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  1. The Bankside Farmers were a group of five men who established themselves along the Long Island Sound south of Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1648. The area is now known as Greens Farms, a section of Westport, Connecticut .

  2. Bankside Farmers, 1648-1711. When Connecticut was a British colony, the area east of the Saugatuck River to the border of Fairfield and west of the Mill River was known as Green’s Farms. Thomas Newton, John Green and Henry Gray were given a land grant to settle the area in 1648 with Daniel Frost and Francis Andrews joining them within a few ...

  3. Mar 2, 2020 · The group later became known as the Bankside Farmers. In subsequent generations, others like Joshua Jennings possessed landholdings encompassing a large parcel of Green’s Farms. Settlers cultivated the rich soil of Greens Farms initially for their own subsistence and later for commercial profit.

  4. By the end of 1648, these five pioneers – who came to be known as the Bankside Farmers – had been officially sanctioned by Fairfield to “sit down and inhabit at Machamux”, creating the first white settlement in the Green’s Farms area.

  5. May 19, 2024 · The Bankside Farmers. The first three farmers were Thomas Newton, Henry Gray, and John Green. They were soon followed by Daniel Frost, who occupied land now called Frost Point, and Francis Andrews, who lived near what is now called Sherwood Island.

  6. For nearly two hundred years following the settlement of Greens Farms by the Bankside Farmers in 1648, the area that would eventually become Westport was divided by the Saugatuck River. To the east of the waterway, it was part of Fairfield and to the west it was part of Norwalk.

  7. Mar 3, 2020 · In 1708, the Bankside farmers, Thomas Newton, John Green, Henry Gray, Daniel Frost and Francis Andrews started their petition to form the West Parish of Fairfield, which is the modern day Green’s Farm Church in Westport.