
A map of the Connecticut, New Haven, and Saybrook colonies.
The 'New Haven Colony' was an
English colonial venture in present-day
Connecticut in
North America from
1637 to
1662.
A
Puritan minister named
John Davenport led his flock from exile in
the Netherlands back to
England and finally to America in the spring of
1637. The group arrived in
Boston on the ship ''Ann'' on
June 26, but decided to strike out on their own, based on their impression that the
Massachusetts Bay Colony was lax in its religious observances.
That fall
Theophilus Eaton led an exploration party south to
Long Island Sound in search of a suitable site. He purchased land from the Indians at the mouth of the
Quinnipiac River. In the spring of 1638 the group set out, and on April 14 they arrived at their
'New Haven' on the Connecticut shore. The site seemed ideal for trade with a good port between Boston and
New Amsterdam and access to the furs of the
Connecticut River valley. However, while the colony succeeded as a settlement and religious experiment, its future as a trade center was some years away.
In
1639 they adopted a set of ''
Fundamental Articles'' for self-government, partly as a result of a similar action in the river towns. A governing council of seven was established, with Eaton as chief magistrate and Cunningham as pastor. The articles required that ''"...the word of God shall be the only rule..."'' and this was maintained even over English
common law tradition. Since the Bible contained no reference to trial by jury, they eliminated it and the council sat in judgement. Only members of their church congregation were eligible to vote.
The colony's success soon attracted other believers, as well as those who were not Puritans. They expanded into additional towns:
Milford and
Guilford in 1639,
Stamford in
1640, and later to
Fairfield,
Medford,
Greenwich, and
Branford. These towns formally joined together as the New Haven Colony in
1643. They based their government on that of
Massachusetts but maintained stricter adherence to the Puritan discipline.
An uneasy competition ruled their relations with the Connecticut River settlements centered on
Hartford. The colony published a complete legal code in
1656, but the law remained very much church-centered.
Eaton stayed as governor until his death in
1658, when leadership of the Colony was given to
Francis Newman, followed by
William Leete in
1660. When a royal charter was issued to Connecticut in
1662, New Haven's period as a separate colony ended and its towns were merged into the government of
Connecticut Colony in
1665, largely as punishment from
King Charles II, as New Haven had sheltered three of the Regicide judges who sentenced
King Charles I to death in 1649.
See also
★
New Haven, Connecticut
★
History of Connecticut
★
Robert Seeley