Eliphalet Lockwood
Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Norwalk
In office
May 1790  May 1792[1]
Preceded bySamuel Cook Silliman,
Thomas Belden
Succeeded bySamuel Cook Silliman
In office
October 1794  May 1797[1]
Preceded byThomas Belden,
Samuel Comstock
Succeeded byMatthew Marvin
John Cannon
Personal details
Born1741
Norwalk, Connecticut
Died1814
Norwalk, Connecticut
SpouseSusannah St. John
ChildrenJoseph
Residence(s)Norwalk, Connecticut
Military service
RankCaptain
UnitFirst Company of Connecticut's Seventh Regiment

Commissary of Connecticut's Fifth Regiment

Coast Guard
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War

Eliphalet Lockwood (1741 – 1814) was a nine-term member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from Norwalk in the sessions of May and October 1790, May and October 1791, October 1794, May and October 1795, May and October 1796. He served as a captain in the Connecticut Militia during the American Revolutionary War.

He was the son of Deacon Peter Lockwood and Mary Hawley.

At the beginning of the war, on July 12, 1775, Lockwood enlisted in the First Company of Colonel Charles Webb's Seventh Connecticut Regiment, and was discharged December 24, 1775.

In 1778, he was assistant commissary of issues of the Fifth Regiment.

On July 21, 1778, he gave his bond for $5000 as security to Henry Laurens, Esq., President of the Continental Congress or his successor in office, for faithfully executing the office and trust of an Assistant Commissary of Issues in the American Army.

Lockwood organized the first voluntary fire department in Norwalk.[2] His home was one of those lost when the British burned Norwalk.[2]

In 1780 captain of the coast guards.

References

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