Colonel William A. Phillips

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Edward Richards was an early settler of and nine term selectman in Dedham, Massachusetts.[1][2]

Richards was born circa 1610 -1615.[2] He may have been the brother of Nathaniel Richards and, through his wife Susan, was brother-in-law of John Hunting.[2] He may have traveled in 1632 on board the Lyon from England to Massachusetts with Nathaniel and settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts until 1636.[2] Nathaniel moved to Connecticut to found Hartford, but Edward Richards first appears in Dedham in 1636, which is where he married Susan in 1638.[2] He signed the Dedham Covenant and was a member of First Church and Parish in Dedham.[2]

Though Dedham was intended to be a Utopian commune, and there was little disparity in wealth, Richards went by the title of "Gent" and, unlike others, aspired to a manor.[2] He received large tracts of land, second only to the minister, John Allin.[2] Before moving to Dedham, he purchased a large estate to use as his home and did not receive a house lot, as other settlers did.[2] He then purchased and was distributed other tracts of land, one of which became known as Broad Oak.[2][3]

He died in May 1684. In his will, he left his home to his second son, Nathaniel, and not his oldest, John.[a] It is suspected that this was because Nathaniel had given Richards more grandsons and thus would be in a better position to transmit the family name down through successively more prosperous generations.[5]

Notes

  1. ^ The home in 1861 was the home of Rev. Ebenezer Burgess, the minister of the Allin Congregational Church.[3][4] Morse locates it as being "two miles west of the Court House."[4] As of 2019, Burgess Lane is located 2.5 miles west of the Norfolk Superior Court.

References

  1. ^ Worthington 1827, p. 79-81.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Morse 1861, p. 105.
  3. ^ a b Richards 1942, pp. 42–54.
  4. ^ a b Morse 1861, p. 105-106.
  5. ^ Morse 1861, p. 106.

Works cited