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Preserving the Past, Informing the Future | Skip Navigation Links |
Born:
March 25, 1714, Lyme, Connecticut
Political Party: Federalist
Offices: Captain of the Train Band, South Society, 1739
King's
Attorney, New London Co., 1743-1776
Deputy, Connecticut General Assembly,
1748, 1751-1759
Council of Assistants, 1759-1769
Judge, Superior
Court, 1765-1769
Chief Justice, Connecticut Superior Court, 1769-1784
Deputy Governor, Colony of Connecticut, 1769-1784
Governor of
Connecticut, 1784-1786
President, Supreme Court of Errors, 1784-1786
Died: April 28, 1799, Lyme, Connecticut
The Griswold family was
well established by the time Matthew Griswold IV was born on March 25, 1714
in Lyme, Connecticut. The fourth generation of the family in America, he was
the eldest son of John Griswold, a successful politician and landowner, and
Hannah (Lee) Griswold. The first of the Griswold family to settle in the
area of Lyme, which is now the town of Old Lyme, was also a Matthew. He had
emigrated from England about 1639 and at first settled in Windsor. George
Fenwick, who was in charge of the Saybrook Colony at that time, asked
Matthew I to serve as a business agent. In 1645, Fenwick granted Matthew I a
large tract of land, which came to be known as Black Hall. Through the
succeeding generations, the Griswold family served in public offices and
became one of the wealthiest and respected families in Lyme.
It was
at Black Hall that Matthew IV was born and spent his childhood. Griswold may
have attended one of the local schools in Lyme, where his father John served
on a committee to build two schoolhouses and hire teachers, but Matthew
received no other formal education. In his mid-twenties, he decided to study
law. He was admitted to the New London Bar in 1742 and opened a practice in
Lyme. Many of his legal cases involved settling estates and collecting
debts. He became a well-liked and respected teacher of the law as well and
over the years developed the one of the first and finest collections of law
books in Connecticut.
Griswold married Ursula Wolcott, the daughter
of Governor Roger Wolcott, on November 10, 1743. The couple had seven
children. One son, Roger Griswold, later became governor himself. Also in
November 1743, Griswold's reputation as a fair and hard working lawyer
landed him the appointment of King's Attorney for New London County. The
King's Attorney represented the interests of England and her colonies in
court. That Griswold held this position for over thirty years stands as a
testimony to both his ability as a lawyer and his fair-mindedness.
Griswold's busy law practice, as well as his duties as King's Attorney, left
much of the management of Black Hall to Ursula.
Griswold's public
service to the Colony of Connecticut began in 1739, when he was appointed a
Captain of the Lyme Train Band (local militia). In 1748 and 1751, Griswold
was elected a Deputy for Lyme in the General Assembly. He was re-elected in
1754, and served in this capacity until May 1759.
While serving as
Deputy, Griswold was appointed overseer of the Mohegan Indian Tribe. As
overseer, Griswold was responsible for taking care of the Indians' property
and affairs. Griswold became involved in a lawsuit between the Mohegans and
the Colony of Connecticut known as the Mohegan Case. The case, concerning
land ownership in Colchester, Connecticut, was first brought against the
Colony in 1704. The complaints reached Queen Anne in England who ordered an
investigation into the problem. Although initially a Court at Stonington
ruled in favor of the Mohegans, the matter was again brought to Queen Anne
who, after a review of the case, ruled in favor of the settlers at
Colchester. Many years of appeals followed. In 1764, Griswold was appointed
to serve on a committee to once again look into the Mohegan Case. Griswold
sided with the colonists, whom he believed had a right to the lands where
they had worked hard to build their community. William Samuel Johnson, a
famed attorney and close friend of Griswold's, traveled to London in 1767 to
present the case to the Royal Court. The case was settled in the colonists'
favor in 1771.
Griswold was an active member of the church in Lyme's
First Ecclesiastical Society. During the mid-part of the eighteenth century,
the New England colonies experienced religious upheavals. In Connecticut,
religious and organizational changes had been gradually made in the standing
church. Those who wished to reverse these changes came to be known as "New
Lights," while those supporting the status quo were known as "Old Lights."
In the 1740s, this "Great Awakening" swept across Connecticut. Charismatic
traveling ministers preached throughout the colony, and churches took sides,
or sometimes divided. The controversy continued for years and divided people
along political and geographical lines as well.
Griswold's church in
Lyme was enthusiastically affiliated with the New Light ideas, and had
well-known revivalist preachers, such as Jonathan Parsons and Stephen
Johnson, as ministers. Griswold served on various committees and acted as a
moderator for church meetings. He also served as clerk of the Society from
1732 through 1748.
In 1759, Griswold was elected to the twelve-member
Council of Assistants. In 1765, the Stamp Act was passed, which placed a tax
on numerous paper items such as playing cards, newspapers, pamphlets, and
legal documents. In Connecticut, the New Lights violently opposed the Act,
and a group of them formed the Sons of Liberty, who pledged to see the Act
repealed regardless of the consequences. Griswold was a member of the Sons
of Liberty and may have been one of the nearly five hundred citizens of Lyme
that accompanied the Sons of Liberty when they met Jared Ingersoll, the
Royal Stamp Distributor, and demanded he resign his position.
When
the Stamp Act went into effect on November 1, 1765, all colonial governors
were required to take an oath to support it. Thomas Fitch, who was Governor
of Connecticut at that time, did so reluctantly, but Griswold, as well as
eight other members of the Council, defiantly left the room to show their
hostility. Although the Stamp Act was repealed in February 1766, Governor
Fitch was voted out of office and the New Lights gained a great victory.
In addition to serving on the Council, Griswold was chosen Judge of the
Superior Court in October of 1765. His years of training as a lawyer, as
well as his experience as King's Attorney, uniquely qualified him for the
demanding job.
The disputes between the New Lights and the Old
Lights did not diminish after Fitch's defeat. Instead, the arguments were
further heightened by the land claims of the Susquehannah Company. The
Susquehannah Company had been formed by New Lights in eastern Connecticut to
settle land along the Susquehannah River in what is now Pennsylvania. The
Pennsylvania settlers objected to those from Connecticut moving in on what
they viewed as their territory, and brought their complaints to England. The
Old Lights feared repercussions from England and the possibility that
Connecticut's Charter would be revoked.
Griswold, who realized that
land was scarce in overpopulated eastern Connecticut, sympathized with the
Susquehannah Company and did his best to support their petitions. In 1769,
Griswold, along with Roger Sherman, served on a committee to review the
Company's claims. Despite Griswold and Sherman's efforts, the Lower House
could not be persuaded to support the Company. The formation of the county
of Westmoreland, in what is now Pennsylvania, was finally approved in
October 1774.
The controversy over the Susquehannah Company played a
major role in the special elections of October 1769, which occurred because
of the death of Governor Pitkin. Jonathan Trumbull, who supported the
Company, was elected to the Governor's seat. The Old Lights tried to get
Thomas Fitch, who opposed the Company's claims, elected to the office of
Deputy Governor. On the fourth ballot, Matthew Griswold gained the majority
with 72 votes compared with Fitch's 47. Griswold's election stunned almost
all of Connecticut, including his own supporters. Eliphalet Dyer, a very
outspoken and strong supporter of the New Lights, had been considered to be
a shoe-in for the office. His outspokenness, however, played against him
with more moderate voters, and Griswold won the election.
Griswold
was re-elected as Deputy Governor each year until 1784. As Deputy Governor,
Griswold also became the Chief Justice of the Superior Court. Aside from
attending to the challenging duties as Chief Justice, Griswold was concerned
about education. In 1773, he served on a joint committee to examine better
methods of teaching and instruction at Yale College. To show appreciation
for Griswold's efforts, Yale awarded him the degree of Doctor of Laws in
1779.
When war broke out between the American colonists and England,
Griswold, an ardent patriot, whole-heartedly supported the colonists' cause.
In 1775, he was appointed to the Council of Safety. Griswold was a valued
and active member, who served on a variety of committees including those
dealing with troop movements, military appointments, provisions, and
defense. It was defense of the Connecticut shoreline, however, that had
Griswold most concerned. His own home, Black Hall, lay along the mouth of
the Connecticut River. Griswold had seen British ships trying to capture
American vessels, and he helped fend off a British attack on Lyme from the
sea. Other British ships tried to raid provisions from Black Hall and
surrounding farms. Because of these dangers, Griswold successfully
petitioned Governor Trumbull to station troops in Lyme.
Griswold's
fears for the Connecticut shoreline were realized in 1781 by the ruthless
attack on New London and Groton by Benedict Arnold. At the time, Griswold
was in New Haven for a session of the Superior Court. He immediately sent
word to other Connecticut towns along the shore and requested more troops to
secure New Haven.
Griswold's position as Deputy Governor, and his
close involvement with military affairs, made him a target for British
soldiers. Family lore has it that on one occasion soldiers were seen
approaching Black Hall when Griswold hid in a large chest covered with bags.
Ursula invited the soldiers to check the house, but they did not find him. A
second time, when British soldiers came looking for Griswold, he hid under a
pile of linen that had been spread on the lawn to dry by his neighbor's
daughter, Hetty Marvin. In his sixties at that time, Griswold nevertheless
evaded capture!
The American Revolution officially ended in 1783 with
the Treaty of Paris. While the people of Connecticut rejoiced, they had
become disenchanted with Governor Trumbull's policies and associated them
with Deputy Governor Griswold as well. In 1784, Trumbull chose not to run
for re-election. Griswold ran for the office, but to his great
disappointment, did not receive a majority of the vote, and instead had to
be chosen Governor by the General Assembly. Some sources regard him as the
first Federalist governor of the state, although political parties as such
did not exist at that time. He was re-elected with the necessary majority in
1785, but in 1786, after again receiving too few votes for a majority, the
General Assembly selected Samuel Huntington as governor.
Griswold
continued to use his legal talents when he became President of the Supreme
Court of Errors in 1784. Griswold also recognized the need for a strong
national union and supported the idea of a written Constitution. In 1788,
the town of Lyme chose him to serve as a delegate to Connecticut's
convention to ratify the Constitution. Griswold, who was quickly chosen to
serve as president of the Convention, had the honor of informing Congress of
Connecticut's ratification of the new government.
The year 1788 also
brought tragedy to Griswold, when Ursula, his wife of more than forty years,
passed away in April. He retired soon after to Black Hall to manage his
estate. Griswold's last public duty came in 1789, when he was asked to be
among those to greet George Washington when he visited New Haven.
On
April 28, 1799, Matthew Griswold passed away in his home. He is buried
beside Ursula in Old Lyme's Duck River Burying Ground.
Bibliography
Allyn, Adeline Bartlett. Black Hall Traditions and
Reminiscence. Hartford: The Case, Lockwood & Brainard Company, 1908 [CSL
call number CS 71.G87 1908].
Dictionary of American Biography.
Volume 8. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1936, s.v. "Griswold, Matthew,"
pp. 9-10 [CSL call number E 176 .D56].
Garrity, John A. and Mark C.
Carnes, eds. American National Biography. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1999, s.v. "Griswold, Matthew," pp. 640-643 [CSL call number CT 213
.A68 1999].
Griswold, Glenn E., comp. The Griswold Family,
England-America: Edward of Windsor, Connecticut, Matthew of Lyme,
Connecticut, Michael of Wethersfield, Connecticut. 7 vols.
Middleboro, MA: Griswold Family Association of America, 1935-1983 [CSL call
number CS 71 .G87 1935].
Highways & Byways of Connecticut.
Hartford: G. Fox & Co., [1947] [CSL call number F 94 .H54 1947].
Ifkovic, John W. "Matthew Griswold: Lyme's Revolutionary Magistrate." In
A Lyme Miscellany, 1776-1976, George Willauer, ed. Middletown: Wesleyan
University Press, 1977 [CSL call number F 104 .L95 L9 1977].
National Cyclopedia of American Biography. New York: James White &
Company, 1898- , s.v. "Griswold, Matthew", vol. X, p. 329 [CSL call number E
176 .N27].
Norton, Frederick Calvin. The Governors of Connecticut.
Hartford: The Connecticut Magazine, 1905 [CSL call number F 93 .N88 1905].
Raimo, John W. Biographical Dictionary of American Colonial and
Revolutionary Governors 1607-1789. Westport, CT: Meckler Books, 1980
[CSL call number E 187.5 .R34].
Salisbury, Edward Elbridge. "The
Griswold Family of Connecticut". "From the Magazine of American History,
February-April 1884." [S.l.: s.n.], 1884. [CSL call number CS 71 .G87 1884].
Stark, Bruce P. Lyme, Connecticut: From Founding to Independence.
[Lyme?]: B. Stark, 1976 [CSL call number F 104.L95 S7 1976].
Portrait
There is no known portrait of Matthew Griswold.
Originally prepared by David O. White, Museum of Connecticut History, Connecticut State Library. Edited and revised by CSL Staff, September 2004.