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・ Sherri Skanes
・ Sherri Smith Buffington
・ Sherri Steinhauer
・ Sherman's Lagoon
・ Sherman's March (1986 film)
・ Sherman's March (2007 film)
・ Sherman's March (disambiguation)
・ Sherman's March to the Sea
・ Sherman's neckties
・ Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. 120
・ Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. 15
・ Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. 64 (series 1864)
・ Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. 67 (series 1864)
・ Sherman's Way
・ Sherman, Clark County, Wisconsin
Sherman, Connecticut
・ Sherman, Dunn County, Wisconsin
・ Sherman, Illinois
・ Sherman, Iron County, Wisconsin
・ Sherman, Kansas
・ Sherman, Kentucky
・ Sherman, Maine
・ Sherman, Michigan
・ Sherman, Minnesota
・ Sherman, Mississippi
・ Sherman, Missouri
・ Sherman, Nevada
・ Sherman, New Mexico
・ Sherman, New York
・ Sherman, New York (disambiguation)


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Sherman, Connecticut : ウィキペディア英語版
Sherman, Connecticut

Sherman is the northernmost and least populous town of Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. The population was 3,581 at the 2010 census.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Race, Hispanic or Latino, Age, and Housing Occupancy: 2010 Census Redistricting Data (Public Law 94-171) Summary File (QT-PL), Sherman town, Connecticut )〕 The town was formed in 1802 from the northern part of New Fairfield. It is named for New Haven's Founding Father, Roger Sherman.
Sherman has been named "Best Small Town in Connecticut" three times by Connecticut Magazine.
The Appalachian Trail goes through the northern end of Sherman. Part of Squantz Pond State Park is in the town.
Sherman has one area on the National Register of Historic Places: the Sherman Historic District, bounded roughly by the intersection of Old Greenswood Road and Route 37, northeast past the intersection of Route 37 East and Route 39 North and Sawmill Road. The district was added to the National Register on August 31, 1991.
Sherman is the only town in Fairfield County in the 860 area code; the remainder of the county is served by the area code 203/area code 475 overlay.
==History==

The land which is now called Sherman, Connecticut was formerly occupied primarily by native people of Algonquian lineage.
In 1724, colonial settlers from Fairfield, Connecticut received approval from the General Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut to establish a new township. According to one account, they negotiated with Chief Squantz of the Schaghticoke tribe. Alternatively, it is told that they did not negotiate with Chief Squantz because he moved to the north end of Squantz Pond land area and refused to "sell" the township of New Fairfield. They returned in the Spring of 1725, but found that Chief Squantz had died during the winter. His four sons and heirs refused to sign the deeds. It was not until four years later that the white men called "The Proprietors" finally got the drawn marks of several other native people who may not have had authority to sell the land. They "purchased" a 31,000 acre tract of land that is now New Fairfield and Sherman, for 65 pounds sterling, the equivalent of about 300 dollars, on April 24, 1729, The deed was recorded on May 9, 1729, and is now deposited in the archives of the State Capitol in Hartford, Connecticut.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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