Transfer of two pieces of land lying west of Pequabuck Meadow: (1) half an acre and (2) six acres to another Tunxis member for thirteen pounds old tenor
Geography, Land, & the Environment, Culture & Society, Politics, Power, & Sovereignty, Arts & Abstract Ideas
Summary
Transfer of all the land Hatchet Towsey owns on the west side of the meadow (which lies undivided with the rest of the Tunxis proprietors) to his son, John
Transfer from a Tunxis at Stockbridge to two Tunxis women at Farmington of a one-acre parcel with a dwelling house located west of Pequabuck Meadow for fifteen pounds
Transfer from a Farmington settler to a Tunxis/Quinnipiac man of Farmington of five acres, two roods, and thirty perches of land at Fort Hill in the Farmington Common Field for ten pounds, four shillings, and nine pence
Transfer to a Quinnipiac man at Farmington and to the East Haven Quinnipiac twenty-one acres in the 49th Lot in the Southeast Division for twelve pounds
Transfer by the Tunxis of 36 acres and one rood in the 8th Allotment in the Second Division to a Farmington colonist for 18 pounds, 2 shillings, and 6 pence
Transfer by a Tunxis man to a Farmington colonist of all his interest in the Tunxis reservation and any other tribal land he may have interest in for four pounds, ten shillings