Online Encyclopedia

BRANFORD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 430 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

BRANFORD  , a township, including a

borough of the same name, in New Haven county,
See also:
Connecticut, U.S.A., at the mouth of the Branford
See also:
river and at the head of a short arm of Long Island Sound, about 7 M . E.S.E. of New Haven . Pop. of the township (1890) 4460; (1900) 5706 (1968
See also:
foreign-born);(191o) 6047; of the borough (1910) 2560 . The borough is served by the New York, New Haven &
See also:
Hartford railway, and by an electric
See also:
line connecting with New Haven . A range of rocky hills commands
See also:
fine views of the Sound, the
See also:
shore is deeply indented, the harbour and bays are dotted with islands, and the harbour is deep enough for small craft, and these natural features attract many visitors during the summer season . In Branford is the James Blackstone Memorial library (1896), designed by Solon Spencer Beman (b . 1853) in the Ionic style (the details being taken from the
See also:
Erechtheum at Athens) . On the interior of the dome which covers the rotunda are a series of paintings by Oliver Dennett Grover (b . 1861) illustrating the
See also:
evolution of
See also:
book-making, and between the arches are medallion portraits, by the same artist, of New England authors—Longfellow, Emerson, Hawthorne, Lowell, Bryant, Whittier, Holmes and Mrs Stowe . The library was erected by Timothy B . Blackstone (1829-1900), a native of Branford, and president of the Chicago &
See also:
Alton railway from 1864 to 1899—as a memorial to his
See also:
father, a descendant of William Blackstone (d . 1675), the New England
See also:
pioneer .

The

See also:
principal
See also:
industries of Branford are the manufacture of malleable iron fittings, locks and general hardware, the
See also:
quarrying of granite, and
See also:
oyster culture . The territory of Totoket (now the township of Branford) was
See also:
purchased from the Indians by the New Haven Plantation, in December 1638, for eleven coats of trucking
See also:
cloth and one coat of
See also:
English cloth, but with the reservation for a few Indians of what is still known as
See also:
Indian Neck . In 164o the general court of New Haven granted it to the Rev .
See also:
Samuel Eaton (1596?-1665), a
See also:
brother of
See also:
Theophilus Eaton, on condition that he brought friends from England to settle it . As Eaton went to England and did not return, Totoket was granted in 1644 to settlers mostly from
See also:
Wethersfield, Conn., on condition that they should organize a church state after the New Haven model and join the New Haven Jurisdiction . The settlement was made in the same
See also:
year, and about two years later several new families came from Southampton, Long Island, under the leadership of the Rev . Abraham Pierson (c . 1608-1678), an ardent advocate of the church state, who was chosen pastor at Totoket . The
See also:
present name of the township, derived from
See also:
Brentford, England, was adopted about 1645 . After the members of the New Haven Jurisdiction had submitted to Connecticut, Pierson, in 1666-1667, led the most prominent citizens of Branford to New Jersey, where they were leaders in founding Newark . The borough of Branford was incorporated in 1893 . See E .

C .

Baldwin, Branford Annals, in Papers of New Haven Colony
See also:
Historical Society (New Haven, 1882 and 1888) .

End of Article: BRANFORD
[back]
BRANDYWINE
[next]
FRANK BRANGWYN (1867– )

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.