Jeremy Adams | |
---|---|
Born |
Jeremiah Adams 1604/5 |
Died | August 11, 1683 |
Monuments | Founders Monument of Hartford at the First Church of Christ and the Ancient Burying Ground |
Residence | Hartford, Connecticut, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Colchester, Connecticut |
Occupation | Puritan minister, Innskeeper |
Known for | Proprietor and founder of Hartford, Connecticut |
Relatives | John Quincy Adams, John Adams |
Jeremy Adams, also known as: Jeremiah Adams, (c.1604/5—August 11, 1683) was one of the first settlers of Hartford. He was the founder and first proprietor of Colchester, Connecticut, which was established on land owned by Adams: known as "Jeremiah's Farme".
Adams arrived in America in 1632. He was one of the original members of the company that came to the colonies with Rev. Thomas Hooker, aboard the Griffin. He first arrived in New England at Braintree, Massachusetts with his brother Henry Adams (grandfather of later U.S. Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams). Before coming to America, Adams was a Puritan minister of the Church in Chelmsford, Essex, England. He became a freeman in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1635. In 1636, he moved with Rev. Hooker to Hartford, Connecticut, and was one of the original proprietors of the settlement.
In 1639 Adams was the constable (cunstable), and the official Innkeeper for the Colony. His Inn at Hartford was used as the meeting place for the legislative body of the colony, general court sessions, and for other public purposes. The Inn was said to have been "frequented by all of the great men of the colony". It may be presumed that among these meetings, was the creation of the famous Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639), which was perhaps the western world's first written constitution. The constitution was later hidden in the Charter Oak.
On April 5, 1638, he was sent with Captain Mason on an expedition to the Warranocke Indians to trade for corn. This service qualifies his descendants to become members of the General Society of Colonial Wars. He was: an Officer of the Court, a Tax Assessor, a collector for the town, a Juror, a Collector of Customs and traded with the Indians for the General Court of Connecticut. In 1660, he was the only resident of the colony allowed to sell wine or liquor.