Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Nathaniel Ely

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Matthew Canfield

Spouse(s)
  
Martha Ely


Religion
  
Puritan

Name
  
Nathaniel Ely

Succeeded by
  
Samuel Hales, Matthew Canfield

Children
  
Samuel Ely, Ruth Ely Horton

Occupation
  
constable, tavern owner

Died
  
December 25, 1675, Springfield, Massachusetts, United States

Residence
  
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Hartford, Connecticut, United States, Connecticut Colony, Norwalk, Connecticut, United States, Chicopee, Massachusetts, United States

Nathaniel Ely (also Nathaniel Eli) (1605 – December 25, 1675) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut. He served as a deputy of the General Court of the Connecticut Colony from Norwalk in the October 1656 session.

Contents

He was born in 1605 in Tenterden, Kent, England. He was the son of the Reverend Nathaniel Ely and Susuan Dowle.

He came to America, sailing from Ipswich aboard the Elizabeth, in 1634. He originally settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Settlement of Hartford

In June 1636, Reverend Thomas Hooker led a group of about one hundred people including Ely to Hartford. He served there as a constable in 1639, and as a selectman in 1643 and 1649.

Settlement of Norwalk

Roger Ludlow purchased the land that would become Norwalk in 1640. Ludlow contracted with fourteen men for the original planting of Norwalk. In 1649, Ely and Richard Olmsted became the first two settlers. He served in the General Court of the Colony of Connecticut representing Norwalk in 1656. He lived in Norwalk until 1659.

He then moved to Springfield, Massachusetts Bay Colony. He served as a selectman there in 1661, 1663, 1666, 1668, 1671 and 1673. After 1665, he was a tavern keeper.

He is listed on the Founders Stone bearing the names of the founders of Hartford in the Ancient Burying Ground in Hartford, and he is also listed on the Founders Stone bearing the names of the founding settlers of Norwalk in the East Norwalk Historical Cemetery.

References

Nathaniel Ely Wikipedia