Theophilus Lord

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Theophilus Lord

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Lyme, CT, United States
Death: February 28, 1761 (62)
Hamburg, Lyme, CT, United States
Place of Burial: Marvin Cemetery Lyme New London County Connecticut
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas Lord and Mary Lord
Husband of Deborah Lord
Father of Lydia Ransom; Deborah Emerson; Sarah Beebe; Hepzibah Rowe; Huldah Rathbun and 1 other
Brother of Thomas Lord; Joseph Lord; Daniel Lord; Samuel Lord and Abigail Marvin

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Theophilus Lord

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=28540559&ref=wvr

Marriage 8 May 1728 Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States
to Deborah Mack

Lyme, Connecticut. Second Church and Society records, 1767.
Search Lyme, Connecticut. Second Church and Society records, 1767.

The colony of Saybrook, founded in 1635 at the mouth of the Connecticut River, extended some twenty miles along the shoreline from Clinton to the village of Niantic. In 1665, in what is known as the "Loving Parting", the township of Lyme was established on the eastern shore of the river, and with it, the Ecclesiastical Society of Lyme, now known as the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme. By 1718, the families on the eastern side of this township had successfully petitioned the General Court of Connecticut to grant a separation from the Lyme church so they did not have to travel so far on the Sabbath. In May 1718, the legislature authorized the inhabitants of the “Second Society of Lyme to embody themselves in church order and settle an orthodox minister.” The first meeting was called on February 15, 1719, and the Reverend Mr. George Griswold, a recent graduate of Yale College, was chosen as minister. Rev. Griswold's family owned thousands of acres of land on the east side of the Connecticut River; he had graduated from Yale in 1717, before the college moved from Saybrook to New Haven. Besides his duties in his own church, he held a commission from the “Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in New England” as missionary to the local Nehantic Indians.

In 1722 a small wooden meetinghouse was built in the center of the community, where Society Road and Riverview Road intersect today. During the Great Awakening of the 1740s, the small congregation added 116 members, including 15 Nehantics, but in the second half of the century the membership gradually dwindled, eventually totaling “only two aged females,” and the condition of the wooden meetinghouse deteriorated.

The church's deterioration prompted an anonymous author to write a parody entitled "The Last Will & Testament of the 2nd Society of Lyme Sirnamed Niantic," the digitized version of which is available below. The church was saved from its anticipated demise, however, when another religious resurgence in the 1790s led to a revitalization of the congregation and repairs to the meeting house. The church continues to serve the community today as the Niantic Community Church.

References
↑ Lyme Vital Records, in Connecticut, United States. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records
L-2: 334.
LORD, Theophilus, [s. Thomas & Mary], b. Dec. 19, 1698

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Theophilus Lord's Timeline

1698
December 19, 1698
Lyme, CT, United States
1729
March 19, 1729
Lyme, Connecticut, United States
1730
1730
Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, USA
1732
February 20, 1732
Lyme, New London County, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America
June 22, 1732
Lyme, New London, Connecticut
1735
July 16, 1735
Lyme, New London, Connecticut, USA
1739
July 5, 1739
Of East Haddam, Middlesex, CT
1761
February 28, 1761
Age 62
Hamburg, Lyme, CT, United States
????
Marvin Cemetery Lyme New London County Connecticut