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In 1711, Reverend Samuel Welles became the second pastor of the Congregational Church in Lebanon. In 1712, he built a house on what is now route 87, across from where William A. Buckingham Birthplace House would be built in 1804. According to a biography of Jonathan Trumbull, the governor of Connecticut who as a boy had been tutored by Welles, “If there were any exceptions to the rule of social equality which existed in the town at this time, one exception might be found in the case of this same Reverend Samuel Welles, whose aristocratic Boston connections had enabled him to build the handsomest house in Lebanon.” In 1719, Rev. Welles had married Hannah Arnold, whose family owned extensive property in Boston. Her parents wanted the couple to move to Boston, so Welles left Lebanon in 1722, looking after his wife’s property after her parents’ deaths and, according to Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College (1885), in Boston, “he accumulated more wealth, becoming one of the richest men of the town, and highly respected.” On leaving Lebanon, Welles sold his house to his successor as pastor, the Rev. Solomon Williams, son of the Rev. William Williams of Hatfield. Rev. Solomon Williams’ son, William Williams, was born in the house in 1731 and later went on to become a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Another son of Rev. Williams was Ezekiel Williams, who moved to Wethersfield and was a merchant and sheriff of Hartford County during the Revolutionary War. Their former home came to be owned by David S. Woodworth. In 1857, Charles Lyman Pitcher began working for Woodworth, eventually gaining possession of the farm after Woodworth’s death. Pitcher served in the Civil War and later the farm was managed by his two sons after his retirement.

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Welles-Williams House (1712)
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One thought on “Welles-Williams House (1712)

  • October 7, 2012 at 10:38 pm
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    The Welles-Williams House:

    The sentence “The Williams Family later moved to another house on the other side of the street in 1748, which was later inherited by William Williams” is incorrect. The Rev. Solomon Williams retained ownership of the Welles-Williams house until his death in 1776. His oldest son, Dr. Thomas Williams, inherited the house and lived here until his death in 1819. The Rev. Solomon Williams purchased the house at 876 Trumbull Highway, across the street and somewhat north from his own house, in 1748. He deeded it to his son, William Williams, the Signer, in 1755 when William was 24 years old. William Williams spent his adult life in this house.

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