Amenia is one of the original towns formed by act of March 7, 1788. It comprises the width of the Oblong Tract, and the east tier of lots in the
Great Nine Partners Patent. Inhabitants prior to European incursion were
Pequot, in a village on the west side of a pond they called Wequagnoch. Along with related Native Americans from
Connecticut, they held
Pow Wows on land both before and after the incorporation of the town. In 1703 Richard Sackett was granted a patent for land along Wassaic Creek. As this land was already included in the previous Great Nine Partners Patent, Sackett's title was invalid. Sackett was also one of the partners in the
Little Nine Partners Patent. In 1724 Captain Garret Winegar (Winnegar) came to Amenia Union from
East Camp in Columbia County, New York. The Winegars were among the
Palatine families from the Middle Rhine that had settled in the
Province of New York in 1710 under the sponsorship of
Queen Anne. The town was named by Young, derived from
Latin and meaning "pleasant to the eye". The house of worship known as the "Red Meeting House" was built in 1758, and stood about a mile northeast of the village of Amenia.
George Whitefield preached there in the summer of 1770. The Precinct of Amenia was established by act of the colonial legislature in 1762. In the summer of 1778, a large number of prisoners - mostly
Hessians, taken at the
battle of Saratoga the year before - were marched through the town on their way to
Fishkill Landing, where they crossed the
Hudson. It is said that some of the Hessian soldiers solicited the people to aid them in escaping; a few succeeded, and remained in this country. Jacob Bockee, a captain in the company in Col. Willet's Regiment, was a member of the Assembly in 1795 and 1797, where he introduced a bill for the abolition of
slavery in the state. Most of the slaves in the town were
manumitted in the manner and under the conditions prescribed by law. Owners were not permitted to make free and cast off any slave who was not capable of providing for himself. In 1824, three years before the institutional
abolition of slavery in the state, there were 32 slaves in Amenia. ==Geography==