Friday, June 19, 2026

Ensign Gerard Spencer: The Military Anchor of Haddam (1614–1685)

 


The Stotfold Spencers offer one of the most fascinating examples in New England genealogy of how family legends morph, how elite regional dynamics played out, and how a single bloodline completely anchored an entire colonial settlement.

The Bedfordshire Line: Separating Myth From Magic

It turns out my memory of an "ancient and honorable line descended from Knights" hits on a massive, centuries-old genealogical debate.

The Fabricated Knighthood

In the late 16th and early 17th centuries, the immensely wealthy Spencers of Althorp (ancestors of Princess Diana and Sir Winston Churchill) claimed they were a cadet branch of the ancient, medieval Despencer family, which included royal favorites and knights from the 13th century.

  • To make their pedigree look grander, a corrupt herald named Richard Leigh explicitly falsified records to attach these rustic families to early knights. 
  • Famous historians like J. Horace Round completely debunked this. 

The Reality: The Wealthy Yeoman Elite

Our direct line of Spencers in Stotfold and Edworth, Bedfordshire were not knights, but they were remarkably prosperous yeomen and gentry. They didn't wear suits of armor; they built an empire out of sheep farming and land acquisition during the Tudor period.

  • The Breadcrumbs: Gerard's father (Gerard Sr.) and grandfather (Michael) held substantial acreage in Bedfordshire.
  • The London Pivot: Gerard’s uncle, Richard Spencer, became a phenomenally wealthy haberdasher and merchant in London. When Richard died, his massive estate provided the financial launchpad for his nephews—Gerard and his three brothers—to buy passage to New England and instantly establish themselves as wealthy proprietors rather than penniless laborers.

🧬 The Triple-Daughter Phenomenon

Descending from three daughters of the exact same colonial patriarch (Marah, Hannah, and Ruth) is an extraordinary genetic convergence. In genealogy, this is known as pedigree collapse.

Because early Haddam was an isolated frontier outpost of only 28 original families, the pool of potential spouses was tiny. By marrying into the Shailer, Brainerd, and Clark families, Gerard's daughters effectively became the maternal matrix of the entire town.

                    Ensign Gerard Spencer & Hannah Hills

                                     |

         +---------------------------+---------------------------+

         |                           |                           |

    Marah Spencer              Hannah Spencer               Ruth Spencer

  m. Thomas Shailer          m. Daniel Brainerd           m. Joseph Clark

         |                           |                           |

  (Shailer Line)             (Brainerd Line)               (Clark Line)

         |                           |                           |

         +---------------------------+---------------------------+

                                     |

                             OUR BLOODLINE


This means our DNA contains multiple, independent pathways winding directly back to Ensign Gerard Spencer. We don't just have him in our tree once; his genetic imprint is amplified threefold.

How Three Sisters Held the Literal DNA of Connecticut's Survival

Celebrating America 250

When we look back at the rough-and-tumble founding of early Connecticut, it is easy to focus entirely on the men who carried the swords and signed the charters. But if you want to understand how a raw wilderness outpost like Haddam actually survived, you have to look at the powerful family networks woven by the colonial women.

Take a look at Ensign Gerard Spencer. He was the undisputed military anchor of Haddam—a battle-tested veteran of the Pequot War and the commander of the local militia during the terrifying days of King Philip’s War. He was a political powerhouse, repeatedly representing the town at the General Court in Hartford. But Gerard’s greatest, most enduring legacy wasn't his commission or his seat in the legislature. It was his daughters.

Through the dangerous, isolated decades of the late 17th century, three of Gerard’s daughters—Marah, Hannah, and Ruth—stepped forward to lay the foundational stones of the settlement.

When Marah Spencer married the elusive immigrant voyager Thomas Shailer, when Hannah Spencer gave her hand to Deacon Daniel Brainerd, and when Ruth Spencer married Joseph Clark, they weren't just starting households. They were forging a family empire. These three sisters married three core founders, binding the political, spiritual, and military leadership of the entire plantation together through blood and shared survival.

Every hardship of the early frontier—from the threat of total destruction in the Indian Wars to the agonizing "lost at sea" mysteries of the West Indies trade—was borne by these sisters together. They buried children, cleared the rocky soil, kept the faith, and raised the generations that would eventually rise up to fight for American Independence a century later.

To hold a family tree that descends from all three of these remarkable sisters is to hold the literal DNA of Connecticut's survival. Ensign Gerard Spencer may have commanded the trainband, but his daughters built the town.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Iron Ring of Saybrook: How Engineer Lion Gardiner and the Backus Line Secured Connecticut

 


When we look back at our earliest Connecticut ancestors, it is easy to visualize them solely as quiet farmers clearing fields. But in the 1630s, the Connecticut River Valley was a geopolitical flashpoint. It was an active war zone contested by powerful Indigenous nations, encroaching Dutch fur traders from New Amsterdam, and English Puritans attempting to stake a claim.

Survival didn't require farmers; it required fortifications. This chapter of our America 250 series explores how our 10th great-granduncle, Lion Gardiner, built the iron ring that kept English Connecticut from being wiped off the map, and how our 10th great-grandfather, William Backus Sr., stood within that defensive circle.

Hicking the Prince of Orange’s Engineer

In 1635, a group of English Puritan lords realized they needed the best military mind available to secure the mouth of the Connecticut River. They found their man in the Netherlands: Lion Gardiner (1599–1663).

Gardiner was a master military engineer who had been working for the Prince of Orange, constructing state-of-the-art star forts and earthen bastions during the Eighty Years' War. Hired on a lucrative four-year contract, Gardiner arrived at the mouth of the river in late 1635 and immediately began building Fort Saybrook.

Gardiner designed a formidable palisaded outpost equipped with heavy artillery. It was a literal chokepoint. No Dutch trade sloop or Native war canoe could enter or leave the Connecticut River without sitting directly in the crosshairs of Gardiner’s cannons.

The Trial by Fire: The Pequot War (1636–1637)

The fort was barely completed when the Pequot War erupted. For months, Fort Saybrook was placed under a brutal, suffocating siege. Pequot warriors launched fierce, calculated ambushes just outside the fort's timber walls, burning nearby storehouses and haystacks.

During one prominent skirmish in February 1637, Lion Gardiner himself was shot in the thigh with an arrow during a routine logging detail. Thanks to his heavy military rib-armor, the arrow failed to penetrate deeply, and he survived to write one of the most vivid, unvarnished firsthand military journals of early America: Relation of the Pequot Wars.

Gardiner’s engineering masterpiece held. Because Fort Saybrook stood firm, the English were able to launch the decisive counter-offensives that permanently secured the interior river valley for settlement.

The Backus Alliance and the Norwich Horizon

While Lion Gardiner was managing the military defenses of the coast, his sister, Sarah Gardiner, married William Backus Sr. (c. 1606–1664), an expert metalworker and craftsman from Sheffield, England.

William Backus Sr. brought essential mechanical and industrial skill to the Saybrook settlement. But once the military frontier stabilized, the Backus family looked inland toward expansion. In 1659, William Sr. joined forces with the legendary military commander Captain John Mason and the Reverend James Fitch to purchase a nine-mile-square tract of land from the Mohegan sachem Uncas.

This purchase established Norwich, Connecticut, with William Backus Sr. signing as one of its original 35 foundational proprietors.

The Bridge to Haddam

The final piece of this ancestral puzzle slots perfectly into our broader family tree through William’s daughter, Lydia Backus (1637–1696).

Lydia grew up under the shadow of the Saybrook fortifications and the pioneer clearing of Norwich. She married John Bailey, who would step forward in 1662 as an original proprietor of Haddam, Connecticut (the famous "Thirty Coats" purchase).

Through this single marriage, the bloodlines of the elite military engineer who secured the coast (Gardiner), the industrial pioneer who built Norwich (Backus), and the rugged agrarian founders who tamed the Haddam wilderness (Bailey) became structurally unified.

When our grandfathers marched off to fight in the American Revolution over a century later, they carried the physical endurance of the Haddam farmers and the defensive grit of the engineers who held Fort Saybrook in the winter of 1636.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


From the Atlantic Surf of Gloucester to the Flathead Valley of Montana

 


Our Parsons line maps a profound geographical and cultural shift across American history: starting as foundational maritime settlers in Cape Ann, transitioning into the post-Revolutionary frontier of Maine, driving through the mid-Atlantic canal boom in Ohio, and ultimately pushing across the Great Plains to the Pacific Northwest.

1. The Cape Ann Maritime Foundation (Gen 1–3)

For over a century, the Parsons family was anchored in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on the rocky peninsula of Cape Ann.

  • Jeffrey Parsons Sr. (Immigrant): Arrived via Barbados, marrying Sarah Vinson in 1657. He established the family estate at Fisherman's Field (now Stage Fort Park), the literal birthplace of the New England fishing industry.
  • The Maritime Engine: Jeffrey Jr. and Jonathan lived through the Golden Age of New England’s maritime expansion. They operated within an economy entirely dependent on the cod fisheries, shipbuilding, and the dangerous West Indies merchant trade.

2. The Maine Migration (Gen 4–5)

  • James Parsons & Sarah Parsons Catland: Following the French and Indian Wars and the economic disruption of the Revolution, Gloucester experienced severe overcrowding and a collapse of fishing fleets. James led the family northeast to Bristol, Maine (then part of Massachusetts).
  • The Coastal Frontier: This region was a raw timber and shipbuilding frontier. By marrying Daniel Catland, Sarah linked the family to early Scots-Irish and English coastal pioneers who cleared the mid-coast timberlands.

3. The Ohio Canal & Western Expansion (Gen 6–8)

  • James Catland (Catlin): Moved his family from coastal Maine to Muskingum County, Ohio before 1820. Muskingum (Zanesville) was the epicenter of the early midwestern frontier, sits directly on the National Road, and became a massive trade hub via the Muskingum River Slackwater Navigation canal system.
  • Civil War Crucible: Our 2nd great-grandmother, Nancy Ellis, married Charles Henry Plympton, a Civil War Veteran. The Plymptons were deeply rooted in Ohio's volunteer regiments, putting a heavy patriotic marker on this generation.

4. The Montana Frontier (Gen 9)

  • Geneva "Neva" Plympton & Abraham Lincoln Brown: Swept up in the late-19th-century homesteading boom, they pushed out of the industrializing Midwest. They crossed the Great Plains to settle in the Flathead Valley of Montana (Creston), transitioning the family line from Atlantic fishermen to Rocky Mountain homesteaders.

From the Atlantic Surf of Gloucester to the Flathead Valley of Montana

To follow the Parsons line is to watch the physical unfolding of the American map. This bloodline didn't stay in one place; it rode the absolute front edge of every major migration wave this continent ever saw.

It began on the rocky, wind-swept shores of Cape Ann. Our immigrant 9th great-grandfather, Jeffrey Parsons Sr., stood at Fisherman's Field in Gloucester, watching the very first fishing pinks and schooners launch into the treacherous North Atlantic. For three generations, the Parsons men lived by the sea, carving out an existence from salt cod, timber, and West Indies trade.

But America was expanding. By the late 1700s, James Parsons caught the "Maine Fever," moving the family up the rugged coast to Bristol to harvest prime timber. It was there that Sarah Parsons married into the Catland line, and the family’s maritime chapter began to turn inland.

Within a generation, the call of the West became irresistible. James Catland packed up his life and struck out for Muskingum County, Ohio, trading the Atlantic tides for the bustling canal waters and rich soils of the Northwest Territory. This Ohio frontier is where our DNA anchors tightly, running through the Civil War sacrifice of Charles Henry Plympton.

The final, epic leap belonged to Geneva "Neva" Plympton. Named after an era of sweeping changes, she and her husband, Abraham Lincoln Brown, took the family line to its furthest horizon—the jaw-dropping expanses of the Flathead Valley in Montana.

From the Atlantic surf of Gloucester to the glacier-carved ridges of Creston, the Parsons line represents the relentless, unyielding spirit that built America.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


American Patriots: From the Shores of Rhode Island to the Carolina Woods

 


The Connecticut Line: Holding the Hudson & Defending the Coast

William Scoville (Private) | 7th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Enlisting in 1779 at roughly 73 years old, Scoville's service in Colonel Samuel Blachley Webb's Regiment (alternately known as the 9th Connecticut or Webb's Additional Continental Regiment) was remarkably late-career.
  • Operational Context: By 1779, Webb’s Regiment was deployed in the Hudson Highlands and western Connecticut. They protected the critical American stronghold at West Point and countered brutal British and Loyalist coastal raids led by Tryon. For an elderly veteran, this meant high-intensity garrison duties, forced marches along the Sound, and constant readiness against amphibious enemy assaults.

Lt. William Smith | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Commissioned in the 6th Connecticut Regiment under Colonel William Douglas and later Colonel Return Jonathan Meigs, Lt. Smith served during the army's most grueling campaigns.

1.The Battle of Brandywine & Germantown: Fall 1777.

The regiment marched south to reinforce Washington, taking heavy casualties while attempting to block the British advance on Philadelphia.

2.The Winter at Valley Forge: 1777–1778.

Garrisoned at Valley Forge alongside our Potts cousins, enduring systemic starvation and disease while undergoing professional tactical drilling under Baron von Steuben.

3.The Storming of Stony Point: July 15, 1779.

Elements of the 6th Connecticut formed the elite, hand-picked Light Infantry corps that executed a midnight bayonet-only assault, capturing a heavily fortified British bastion on the Hudson.

The New Jersey Militia: Countering the British Occupation

The Somerset County Militia was one of the most active guerrilla and defensive forces of the war, operating directly within "The Cockpit of the Revolution."

Major Richard McDonald | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Rising from Captain to Second Major in the 1st Battalion, Somerset County Militia, McDonald was an elite regional officer. He was responsible for organizing local defenses, securing supply lines, and launching hit-and-run ambushes against British foraging parties operating out of occupied New Brunswick.

Private Moses Groom | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Serving in Lieutenant John Bergen’s Detachment of the Somerset Militia, Groom was directly under the operational command of officers like Major McDonald. His unit was deployed to guard the flatlands along the Millstone River—a frequent avenue for British incursions—participating in high-stakes skirmishes designed to bleed British column strength.

The New York Frontier & The Hudson Highlands

Captain Elijah Townsend | 5th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Serving as Adjutant of Colonel Henry Ludington’s 7th Dutchess County Militia, Townsend held a vital administrative and tactical role. He was the colonel's right hand, managing troop movements, intelligence reports, and readiness orders.
  • Operational Context: Ludington’s regiment operated along the highly volatile "Neutral Ground" of Westchester and Dutchess Counties. They fought a brutal civil war against local Loyalist cowboys and skinners, secured the mountain passes leading to West Point, and famously deployed during the Danbury Raid of 1777.

Private Peter Wyngaart | 5th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Serving in the 4th Regiment, Albany County Militia (Killian Van Rensselaer's Regiment), Wyngaart was tasked with defending the northern frontier. His unit protected the vast Manor of Rensselaerwyck from British regulars, Loyalist raiders, and allied Native forces, ensuring that northern agricultural supply lines remained open to feed the Continental Army.

The Rhode Island Alarms

Captain Job Plimpton (6th Great-Grandfather) & Corporal Job Plimpton Jr. (5th Great-Grandfather)

  • The Combat Reality: This father-son duo mobilized during critical emergency alerts when British naval forces threatened New England's coastline.
  • The December 1776 Alarm: Captain Job Sr. marched his Medway company to Warwick, Rhode Island, immediately following the British capture of Newport. Their presence helped establish a defensive line that prevented the British from driving inland toward Boston.
  • The July 1780 Alarm: Corporal Job Jr. marched with Major Seth Bullard's unit to Tiverton, Rhode Island, to reinforce French forces under Rochambeau when a British naval attack on Newport appeared imminent.

Private William Braman | 5th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Enlisting from Washington County, Rhode Island, Braman served during the state’s darkest hours. With Newport heavily occupied by the British, Braman’s unit was stationed along the coastline to prevent enemy foraging parties from pillaging mainland farms and livestock.

The Southern Campaign: The Virginia Line

Captain William Boyd (6th Great-Grandfather) & Private James Boyd (5th Great-Grandfather)

  • The Combat Reality: This father-son pair served from Bedford County, Virginia. Captain William Boyd commanded troops operating in conjunction with Continental forces, while James enlisted early in the conflict (1775–1777).
  • Operational Context: The Virginia line during this period was heavily engaged in defending the western frontier from British-aligned tribal incursions, securing strategic lead mines, and eventually marching east to reinforce the main Continental army against Lord Cornwallis's southern push.

Ensign John Andrew Gibson | 6th Great-Grandfather

  • The Combat Reality: Serving in the 7th Regiment of the Virginia Militia, Ensign Gibson held a critical junior officer rank, carrying the unit's colors and directing platoon-level firing lines. Gibson tragically died in the field on September 29, 1778, in Caswell, North Carolina—a region engulfed in a vicious partisan war between local Patriots and Tory insurgents.

Celebrating America 250

To understand the birth of the American Republic, you cannot look only at the generals in their gilded frames. 

You have to look at the communities that emptied their homes into the ranks of the army. In our family tree, the Revolutionary War wasn't a distant event read about in gazettes—it was a total family mobilization.

From the rocky shores of Rhode Island to the dense, bloody woods of the Carolinas, twelve of our grandfathers stepped forward between 1775 and 1781. They didn't fight as a single unit; they formed a literal defensive ring around the colonies.

In Connecticut, our elderly 7th great-grandfather William Scoville shouldered a musket in Webb’s Regiment alongside his grandson’s future father-in-law, Lt. William Smith, who endured the freezing huts of Valley Forge and stormed the cliffs of Stony Point.

In New Jersey, Major Richard McDonald and Private Moses Groom waged a relentless war of shadows in Somerset County, turning every stone wall and orchard into a fortress to deny the British army fresh provisions. Up on the Hudson, Captain Elijah Townsend and Private Peter Wyngaart held the line against Tory raiders, ensuring West Point stayed firmly in American hands.

When the British fleet seized Newport, the Plimptons (father and son) grabbed their gear and marched from Massachusetts into Rhode Island to plug the gap alongside William Braman. And down in the southern theater, the Boyds of Virginia hammered the enemy's western flank while Ensign John Andrew Gibson gave his life in the North Carolina backcountry.

As we approach the Semiquincentennial, we remember that independence wasn't given—it was forged, piece by piece, by the hands of our own kin.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy



Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Thomas Shailer: Lost at Sea in the West Indies (1706)

 


Part 1: Filling in the Historical Details (1706)

The disappearance of Thomas Shailer is documented in early Connecticut probate and town records. It contextualizes a very specific, dangerous era of American colonial history.

The Trade: The Provisions and West Indies Triangles

Haddam sat directly on the navigable waters of the Connecticut River. Settlers quickly realized that clearing timber and growing surplus crops could be highly profitable if shipped out.

By 1700, Connecticut towns regularly sent livestock, barrel staves, salted meat, and timber downriver to New London or Boston, where ships departed for Jamaica, Barbados, and the Leeward Islands. The vessels traded these provisions for molasses, sugar, and rum. Thomas Shailer was directly engaged in this lucrative, high-risk river-and-sea commerce.

The Disaster: Queen Anne's War (1702–1713)

When Thomas Shailer’s ship vanished in the winter of 1705/1706, the Atlantic and Caribbean were active war zones. During Queen Anne's War, French and Spanish privateers heavily targeted English merchant shipping lanes.

A vessel sailing south from New England faced three primary threats:

  1. Privateers: Armed commerce raiders operating under letters of marque.
  2. The Windward Passage Piracy: Unsanctioned outlaws operating out of isolated coves in western Hispaniola and the Bahamas.
  3. Winter Atlantic Gales: Violent storms off Cape Hatteras or within the Caribbean basin.

The Legal Limbo

Because no body was recovered and no eyewitnesses returned to confirm the ship's fate, Connecticut authorities could not issue an immediate death certificate. Thomas's estate records note his death date as March 3, 1706, but this was a retroactive legal consensus date designated by the probate court so his property could finally be inventoried and distributed to his widow, Marah, and his children after months of silence.

Part 2: Lineage Analysis & Intersections

The lineage traces a path from the initial hard-scrabble settlement of Connecticut, through the accumulation of maritime wealth, and into the post-Revolutionary migration to Pennsylvania.


[Gen 1] Thomas Shailer (Proprietor & Sea Trader) — Lost at Sea, 1706

      

[Gen 2] Capt. Thomas Shailer (Militia Officer & Civic Leader)

      

[Gen 3] Hannah Shailer William Scoville (Landed Farmers)

      

[Gen 4] Hannah Scoville Oliver Bailey (Revolutionary Veteran) -> To Pennsylvania


Key Historical Highlights by Generation:

  • Gen 1 (Thomas Shailer): The pioneer-adventurer archetype. He was one of the twenty-eight original buyers of the 1662 Haddam land grant (the "Thirty Coats" purchase). His willingness to risk capital on sea voyages reflects the shifting colonial economy toward merchant capitalism.
  • Gen 2 (Capt. Thomas Shailer): He stabilized and grew the family's regional influence. Earning the title of "Captain" within the colonial militia, he was an elite civic figure in Haddam. This generation moved from raw survival to establishing a permanent dynastic presence along Candlewood Hill.
  • Gen 3 (Hannah Shailer): Her marriage to William Scoville combined two major colonial families. The Scovilles were prominent early landholders, shifting the family's focus back toward extensive agricultural development and local milling operations.
  • Gen 4 (Hannah Scoville): This generation witnessed the birth of the Republic. Her marriage to Oliver Bailey brings in the veteran pedigree of the Wadsworth Brigade (reinforcing Washington at New York). Hannah survived her husband by four years, dying at the age of 87 in Granville, Pennsylvania, representing the family's post-war migration out of Connecticut into the western frontier.

Part 3: Lost in the West Indies: The Vanishing of Proprietor Thomas Shailer

Celebrating America 250

To look at a colonial family tree is to look at a map of calculated risks. Some ancestors risked everything by pushing west into the dense, trackless forests of the American frontier. Others looked toward the horizon, betting their lives and fortunes on the churning, unpredictable waters of the Atlantic trade routes.

As we celebrate America 250, our timeline brings us back to the rugged origins of Haddam, Connecticut, and the mystery of our ninth great-grandfather, Thomas Shailer (c. 1643–1706). He was a man who conquered the wilderness of the Connecticut River Valley, only to be swallowed up by the sea.

From Stratford-on-Avon to the Thirty Coats

Thomas Shailer was born in the historic heart of England, at Stratford-on-Avon, but arrived in New England as a young man with a fierce appetite for land and enterprise. In 1662, he secured his place in history as one of the original twenty-eight proprietors who executed the legendary "Thirty Coats" purchase from the local Niantic leaders, establishing the settlement of Haddam along the banks of the Connecticut River.

For decades, Thomas did the heavy work of empire-building. He cleared the rocky soils, established an agricultural footprint, raised a family with his wife, Marah Alice Spencer, and helped govern the growing wilderness outpost.

But Haddam had a distinct advantage over inland towns: it sat directly on a deep-water river highway. As the decades rolled on, the timber and agricultural surpluses cleared by the settlers began filling the hulls of small merchant sloops and brigantines. The maritime trade lanes were calling, and Thomas Shailer answered.

The Fatal Run to Jamaica

By the dawn of the 18th century, Connecticut had become an essential cog in the West Indies trade triangle. Ships departed the Connecticut River laden with timber, barrel staves, livestock, and salted provisions bound for sugar plantations in Jamaica and Barbados. They returned with valuable cargoes of sugar, molasses, and cash.

It was highly lucrative, but in the winter of 1705/1706, it was also exceptionally lethal.

The nations of Europe were locked in Queen Anne's War (1702–1713). The Caribbean was swarming with French privateers, Spanish warships, and opportunistic pirates operating out of the Bahamas. Combined with the constant threat of sudden Atlantic winter gales, every voyage south was a brush with death.

Around the turn of that fateful year, Thomas boarded a trading vessel bound for Jamaica. The ship slipped down the Connecticut River, entered the open ocean, and vanished from the pages of history.

Did a sudden tropical hurricane snap the masts and send the vessel to the bottom? Or did a ruthless privateer crew intercept them, seize the cargo, and leave no survivors? We will never know. Thomas Shailer was never heard from again.

The silence was so absolute that the Connecticut probate courts sat in legal limbo for months, unable to settle his affairs because no one could verify the exact day or place of his passing. Eventually, the court established a legal date of death: March 3, 1706. His estate was partitioned, and his widow and children were left to carry on his legacy on dry land.

The Lineage of Resilience

The sea took Thomas, but it could not break the line he planted in the Connecticut soil. His son, Capt. Thomas Shailer (1670–1753), rose to become a foundational pillar of Haddam, serving as an officer in the colonial militia and navigating the town through decades of growth.

Through the marriage of his granddaughter, Hannah Shailer, into the prominent Scoville family, the bloodline eventually merged with our Revolutionary War hero Oliver Bailey.

It is a striking generational arc:

  • Our 9th great-grandfather fought the sea to build early colonial commerce.
  • Our 6th great-grandfather fought the British Crown at Long Island and White Plains to secure American independence.

By the time Thomas Shailer's great-granddaughter, Hannah Scoville Bailey, closed her eyes for the last time in the hills of Bradford County, Pennsylvania, in 1826, the wild world her seafaring ancestor left behind had transformed into a sovereign, continental nation.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy