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Thomas Miner

Thomas Minor
Born (1608-04-23)April 23, 1608
Chew Magna, Somerset, England
Died October 23, 1690(1690-10-23) (aged 82)
Stonington, Connecticut
Resting place Wequetequock Cemetery
41°21′36″N 71°52′36″W / 41.35993°N 71.87673°W / 41.35993; -71.87673Coordinates: 41°21′36″N 71°52′36″W / 41.35993°N 71.87673°W / 41.35993; -71.87673
Known for Founder of New London and Stonington, Connecticut
Spouse(s) Grace Palmer

Thomas Minor or Miner (23 April 1608 – 23 October 1690) was a founder of New London and Stonington, Connecticut, United States, and an early Colonial New England diarist.

Minor was born in Chew Magna, in Somerset, England, on April 23, 1608. In 1629, he emigrated to Salem, Massachusetts, aboard the Lyon's Whelp. He quickly moved to Watertown, and then on to Charlestown, after Typhus Fever broke out in Salem.

In Charlestown, Minor met Grace Palmer, whom he married in 1634. She was the daughter of Walter Palmer. The couple eventually had seven sons and three daughters.

John Minor (1635-1719)

Clement Minor (1639-1700)

Thomas Miner (1640-1662)

Ephraim Miner (1642-1724)

Joseph Miner (1644-1712)

Manassah Minor (1647-1728)

Ann Minor (1648-?)

Marie Minor (1651-1660)

Samuel Minor (1652-1682)

Hannah Minor (1655-1721)

In 1636, the Minors moved to Hingham.

After several years in Hingham, the family moved south to the Wequetequock area of present-day Stonington, Connecticut, where Minor and his son Ephraim helped found the Road Church.

In about 1653, Minor bought land west of Stonington, across Quiambaug Cove near present-day Mystic, and built a house for his family. Around this time he began one of the few diaries to survive 17th-century New England. It covers the years 1653 to 1684 and was published in book form in 1899.

Minor was active in public affairs in both New London and Stonington. He was commissioned as the captain of the Stonington militia company in 1665. Both he and his sons served during King Philip's War. His son, Lieutenant Thomas Minor, appears on the list of Connecticut men who volunteered for service in King Philip's War who were the original proprietors of Voluntown, Connecticut.


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