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Thomas Hawley House : ウィキペディア英語版 | Thomas Hawley House
The Thomas Hawley House at 514 Purdy Hill Road in Monroe, Connecticut, is a historic Colonial American wooden post-and-beam saltbox farm house built in 1755. Hawley was the great grandson of Joseph Hawley (Captain) of Stratford, Connecticut, through Samuel. A drawing and description of the house was included in J. Frederick Kelly's book, ''The Early Domestic Architecture of Connecticut'' first published in 1924. ==Thomas and Sarah Hawley== The Thomas Hawley house is a rare survivor from the earliest era of Stepney’s settlement.〔(Stepney Heritage Trail Guide retrieved on 2009-05-11 )〕 It is also a reminder that until the mid-20th century, most residents made their living by farming. Present day Stepney or Monroe, was originally the northern part of Stratford, which had been settled in 1639. In the early 18th century, descendants of Stratford’s original settlers, Thomas Hawley among them, carved out farms out of the wilderness. Thomas Hawley was the great grandson of Joseph Hawley, one of the original settlers of Stratford, Connecticut who purchased most of the present town of Monroe from the Paugusset Indians in 1671. Thomas was born on September 8, 1734 in present day Trumbull, Connecticut, married Sarah Olcott on November 16, 1760 and raised ten children.〔( Hawley Genealogy, Elias Hawley, 1890, website retrieved on 2009-05-11 )〕
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