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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 22, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
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CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, September 22, 2006
Henry Accorly: A Witness to the Signing of Thomas Pell's Treaty
with Local Native Americans on June 27, 1654
For quite some time I have been researching the backgrounds of a number of
the English settlers who signed Thomas Pell's "treaty" with local Native
Americans by which he acquired the lands that became Pelham and
surrounding areas. See, for example, the following:
Friday, September 15, 2006:
William Newman: A Witness to the Signing of Thomas Pell's Treaty with
Local Native Americans on June 27, 1654
Thursday, May 18, 2006:
Richard Crabb, the "Magistrate" Who Witnessed the Signing of Thomas Pell's
Treaty with Local Native Americans on June 27, 1654
An image of Thomas Pell's handwritten copy of the treaty as well as a
transcription of its text may be viewed
here. The treaty consists of two parts. The first half involves an
agreement by the Native Americans to transfer lands to Thomas Pell. The
second half is entitled "Articles of Agreement". In this part of the
document, the parties agreed to maintain peaceful and loving relations and
to send two men on an excursion once a year in the spring to agree upon
and "remark" the boundaries of the land purchase.
Two English settlers signed as witnesses the "Articles of Agreement"
section of the treaty: Henry Accorly (by his mark) and William Newman. In
today's Historic Pelham Blog posting I am providing a summary of the
results of the research I have assembled so far about Henry Accorly.
There is conflicting information available for "Henry Accorly" in the 17th
century Colony of Connecticutt. This blog posting is not intended to
resolve such conflicts. Rather, it is intended to record the information.
Today's posting should be viewed essentially as research notes.
Brief Background on Henry Accorly, Ackerly, Accorley, Accorlie or Acrely
The Genealogical Dictionary of New England Settlers contains the following
listing:
"Ackerly, Accorley, or Acrely, Henry, New Haven 1640, Stamford 1641 to 53,
Greenwich 1656, d. S. 17 June 1658, wh. is the date of his will. His wid.
Ann, was 75 yrs. old in 1662. Haz. II. 246. ROBERT, Brookhaven, L. I.
1655, adm. freem. of Conn jurisdict. 1664. See Trumbull, Col. Rec. I. 341,
428. SAMUEL, Brookhaven, 1655, perhaps br. of the preced."
Source: Savage, James, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of
New England Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692
on the Basis of the Farmer's Register, Vol. I, p. 7 (Boston, MA: 1860).
According to one genealogical researcher, Henry Accorly (also referenced
as "Henry Ackerly") married a woman named "Ann". He lived in the Colony of
New Haven in 1640 and 1641. He signed a will on June 17, 1658 in Stamford.
Henry and Ann had at least one child, a daughter named Mary (ca. 1623 -
1710). She married William Oliver in about 1655 in Stamford, The couple
had at least six children (Mary, David, Samuel, Elizabeth, Sarah and
William, Jr.). See Martin, David Kendall, The Oliver Connection,
Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey, vol. 56, pp. 617-626.
A different source indicates that a man named Vincent Simpkins who lived
in Stamford in 1641 married an unnamed daughter of Henry Ackerly, also of
Stamford at the time. Vincent and his wife "had Daniel, John, and,
perhaps, other ch. and d. bef. 1671. We kn. of the two s. only that Daniel
liv. in the adjoin. town of Bedford, d. there 1699; and that John, soon
aft. d. of his f. sold his est. and rem."
Source: Savage, James, A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of
New England, Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692,
on the Basis of Farmer's Register, Vol. IV, p. 101 (Boston, MA: Little,
Brown and Company 1862).
Yet another source adds information about the man who married Henry
Ackerly's daughter and names that daughter as "Mary". That source states:
"MICHAEL SIMPKIN was from Stamford, Ct. Nicholas Simkins, in 1634, was
Capt. of the Castle at Boston. Vincent Simkins [Smiking], a son or
brother, probably, of the Capt., accompanied the early colonists to
Wethersfield, and was one of the Company that bought, Oct. 30, 1640,
Rippowams [Stamford] from the New Haven people, where he married, 1641,
Mary, a daughter of Henry Ackerly. He had, at least, two sons, Daniel and
JOHN; most likely, Michael, also. He had died in 1656. Daniel settled in
Bedford, N. Y., and John, with his widowed mother, removed to thi town,
where the mother, soon after, became the wife of William Oliver. He had an
allotment of 80 acres of upland, on the W. brook bounded by William Cramer
and William Oliver, a swamp and the two mile brook; also, 4 acres of
meadow adjoining Aaron Thompson; also 3 acres of meadow adjoining Aaron
Thompson; also 3 acres of meadow adjoining Aaron Thompson; also 3 acres of
meadow on 'Rawack River;' also 2 acres of meadow adjoining Jacob Melyen
and George Pack: in all 89 acres. John died unmarried before Sep., 1679,
and his mother administered on his estate. Michael must have died soon
after his coming, as no further mention of him is found."
Source: Hatfield, Edwin F., History of Elizabeth, New Jersey; Including
The Early History of Union County, pp. 93-94 (NY, NY: Carlton & Lanahan
1868) (citing "Hinman's P. S. Ct., I. 232. Savage, IV. 101. E. J. Records,
II. 41, 102; 24. o. e.; III. 159. E. T. Bill, p. 109.")
Additonally, a "Henry Accorley" appears in the following reference:
Huntington, Eliijah Baldwin, History of Stamford, Connecticut, from its
Settlement in 1641, to the Present Time, p. 82 (Privately Printed by the
Author 1868; reprinted Picton Press, 1992).
Henry Ackerly Rebuked for Building a Cellar in New Haven in
1639
According to one source, Henry Ackerly was in New Haven even earlier
than 1640. In fact, according to this source, he built a cellar in the
colony of New Haven in 1639 and then sold it. For this officials publicly
rebuked him on April 3, 1640. This source states:
"Capt. Underhill, Henry Ackerly, John Budd, Thomas Osborne and others,
afterward of Southhold, were at New Haven as early as 1639. Henry Ackerly
built a cellar there and afterward sold it. On 3d April, 1640, Ackerly
was publicly rebuked for this, which we cannot think was wrong, if he
preferred to go somewhere else, or went as a soldier. In 1666 he was at
Greenwich, Conn. We find Robert Ackerly in 1651 at Southold (probably a
son of Henry), having a home lot which adjoined our Pastor Young's and
which also was soon sold. In 1660 he and several others from New Haven
and Southold were at Setauket."
Source: Whitaker, Epher, Celebration of the 250th Anniversary of the
Formation of the Town and the Church of Southold, L. I., pp. 127-28
(Southold, L.I., NY: Aug. 27, 1890) (printed for the town).
Accorly Forced to Acknowledge Allegiance to Colony of New Haven
There is evidence that on October 6, 1656, Henry Accorly was among the
eleven men forced to acknowledge allegiance to the Colony of New Haven.
Here is the context.
In 1656, the general court at New-Haven asserted a right to Greenwich and
ordered the inhabitants of Greenwich to submit to their jurisdiction.
Residents of Greenwich reportedly issued a letter to the court in May
denying the court's jurisdiction and "refusing any sub-jection to the
colony, unless they should be compelled to it, by the parliament." See
Trumbull, Benjamin, A Complete History of Connecticut Civil and
Ecclesiastical From the Emigration of its First Planters, from England, in
the Year 1630, to Year 1764; and to the Close of the Indian Wars In Two
Volumes By Benjamin Trumbull, D.D. Volume I With an Appendix Containing
the Original Patent of New England, Vol. I, p. 188 (New London, CT: H. D.
Utley 1898). According to one source, Henry Accorly was in the thick of
this dispute. In response to the May 1656 letter to the court in
New-Haven, the court: "resolved, that, unless they should appear before
the court, and make their submission, by the 20th of June, Richard Crab
and others, who were the most stubborn among them, should be arrested and
punished, according to law. They, therefore, some time after, subjected
their persons and estates to the government of New-Haven." Id.
Another source confirms that Henry Accorly subjected himself to the
government of New-Haven at this time. See Huntington, Eliijah
Baldwin, History of Stamford, CT from it's Settlement in 1641 Until 1820
(Privately Printed by the Author 1868; reprinted Picton Press, 1992) (Oct.
6, 1656 John Austin was among eleven Greenwich men who acknowledged
allegiance to New Haven. The others were Angel Husted, Lawrence Turner,
Richard Crab, Thomas Steadwell, Henry Accorly, Peter Ferris, Joseph
Ferris, Jonathan Reynolds, Have Peterson and Henry Nicholson).
Accorly Involved in Incident That Brings English and Dutch to
Brink of Warfare in America
In 1652, the English and Dutch were at war, though the war was being
fought on the high seas -- not as a ground war in America. English
settlers north of New Amsterdam constantly feared attacks by the Dutch to
the South. To add to these fears, rumors circulated of Native American
involvement in Dutch plots to kill English settlers.
Officials of the United Colonies took testimony from a host of individuals
about a rumored plot revealed by a Mohegan Native American named Uncas and
his supporters. Uncas alleged that one of his arch rivals, Ninigret, and
other Narragansett Native Americans had entered a conspiracy with Dutch
officials to attack English settlements, burn homes and structures and
kill English settlers. Among those who testified about the conspiracy was
"Henry Ackerly of Stamford". According to one source he "pointed out that
[Dutch Director General Peter] Stuyvesant had approached Indians in the
vicinity of Manhattan and 'did sett them on to burne the houses poison the
waters and kill the English.'" See Oberg, Michael Leroy, Uncas
First of the Mohegans, p. 134 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press 2003).
The testimony of Ackerly and others brought the English settlers of the
United Colonies to the brink of warfare with the Dutch settlers of New
Netherland. Though tensions grew and troops were raised, peace was reached
by early 1654.
Additional Information About the Life of Henry Accorly
It seems clear from early records that Henry Ackerly (Accorly) was in New
Haven as early as April 1640. See Hoadly, Charles J., ed.,
Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, from 1638 to 1649, p.
32 (Hartford, CT: Tiffany and Company, 1857).
Additionally, it seems clear that he died in 1658, only four years after
witnessing the signing of Thomas Pell's "treaty". See Stamford
Town Records, Vol. I: 1640-1806, pp. 65, 71 (Microfilm Copy of Manuscript,
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints).
Was Henry Accorly a Carpenter Who Built a House for Thomas Pell in
the Manor of Pelham?
A genealogical Web site currently maintained by a member of the Ackerly
family contains the following references:
"Henry Accorly, died at Stamford, June 17, 1650. The Inventory of his
estate, dated Jan. 4th, 1658. He was by trade a 'house-carpenter and
farmer.'"
Source: The Ackerly Family Website,
www.ackerly.com, visited Sept. 21, 2006 (The History of Modern Day
Ackerlys,
http://www.ackerly.com/page2.html).
I find the above reference MOST interesting. Henry Accorly is noted in the
reference above as a "house-carpenter and farmer". Thomas Pell may never
have lived in Pelham, but he built a "house" in Westchester as the 1669
inventory of his estate indicates. Logical speculation suggests that Pell
likely would have built his house to anchor the new estate that he
acquired in 1654 soon after he acquired the lands. Logical speculation
further suggests that the man once described as a "house-carpenter" who
signed Thomas Pell's deed for the lands he acquired from local Native
Americans -- Henry Accorly -- may very well have been the man who built
Thomas Pell's house referenced in the inventory of his estate taken after
his death in late September, 1669.
Another reference from the same Web site states as follows:
"The lines of descent are from HENRY ACKERLY, who was of the Colony of New
Haven, Conn., 1640; in Stamford, Conn., 1641-53, and at Greenwich, Conn.,
1656. He died at Stamford, June 17, 1658, which is the date of his will,
and he left a widow, Ann, who was seventy-five years old, in 1662, hence
she was born about 1587. It may be be [sic] assumed HENRY ACKERLY was born
about 1585 and that they were married, say, 1606, which will give us some
chance of estimating the birth date of the daughter, MARY ACKERLY, to be
named below.
HENRY had a brother, ROBERT ACKERLY, wh was first of the New Haven Colony,
but soon removed to Long Island, settling first at Yennicock, afterwards
the town of Southold, and later became a freeman of the township of
Brookhaven, just adjoining. Both were taken into the jurisdiction of
Connecticut in 1661. Authorities place Robert as at Southold in 1651 and
Brookhaven in 1655. He was admitted a freeman of Connecticut in 1664 and
he was a signer of the petition in behalf of Cromwell Bay, called Setauke,
later Brookhaven, addressed to the General Court of Connecticut in 1659.
He had a son Samuel registered at Brookhaven in 1665. It was claimed that
the two ACKERLY brothers, HENRY AND ROBERT, came to Connecticut from
Lancaster or Lancaster, England. ROBERT ACKERLY was living as late as
1675, when his name appears in a Brookhaven tax list. He was dead before
1683 because the list for that year does not mention him but does name his
son, SAMUEL ACKERLY." \
Source: The Ackerly Family Website,
www.ackerly.com, visited Sept. 21, 2006 (The History of Modern Day
Ackerlys,
http://www.ackerly.com/page2.html).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:02 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
September 22, 2006.
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