Jump to content

James Avery (American colonist): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
DrilBot (talk | contribs)
fixed dates
Line 1: Line 1:
{{otherpeople|James Avery}}
{{otherpeople|James Avery}}
{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
|name=James Avery
|image = James_avery_bust.jpg
|image = James_avery_bust.jpg
|caption = Bust of James Avery
|caption = Bust of James Avery
|name='''James Avery'''
birth_name=James Avery
|birthdate={{birth date and age|1620}}
|birth_date={{BirthDeathAge|B|1620|||1700|4|18}}
|death_date={{BirthDeathAge| |1620|||1700|4|18}}
|birthname= James Avery
|deathdate={{death date and age|1700|4|18}}
|location=[[Groton, Connecticut]], [[United States|U.S.]]
|location=[[Groton, Connecticut]], [[United States|U.S.]]
|occupation=
|occupation=

Revision as of 00:26, 29 October 2009

James Avery
Bust of James Avery birth_name=James Avery
Born1620 (1620)
DiedApril 18, 1700 (aged 79–80)
SpouseJoanna Greenslade (1622-1697)

James Avery (b. 1620 in Cornwall, England - April 18, 1700 in Groton, Connecticut) was an American colonial landowner, legislator, and a military commander in King Philip's War.

Avery was born in England and immigrated to Massachusetts Bay Colony as a child with his parents.[1] As an adult he received several land grants in the vicinity of New London, in Connecticut.

Battles

Avery served as a captain in command of forty Englishmen from Stonington, Lyme, and New London. In 1676. He also served as captain of one of four companies which protected the frontier. In the Great Swamp Fight, a battle at Kingston, Rhode Island, Avery commanded a group of ally Pequot Indians. [1]

General Assembly

He was Deputy to the General Court 12 times from 1656 to 1680.[2]

Home of James Avery built in 1656

Pioneer

Avery was among Groton, Connecticut’s early settlers, for whom Avery Point is named. A monument stands on the location of his 1656 home, called The Hive of the Averys. The home burned down in a fire started from an ember of a passing train on July 20, 1894.

References

  1. ^ a b Benjamin Tinkham Marshall (1922). A Modern History of New London County, Connecticut. Lewis Historical Printing Company.
  2. ^ Avery, Elroy McKendree (1893). The Groton Averys, Christopher and James. pp. 9–10.