The surveys laying out the new tracts were concluded on November 10, 1715. One tract was in the area around
Pelham and
Hadley, another in the area encompassing
Putney,
Brattleboro, and
Dummerston, and another along the east side of the Connecticut River. The commissioners appointed to locate these lands were Massachusetts Governor
Joseph Dudley; Connecticut Governor
Gurdon Saltonstall; Massachusetts residents Elisha Hutchinson and Isaac Addington; and Connecticut residents William Pitkin and William Whiting. These tracts, known as the Equivalent Lands, were then made available for purchase at Hartford on April 24–25, 1716, with the proceeds going to establish Yale. there may have been additional areas not auctioned at that time. One group of
land speculators purchased a parcel. This group included
William Brattle, Jr. for whom Brattleboro, Vermont was named.
Founding of Brattleboro The Massachusetts General Court voted on December 27, 1723 to build a blockhouse and stockade north of its
Northfield settlement in order to defend the
Province of Massachusetts Bay against Chief
Gray Lock and others during
Dummer's War. Lieutenant-governor
William Dummer signed the measure, and construction of
Fort Dummer began on February 3, 1724. It was completed before summer, and a force of about 70
Native Americans, of the French-allied
Abenaki tribe, attacked it on October 11, killing three or four defenders. The settlement surrounding the fort was called "Brattleborough". The fort was converted into a trading post in 1728 for commerce with friendly Indians. It was once again manned by soldiers during
King George's War from 1744 to 1748. A small body of troops remained at the fort until 1750, after which it was considered unnecessary. Brattleborough itself was only scarcely populated until after the 1763
Treaty of Paris, when
France abandoned its attempts to colonize North America.
Other settlements The
Ashuelot Valley towns of
Upper Ashuelot and
Arlington were established prior to 1740, with several families living in each of the settlements. Richard Hazzen was sent to survey the area in the winter of 1740–41 to try to determine the boundary line between New Hampshire and Massachusetts Bay Colony. Some settlements in the Equivalent Lands were temporarily abandoned in the mid- to late-1740s due to renewed conflicts with the French and their allied tribes. These areas around Fort Dummer at the time were regarded to be in the
New Hampshire colony, although maintenance and protection of the settlements were paid for by Massachusetts Bay. Therefore, another survey team was sent out in 1749, to once again clarify provincial lines, resulting in the
New Hampshire Grants and the subsequent territorial disputes with the
New York Colony concerning jurisdiction over parts of the area and its inhabitants. In 1752, a large section of the area came under the dominion of the
Province of New Hampshire, but eventually fell under
Vermont jurisdiction. The Equivalent Lands encompass parts of what are now Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. ==References==