to con-<br />

sider and advise with the constables <strong>of</strong><br />

the three river towns regarding "press-<br />

ing men for the expedition into the Ninegret<br />

Country," in the Narragansett War.<br />

He was one <strong>of</strong> the founders <strong>of</strong> Hadley,<br />

and a leader <strong>of</strong> the movement which<br />

consumated in the establishment <strong>of</strong> that<br />

place, and in the ultimate settlement held<br />

many administrative <strong>of</strong>fices <strong>of</strong> importance.<br />

He was the first town clerk, was<br />

town assessor and magistrate. He joined<br />

the Hampshire troop, in 1663, when it<br />

was organized under Captain Pyncheon.<br />

He was one <strong>of</strong> the projectors <strong>of</strong> the Hopkins<br />

Academy, and was on the first board<br />

<strong>of</strong> trustees. As one <strong>of</strong> the two repre-<br />

sentatives <strong>of</strong> the planters, he signed, on<br />

October 29, 1663, the final settlement<br />

with Major Pyncheon, for the Hadley<br />

tract. Stiles says <strong>of</strong> him : "In both communities,<br />

Wethersfield and Hadley, he<br />

was justly esteemed as an upright, intel-<br />

ligent, active and capable citizen, bearing<br />

well his share in the labors, privations<br />

and dangers incident to a frontier life.<br />

Worn out at last by these, especially<br />

those incurred in the defence <strong>of</strong> Hadley,<br />

and the Indian War <strong>of</strong> 1675-76, and de-<br />

pressed by the tragic loss <strong>of</strong> his three<br />

sons in that strife, he died June 16, 1676,<br />

a noble example <strong>of</strong> Puritan godliness and<br />

manly loyalty to duty." The genealogy<br />

<strong>of</strong> Nathaniel Dickenson is clear for four-<br />

teen generations to Walter de Caen, a<br />

kinsman and companion <strong>of</strong> William the<br />

Conqueror. Walter de Caen married the<br />

daughter <strong>of</strong> the last Saxon lord <strong>of</strong> Kenson,<br />

and was afterwards known as Wal-<br />

ter de Kenson. The family bore a coat-<br />

<strong>of</strong>-arms, with the motto, Esse quam vidcri,<br />

i. e., "to be, rather than to seem to be."<br />

John Francis, who married Eunice<br />

Dickenson, was the owner and landlord

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