File #8338: "Bell.pdf"
Text
STAMFORD AREA'S .FIRST FAMILIES
Bell -Famil _H~ec;L
Settle Stamford,,
By SHIRLEY DIAMAN1.'
Tne story of the Bell' family is
the story of Stamford itself.
At the very beginning, in 1641,
Francis Bell came down from
Wethersfield. He was one of the
company of 29 Wethersfield men
to settle in the new community
on land purchased only the year
· before from the Rippowam Indians.
From Francis Bell to his present day descendants, which include
Mrs William W. Faucett and her
daughter, iane, of Hi-Cliff; Carl
H. B. Anderson of Case Acres;
and Mrs. John F. Berger of Riverside, the Bell family has shown
leadership in practically every
phase of Stamford life.
When the first settlers arrived
and land was apportioned, Francis
:S.ell received seven acres for his
family. He was soon elected the
town's first representative to the
General Court in New Haven, the
legislative body for all the new
settlements in this area of Connecticut in those days.
Two years later, he was chosen
by the General Court to form a
military company in Stamford,
and was commissoined a lieutenant. He was equally prominent in
religious matters.
Once, when a dispute arose etween the people and their pastor,
he was elected by the people to go ,
Boston wi th Geor~e- Slauson,
to persuade the Rev. John Bishop
to take over the pulpit at Stamford.
WALKED TO BOSTON
It is amazing to realize that he
and Slauson walked all the way to
Boston from Stamford to do so.
They were successful, and 'Rev.
Bishop walked back with them to
become Stamford's new minister.
Francis Bell's son, Jonathan,
was the first child to be born in
the new settlement of Stamford.
That was in September, 1641, and
the record of his birth can be seen
in the old Bell family Bible, now
on public display at the First
Stamford National Bank
Jonathan also played ~n important role fo the community, serving as Selectman for 14 years, and
as the town's representative to the
General Court for 26 years. He
served as lieutenant and later as
1captain of Stamford's military
corn pany. _
_
.__, __J
I
One o his sons, also named I
Jonathan, was born in 1663, and 1
like his father and grandfather,
were prominent in town affairs,
serving as town clerk and repre- i
sentative to the General Court·
His son, Jonathan, great-grandson of Francis Bell, w.as born in \
I
l
1693.
He followed the .family tradi tioo
and was chosen selectman of
Stamford, and in 1736, was appointed to investigate whether a
plot of land might be .g ranted to
the Episcopalians, who had ap- r
plied for it.
Up to that time, there had only
been one church in Stamford, the
Congregatio.n al. The .petition was
·g ranted.
LAID OUT PLOT
Ensign Bell laid out the plot
for the site of the first St. John's
Ch~rch in Stamford.
It was Jonathan's grandson,
Thaddeus Bell, who went from
Stamford to ser e during the
Revolution as an orderly sergeant.
He was taken prisoner by .the
British. When he was later exchanged, he re-enlisted at once,
and served till the end of 'the war.
After the war, Thaddeus, like
his ancestors,' was chos.cn repre- !
sentative to the State Legislature, ,
in 1805. While there, he was in- J
. strumental in setting off the East- i
ern part of Stamford as a separate town, and naming it Dariern.
· One of Thaddeus' sons was Andrew Bell, born in 1791, and married in 1813 to Betsy Raymond.
- Andrew was a. school teacher in
early life, but left the teaching
profession behtnd in 1835 to be- r
come captain of the sloop "Mayflower'' plying between New York
and Stamford.
Among his six c h i 1 d r en was J
Thaddeus Holly Bell, born in 1832,
who married Jane E. Tyler. Hi1;; .
early married life was interrupted ..
by the outbreak of the Civil War
in Which he served with a reg- 1
iment of the Connecticut Volun- r
teers from · Stamford.
His daughter, Bertha Bell, is
the mother · and grandmother · of
one of the present-day branches of
the family. She was 111firried to
Haines P. Andersen, and is remembered byt many p e op 1 e of
Stamford as a noted genealogist .
·and for many years as registrar
of the Stamford Chapter, DAR
She was also an · artist and active member of the · Greenwich
Society o.f Artists, wit}1 whom she
exhibited many ·of her paintings.
The three children of the Andersens all live in this area. Carl
is head of the cash department of
t he Connecticut Power Co., Stamford Division, and an active member of the American Legion and
Veterans of Foreign Wars, liaving
ser ed overseas in World War I.
He lives at Case Acres. Edythe
Andersen Berger lives in River·
side. She is a former Stamford
and Greenwich teaaher, and at
present, the accountant of the
Riverside Yacht Club. Bertha i~
the wife of William W. Fawcet1
assistant treasurer of the Connec·
ticut Power. Co.
Mrs. Faucett, a graduate of Yalf
School of Arts and Conn. Stat1
Teachers College, and has been ar
exhibiting artist member with th1
Greenwich Society of Artists the
Silvermine Guild of Artists and
the Stamford Woman's Club.
A.CTIVE IN COMMUNITY
. She is very active in community
life, is a former president of the
Schubert Club of Stamford, chairman of music of the Stamford
Tercentenary Committee, and is
at present program chairman of
the Stamford Education Assocciation. Mrs. Faucett is a teacher of
Art in tl)e S tam f o rd Public
Schools.
Jane E. Faucett, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William W. "Faucett,
is gifted with a beautiful dramatic
soprano voice. After graduation
from Low - Heywood School she
attended the Juilliard School of
in New York.
·
lMusic
Her studies at Juilliard completed, Jane . became the pupil of
Irene J essner, leading soprano of
·the Metropolitan Opera Assn.
, Today, she leads a very active
life between concert and church
singing, giving music lessons
her leisure time, and holding down
'a position as secretary to Julian
Schwartz, manager of radio sta•
tion WSTC.
in
Jam~
Abresch photo
LAST in the line of a family that first settled in Stamford in 1641 is taiented Jane Faucett.
--~ ~-.-----~.._...
BELL
FA~ILY
BIBLE
1'.fo:!."e tban thru e t.uncired ye ars ag o ; Fr anc is Bell left
Yorkshire, England, bringing wi th hi m a Bible ( in thoS2 days Bi bl es
vwre :o.ot rn.u:::.ei--ous) ·-1ov1 "older than New England itself and fro .1
i
acts coru1ected '\'1i th its hist ory on e hazard s n o t hine in sayine; that
it carae with the
P~lgrim
Fathers" .
This Bible contains the re cord of the first
born in Stamford.
~hite
child
He . was Jonathan, born Sep t ember , 1641, son of
Franc is Bell, one of the twenty- nine Weth.e sf'·ield
... cttle Stamf ord the same year.
rd~n \V
o cC'.J:ne to
Francis v·as also the first to
represent the town in the General .Court at New Haven.
The Bible ·was in t he pos s ession of t he followin g members
of the family: ·
(1)
(2)
(.3)
(ii-)
(5)
(5)
(6)
(7)
Franc is B2ll
Jonathan Bell
Abraham Bell
..bra ham Bell
He:. cy
B2ll
Isaac Bell
Abraham Bell
Georgiana Bell
and heirs
Before
Belov1 is the family record
Jonathan Bell
Rebecca Bell
Mare Bell
-
1640
1690 1699 1744 1795 1842 1848, 1891
WI' i tten
in
1690, 50 years and ove
1 699, 9 ysc:..rs
17li-4:; L:-5 years
1795, 51 yeai.."'S
1 81~2, 47 yGars
1 8)/"'
:...,e:1_ Bible:
~1-:i. c
BoI·n
Septeri ber lli_
Augus t
May
Abraham Bell .3rd, armer of the B0ll
yea::'s
189_, 4-.3 years
1931 , 40 years
Born
Born
/
0
-
(
)
-
-~·r-_,
1
lC "'0
!~~- ~.) ~. t~ J
h:..s :c·cc orded in
-Chis Bible bir t hs of his t ree child:. en and c:lsc · r.r.:.. ;,,·ce _ or: the pa 0 c
1
2
~ ri t
h tl e fa:" · 1..l r e cord t . 1.e
. f ol . . . o·..-ing
n
~ r aha ill 3Gl~
ines:
his Book
GrQnt him o r QC 8 t l~ _ ein to loo~
Tr1c..t h e mu.y r m t -_a t blessed race
md Heaven a y be h is d rvelling place . '
Sept emb er 7 , 1714
Dau ghter
~. fy
~
Son
n
oU"; .........l
S0pt rb · r 25, 1718
Abraham
April 17, 1721
mhe r e are no other records written in this Bible.
Volume 28, ://J and #Lr, and Volume 29, # 2, of the New
Yor k
Geno~~og ic a l
& Biographic al Society contain the genealogy
of t e Bell f amily, by John V. He cker.
The Biule v as purchased from the heirs of ff.trs . John V.
Hecker (Gc:or:; i a·1a Bell) in 1931, by a group of Stamford people,
so that it c ould be preserved he re as a historical relic rather
than ;,,o rave i t ~ 1 et into the hands of NeVIP York dealers Yho ·rere
0
seeking to ouy it .
It 7as placed in the custody of The
Co~1pany
ational BanK and Trust
First -St a r o~ d
at One ..tlantic Street,
~ho,
aft er i t had been protected against further C.e teriora tion,had
it pl c c ed in an air-tight case , and it · is now on exhibi tio1: to
intere sted
t
perso~s,
be ing opened at the
pag~
of the family record.
such ti·ne as the Stamford Historical Society or the D...
are provided with a per - anent fire-proof home, it p::..obac_y ·. ril_
1
be turned over t o such organ ization.
\.
G~ ~ ~ ~~ ,-,6 ,~l ~~-'~ecku
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Bell -Famil _H~ec;L
Settle Stamford,,
By SHIRLEY DIAMAN1.'
Tne story of the Bell' family is
the story of Stamford itself.
At the very beginning, in 1641,
Francis Bell came down from
Wethersfield. He was one of the
company of 29 Wethersfield men
to settle in the new community
on land purchased only the year
· before from the Rippowam Indians.
From Francis Bell to his present day descendants, which include
Mrs William W. Faucett and her
daughter, iane, of Hi-Cliff; Carl
H. B. Anderson of Case Acres;
and Mrs. John F. Berger of Riverside, the Bell family has shown
leadership in practically every
phase of Stamford life.
When the first settlers arrived
and land was apportioned, Francis
:S.ell received seven acres for his
family. He was soon elected the
town's first representative to the
General Court in New Haven, the
legislative body for all the new
settlements in this area of Connecticut in those days.
Two years later, he was chosen
by the General Court to form a
military company in Stamford,
and was commissoined a lieutenant. He was equally prominent in
religious matters.
Once, when a dispute arose etween the people and their pastor,
he was elected by the people to go ,
Boston wi th Geor~e- Slauson,
to persuade the Rev. John Bishop
to take over the pulpit at Stamford.
WALKED TO BOSTON
It is amazing to realize that he
and Slauson walked all the way to
Boston from Stamford to do so.
They were successful, and 'Rev.
Bishop walked back with them to
become Stamford's new minister.
Francis Bell's son, Jonathan,
was the first child to be born in
the new settlement of Stamford.
That was in September, 1641, and
the record of his birth can be seen
in the old Bell family Bible, now
on public display at the First
Stamford National Bank
Jonathan also played ~n important role fo the community, serving as Selectman for 14 years, and
as the town's representative to the
General Court for 26 years. He
served as lieutenant and later as
1captain of Stamford's military
corn pany. _
_
.__, __J
I
One o his sons, also named I
Jonathan, was born in 1663, and 1
like his father and grandfather,
were prominent in town affairs,
serving as town clerk and repre- i
sentative to the General Court·
His son, Jonathan, great-grandson of Francis Bell, w.as born in \
I
l
1693.
He followed the .family tradi tioo
and was chosen selectman of
Stamford, and in 1736, was appointed to investigate whether a
plot of land might be .g ranted to
the Episcopalians, who had ap- r
plied for it.
Up to that time, there had only
been one church in Stamford, the
Congregatio.n al. The .petition was
·g ranted.
LAID OUT PLOT
Ensign Bell laid out the plot
for the site of the first St. John's
Ch~rch in Stamford.
It was Jonathan's grandson,
Thaddeus Bell, who went from
Stamford to ser e during the
Revolution as an orderly sergeant.
He was taken prisoner by .the
British. When he was later exchanged, he re-enlisted at once,
and served till the end of 'the war.
After the war, Thaddeus, like
his ancestors,' was chos.cn repre- !
sentative to the State Legislature, ,
in 1805. While there, he was in- J
. strumental in setting off the East- i
ern part of Stamford as a separate town, and naming it Dariern.
· One of Thaddeus' sons was Andrew Bell, born in 1791, and married in 1813 to Betsy Raymond.
- Andrew was a. school teacher in
early life, but left the teaching
profession behtnd in 1835 to be- r
come captain of the sloop "Mayflower'' plying between New York
and Stamford.
Among his six c h i 1 d r en was J
Thaddeus Holly Bell, born in 1832,
who married Jane E. Tyler. Hi1;; .
early married life was interrupted ..
by the outbreak of the Civil War
in Which he served with a reg- 1
iment of the Connecticut Volun- r
teers from · Stamford.
His daughter, Bertha Bell, is
the mother · and grandmother · of
one of the present-day branches of
the family. She was 111firried to
Haines P. Andersen, and is remembered byt many p e op 1 e of
Stamford as a noted genealogist .
·and for many years as registrar
of the Stamford Chapter, DAR
She was also an · artist and active member of the · Greenwich
Society o.f Artists, wit}1 whom she
exhibited many ·of her paintings.
The three children of the Andersens all live in this area. Carl
is head of the cash department of
t he Connecticut Power Co., Stamford Division, and an active member of the American Legion and
Veterans of Foreign Wars, liaving
ser ed overseas in World War I.
He lives at Case Acres. Edythe
Andersen Berger lives in River·
side. She is a former Stamford
and Greenwich teaaher, and at
present, the accountant of the
Riverside Yacht Club. Bertha i~
the wife of William W. Fawcet1
assistant treasurer of the Connec·
ticut Power. Co.
Mrs. Faucett, a graduate of Yalf
School of Arts and Conn. Stat1
Teachers College, and has been ar
exhibiting artist member with th1
Greenwich Society of Artists the
Silvermine Guild of Artists and
the Stamford Woman's Club.
A.CTIVE IN COMMUNITY
. She is very active in community
life, is a former president of the
Schubert Club of Stamford, chairman of music of the Stamford
Tercentenary Committee, and is
at present program chairman of
the Stamford Education Assocciation. Mrs. Faucett is a teacher of
Art in tl)e S tam f o rd Public
Schools.
Jane E. Faucett, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William W. "Faucett,
is gifted with a beautiful dramatic
soprano voice. After graduation
from Low - Heywood School she
attended the Juilliard School of
in New York.
·
lMusic
Her studies at Juilliard completed, Jane . became the pupil of
Irene J essner, leading soprano of
·the Metropolitan Opera Assn.
, Today, she leads a very active
life between concert and church
singing, giving music lessons
her leisure time, and holding down
'a position as secretary to Julian
Schwartz, manager of radio sta•
tion WSTC.
in
Jam~
Abresch photo
LAST in the line of a family that first settled in Stamford in 1641 is taiented Jane Faucett.
--~ ~-.-----~.._...
BELL
FA~ILY
BIBLE
1'.fo:!."e tban thru e t.uncired ye ars ag o ; Fr anc is Bell left
Yorkshire, England, bringing wi th hi m a Bible ( in thoS2 days Bi bl es
vwre :o.ot rn.u:::.ei--ous) ·-1ov1 "older than New England itself and fro .1
i
acts coru1ected '\'1i th its hist ory on e hazard s n o t hine in sayine; that
it carae with the
P~lgrim
Fathers" .
This Bible contains the re cord of the first
born in Stamford.
~hite
child
He . was Jonathan, born Sep t ember , 1641, son of
Franc is Bell, one of the twenty- nine Weth.e sf'·ield
... cttle Stamf ord the same year.
rd~n \V
o cC'.J:ne to
Francis v·as also the first to
represent the town in the General .Court at New Haven.
The Bible ·was in t he pos s ession of t he followin g members
of the family: ·
(1)
(2)
(.3)
(ii-)
(5)
(5)
(6)
(7)
Franc is B2ll
Jonathan Bell
Abraham Bell
..bra ham Bell
He:. cy
B2ll
Isaac Bell
Abraham Bell
Georgiana Bell
and heirs
Before
Belov1 is the family record
Jonathan Bell
Rebecca Bell
Mare Bell
-
1640
1690 1699 1744 1795 1842 1848, 1891
WI' i tten
in
1690, 50 years and ove
1 699, 9 ysc:..rs
17li-4:; L:-5 years
1795, 51 yeai.."'S
1 81~2, 47 yGars
1 8)/"'
:...,e:1_ Bible:
~1-:i. c
BoI·n
Septeri ber lli_
Augus t
May
Abraham Bell .3rd, armer of the B0ll
yea::'s
189_, 4-.3 years
1931 , 40 years
Born
Born
/
0
-
(
)
-
-~·r-_,
1
lC "'0
!~~- ~.) ~. t~ J
h:..s :c·cc orded in
-Chis Bible bir t hs of his t ree child:. en and c:lsc · r.r.:.. ;,,·ce _ or: the pa 0 c
1
2
~ ri t
h tl e fa:" · 1..l r e cord t . 1.e
. f ol . . . o·..-ing
n
~ r aha ill 3Gl~
ines:
his Book
GrQnt him o r QC 8 t l~ _ ein to loo~
Tr1c..t h e mu.y r m t -_a t blessed race
md Heaven a y be h is d rvelling place . '
Sept emb er 7 , 1714
Dau ghter
~. fy
~
Son
n
oU"; .........l
S0pt rb · r 25, 1718
Abraham
April 17, 1721
mhe r e are no other records written in this Bible.
Volume 28, ://J and #Lr, and Volume 29, # 2, of the New
Yor k
Geno~~og ic a l
& Biographic al Society contain the genealogy
of t e Bell f amily, by John V. He cker.
The Biule v as purchased from the heirs of ff.trs . John V.
Hecker (Gc:or:; i a·1a Bell) in 1931, by a group of Stamford people,
so that it c ould be preserved he re as a historical relic rather
than ;,,o rave i t ~ 1 et into the hands of NeVIP York dealers Yho ·rere
0
seeking to ouy it .
It 7as placed in the custody of The
Co~1pany
ational BanK and Trust
First -St a r o~ d
at One ..tlantic Street,
~ho,
aft er i t had been protected against further C.e teriora tion,had
it pl c c ed in an air-tight case , and it · is now on exhibi tio1: to
intere sted
t
perso~s,
be ing opened at the
pag~
of the family record.
such ti·ne as the Stamford Historical Society or the D...
are provided with a per - anent fire-proof home, it p::..obac_y ·. ril_
1
be turned over t o such organ ization.
\.
G~ ~ ~ ~~ ,-,6 ,~l ~~-'~ecku
-;}_+ 'fr..._c ~ s
~~
c --...
'Be I (
f----- We.--~JP-J.
w1J<.
i..v',-1{ /...;.,,
Miff
7~~ Us ~ I b OY--i _L.A/.. -L1 <- VI ~~
/) A
~ ~
~ Sfh--~ .
~ o-u 2/ l 6V/
!
I
?rv-
--r:
(
~ ~h../ (A)~ ~ ~.-c.vf -lu ~ 7L ~../
.u::tl"~ 4-d.. b ~ ~ ~ -fu ~ ~ ~._/--'(
-/{,._ ~ ';f
r/-L.. ~ 'f 71-e ~ .
T~ ~ ~~
{._ ~ ~ +. ~ 4 ,,,_U;_/"'-) C-p.~ :.._ ~ -hn..n.._ --.(
~ ~ k-J-~ ;;.-., ~ c~~ -
°"
J~JJ -1.e w-.. ~ ~ ,_ ~ ~ -h
~ ('~ ~ ~ ~~ -£.. fd-1_
~
~~ ·
~
7k ~ J~
/~/o
r?Ar I/
k::,
'1-'l
~,. ~ rJ er~ 1 c1.
tfl~ .,_
( JAJ..
i
""i •
)
3·
~e--.. ~ (ck.,_
y, I~~
( c1-__
v
fl"W....:..)
3
tJl
19~) ~
g
le,,
Ptfrr.L-_ > ( ~ ,,)
3
llft,
S cf__
~ :J
~e.,.,'
(~ ,_)
a;/-c_
l~d'/.
~~
~ ~ ;;;-~~&.,._
1-1~ 7 16" rt Troi..n.. ,,.,__ ~h....-,.?J
/Fr-..,,) .,
S.
7 M"""/
-1-
?,
r-
1
.'UJ> a/ +-f++ + +
d_
er
7
~
{.rfj
~
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