'Robert Seeley', also 'Seely', 'Seelye', or 'Ciely', (1602-1668) was an early
Puritan settler in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony who helped establish
Watertown,
Wethersfield, and
New Haven. He also served as second-in-command to
John Mason in the
Pequot War.
Early life
Robert Seeley was born in
Bluntisham-cum-Earith,
Huntingdonshire,
England in 1602. His father William was a
surveyor and trained his son in the trade. In 1623 Robert moved to
London, where he became an apprentice
cordwainer. He married Mary Mason in 1626 and began attending the church of the
Puritan minister
John Davenport that same year.
The Great Migration
In 1630 Robert and Mary sailed with
John Winthrop as a part of the
original Puritan expedition to Massachusetts. Soon after arriving in the New World, Seeley became one of the original forty settlers of
Watertown, one of Massachusetts' earliest Puritan communities. He employed his training in surveying by laying out many of the plots for the settlers. He was granted
freeman status in 1631.
Wethersfield and the Pequot War
In 1633 or 1634, Seeley joined a ten-man expedition led by
John Oldham to the
Connecticut River. The group soon established
Westhersfield, the first English settlement on the Connecticut River. Oldham's death in 1636, presumed by the colonists to be at the hands of the
Pequot, helped touch off the
Pequot War in 1637. Seeley served as second-in-command to Captain
John Mason in the war. He was severely wounded by an arrow to the head in the attack on the fort at
Mystic, Connecticut. Captain Mason, who called Seeley a "valiant soldier", wrote of the incident, "Lieutenant Seeley was shot in the eyebrow with a flat headed Arrow, the Point turning downwards. I pulled out the arrow myself." Seeley carried a permanent scar from the wound.
New Haven
When his old friend
John Davenport arrived in Massachusetts, Seeley joined his group and helped establish the
New Haven Colony in 1638. Seeley served as New Haven's first town marshall and lieutenant of the militia. He was generally known in the community as Lieutenant Seeley. He also participated in
Theophilus Eaton's exploratory expedition in
Long Island Sound.
Later life
In 1659 Seeley briefly returned to England, living there until 1662 when he returned to the New World and settled in
Huntingdon,
Long Island,
New York. He died in
New York City in 1668. In 1695 his heirs received 40 acres of land in Watertown, resolving a suit he had filed 60 years earlier after settling in Wethersfield. In the suit he had claimed that he had not been given the area promised to the original settlers of Watertown.
Seeley's name is featured in Watertown, Wethersfield, and New Haven on plaques that list the towns' founders and on a plaque at the base of a statue honoring John Mason for his victory over the Pequots.
See also
★
Great Migration
★
Mystic, Connecticut
★
New Haven, Connecticut
References
★ ''A Brief History of the Pequot War'' by Major
John Mason, with an Introduction by Rev.
Thomas Prince (Kneeland and Green, Boston, 1736)
★ "The English Life of Robert Seely" by
Ralph M. Seely in ''The New England Historical and Genealogical Register'' (July 1962)
★ ''Huntingdon Town Records'', Vol. 1 by
Charles R. Street (1887)
★ "The Pequot War," http://www.colonialwarsct.org/1637.htm, from ''The Society of Wars in the State of Connecticut'' website
★ ''The Public Records of Connecticut'', Vol. 1 by
J. Hammond Trumball (1850)
★ ''Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven from 1638-1649'' by
Charles J. Hoady
★ ''Seely History'' by
Montell Seely and
Kathryn Seely (Community Press, 1988)
★ ''Watertown Records'' by the
Watertown Historical Society (1894)
External links
★
The Pequot War from
The Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Connecticut
★
1736 version of John Mason's account of the Pequot War
★
The Winthrop Society is a hereditary organization made up of the descendants those who arrived on the Winthrop Fleet or other
Great Migration ships before 1634.
★
Passenger list of the Winthrop Fleet (spelling is ''Seely'' on this list)
★
Robert Seeley's lineage at Rodovid.