Fitch was born at Norwalk, Connecticut, the son of Thomas Fitch III (1675–1731), an investor in the Equivalent Lands and his first wife, Sarah Boardman Fitch.[1] He graduated from Yale in 1721 then went on to obtain a master's degree.[2] Fitch married Hannah Hall in 1724. The couple had several children, the first Thomas Fitch, V, was born in 1725. Thomas Fitch IV served as Norwalk Justice of the Peace, Deputy and Assistant to the Connecticut General Assembly, Deputy Governor, Chief Justice (to the Connecticut Superior Court), and finally Governor of the Colony of Connecticut.
The Fitch house was partially burned during the "burning of Norwalk" raid carried out by William Tryon and British troops in July 1779 and only one wing of the house was left standing. Fitch descendants lived in the rebuilt house until 1945. In 1956 the Fitch house was relocated to make way for the construction of the Connecticut Turnpike. It stands today as part of the Mill Hill Historic Park in Norwalk next to the Green.[1]
Legacy
Fitch Street in East Norwalk is named in honor of the Fitch family including: Thomas Fitch I (1612–1704), a town founder; Thomas IV, the governor; and Thomas Fitch V, soldier and patriot.[3]
His son, Colonel Thomas Fitch, V (1725–1795), served with British colonial troops in the French and Indian Wars; primarily in upstate New York, near Fort Crailo. After that conflict Thomas, V returned to Norwalk and was a prominent resident during and after the American Revolution. He served as a town councilman and helped with the reconstruction efforts after the burning of Norwalk in 1779.[4]
The former Thomas Fitch school along Strawberry Hill Avenue in Norwalk was named in his honor, as well as to honor the other Thomas Fitches who contributed to the town.[5]
^Franklin Bowditch Dexter, Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College: with Annals of the College History, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1885 [at 1:247-51].
Donald Lines Jacobus, " The Mother of Governor Thomas Fitch " The American Genealogist, Vol. 17, No. 2 (October 1940) [at 17:113-14].
Martin C. Babicz, For Empire, Colony and Self-Interest: Thomas Fitch and Connecticut Colonial Politics, University of Colorado at Boulder, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2009.