Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall, Sr.

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Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall, Sr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ipswich, Massachusetts
Death: May 21, 1707 (67-68)
Haverhill, Essex County, Massachusetts
Place of Burial: Haverhill, Essex County, Massachusetts, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Major Richard Saltonstall and Muriel Saltonstall
Husband of Elizabeth Saltonstall
Father of Gurdon Saltonstall, Colonial Governor of Connecticut; Elizabeth Denison; Col. Richard Saltonstall; Deborah Saltonstall; Richard Saltonstall and 2 others
Brother of Jane Meriel Mosley

Occupation: town clerk, colonel in militia, judge, Colonel in Militia, 21 May 1707
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall, Sr.

Wikipedia says [downloaded March 2010 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathaniel_Saltonstall]:

Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall (also spelled Nathanial Saltonstall) (c. 1639 – 1707) was selected as a judge for the special Court of Oyer and Terminer, a specific court responsible for the trial and sentence of people, mostly women, for the crime of witchcraft in Massachusetts during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. He is most famous for his resignation from the court, and though he left no indication of his feelings toward witchcraft, he is considered to be one of the more principled men of his time.

Born in Ipswich, Massachusetts, in about 1639, to Richard Saltonstall (1610 – 1694), he was the grandson of Sir Richard Saltonstall. He graduated from Harvard in 1659, beginning the family tradition of higher education at this university. On December 29, 1663, Nathaniel Saltonstall married Elizabeth Ward, who was 18 years old, and acquired from her father, John Ward, the estate later known as the Saltonstall Seat. Two of their children were Col. Richard Saltonstall (1672 – 1714), and Gurdon Saltonstall (1666 – 1724), later the governor of Connecticut.

In 1668, Nathaniel began his career in town affairs when he was appointed town clerk. Robert Moody quotes that, according to a single surviving record book, he was "firm and effective in law enforcement, and yet, where allowed discretion by law, humane and flexible." His involvement in judicial affairs and apparent good reputation made him eligible to serve in the Salem Witch Trials, and he was appointed a judge along with six other men on May 27, 1692. There is no evidence, however, of his attendance at any of the examinations. Indeed, he resigned from the Court of Oyer and Terminer around June 8, 1692, the same time as Bridget Bishop's trial and sentence for witchcraft. Presumably, he was "displeased with the handling of the Bishop case", and for some time afterward remained "very much dissatisfied with the proceedings."

In addition to town judiciary service, he was a member of the local militia, responsible in part for frontier defense against Native Americans, and he reached the rank of Colonel.

Nathaniel Saltonstall died May 21, 1707, in Haverhill, Massachusetts.



HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF STONINGTON, county of New London, Connecticut, from its first settlement in 1649 to 1900, by Richard Anson Wheeler, New London, CT, 1900, p. 340



From: Geneological and family history of modern New York by Wm. Richard Cutter

"...was assistant member of the governor's council and judge;"


Wikipedia says [downloaded March 2010 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathaniel_Saltonstall]:

Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall (also spelled Nathanial Saltonstall) (c. 1639 – 1707) was selected as a judge for the special Court of Oyer and Terminer, a specific court responsible for the trial and sentence of people, mostly women, for the crime of witchcraft in Massachusetts during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. He is most famous for his resignation from the court, and though he left no indication of his feelings toward witchcraft, he is considered to be one of the more principled men of his time.

Born in Ipswich, Massachusetts, in about 1639, to Richard Saltonstall (1610 – 1694), he was the grandson of Sir Richard Saltonstall. He graduated from Harvard in 1659, beginning the family tradition of higher education at this university. On December 29, 1663, Nathaniel Saltonstall married Elizabeth Ward, who was 18 years old, and acquired from her father, John Ward, the estate later known as the Saltonstall Seat. Two of their children were Col. Richard Saltonstall (1672 – 1714), and Gurdon Saltonstall (1666 – 1724), later the governor of Connecticut.

In 1668, Nathaniel began his career in town affairs when he was appointed town clerk. Robert Moody quotes that, according to a single surviving record book, he was "firm and effective in law enforcement, and yet, where allowed discretion by law, humane and flexible." His involvement in judicial affairs and apparent good reputation made him eligible to serve in the Salem Witch Trials, and he was appointed a judge along with six other men on May 27, 1692. There is no evidence, however, of his attendance at any of the examinations. Indeed, he resigned from the Court of Oyer and Terminer around June 8, 1692, the same time as Bridget Bishop's trial and sentence for witchcraft. Presumably, he was "displeased with the handling of the Bishop case", and for some time afterward remained "very much dissatisfied with the proceedings."

In addition to town judiciary service, he was a member of the local militia, responsible in part for frontier defense against Native Americans, and he reached the rank of Colonel.

Nathaniel Saltonstall died May 21, 1707, in Haverhill, Massachusetts.

HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF STONINGTON, county of New London, Connecticut, from its first settlement in 1649 to 1900, by Richard Anson Wheeler, New London, CT, 1900, p. 340

From: Geneological and family history of modern New York by Wm. Richard Cutter
"...was assistant member of the governor's council and judge;"

view all 12

Col. Nathaniel Saltonstall, Sr.'s Timeline

1639
1639
Ipswich, Massachusetts
1666
March 27, 1666
Haverhill, Massachusetts
1668
September 17, 1668
Haverhill, Essex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
1672
1672
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, British Colonial America
1674
September 5, 1674
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, British Colonial America
1678
August 14, 1678
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, British Colonial America
1703
1703
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, United States
1707
May 21, 1707
Age 68
Haverhill, Essex County, Massachusetts
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