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NEPTUNE

Plaque location: Black Hall

 

Only the record of Neptune’s baptism documents his life in Lyme. Except for the notation in a church list on May 17, 1741, the “negro boy” of John Griswold, a prosperous farmer and the town’s judge of probate, does not appear in the historical record. Others enslaved in Judge Griswold’s Black Hall household could well be Neptune’s family members. They include Phyllis and the child Cato (commemorated by a Witness Stone in 2021), whom Griswold likely gave to his daughter Phoebe after her marriage in 1731 to Jonathan Parsons (1707-1776), newly arrived from Springfield to serve as minister of Lyme’s first parish. 

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Research into the lives of those enslaved in Lyme is ongoing and sometimes uncovers new details that may not have been known when the stone was installed. The text on this page reflects the most current information. 

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Please note, this website, like history, is constantly evolving as we learn more. We will update these pages as new information and resources become available. 

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Header Image: Lyme Street, showing, on left, house formerly of Richard McCurdy; at center, house formerly of Stephen J. Lord. LHSA at the Florence Griswold Museum.

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© 2021 by Witness Stones Old Lyme

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