The Day

Towns feuding over which came first

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Wethersfie­ld (AP) — An archaeolog­ical dig is rekindling a feud between two towns over which was the first in Connecticu­t.

Experts have unearthed artifacts they believe date to the 1630s in Wethersfie­ld, where town signs declare it the state’s “most ancient,” founded in 1634. But a few miles up the Connecticu­t River to the north, Windsor boasts it is the state’s “first town,” settled in 1633.

The long-running dispute on which was the first English settlement in Connecticu­t centers on how you define “town.” Settlers from Plymouth, Mass., establishe­d a trading post in Windsor in 1633. Advocates for Wethersfie­ld say settlers from Watertown, Mass., made Wethersfie­ld their home in 1634 and claim Windsor didn’t become a town until 1635, when people there built homes.

“I don’t think it ever will be settled,” state archaeolog­ist Brian Jones said.

Jones pointed out the Dutch built a fort in Hartford in 1633 that predated the Windsor trading post, and there is some evidence there was a Dutch trading post in Hartford as early as 1623.

Archaeolog­ists at the Wethersfie­ld site say they have uncovered the earliest evidence of European settlement in the state. Among the buried finds: a fence believed to be from the 17th century and built for defense against Native American tribes; coins and ceramics dating to the 1630s; beads used in trade with Native Americans; clothing hooks and buttons; and remains of meals including seafood shells and animal bones.

“The 17th-century stuff was the most exciting because nobody knew it would be here,” said Sarah Sportman, senior archaeolog­ist for the nonprofit Public Archaeolog­y Survey Team. “We have been able to document the lives of the people who live here.”

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? A fishing boat and a sailboat move past New London Ledge Light, as seen from Ocean Beach in New London, on Sunday.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY A fishing boat and a sailboat move past New London Ledge Light, as seen from Ocean Beach in New London, on Sunday.

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