Missy Wolfe, author of The Hidden History of Colonial Greenwich, will speak at the Retired Men’s Association on August 29 at 11 a.m. sharp. The talk, at First Presbyterian Church on Lafayette Place, is free and open to the public.

Missy Wolfe author of books on Greenwich History

Photo from Greenwich Retired Men's Association website

Missy Wolfe

an announcement from the Greenwich Retired Men’s Association

Greenwich, as it existed in the seventeenth century, is a lost world. There were tythingmen and meeting warners here, wild horse hunters, water works makers, cow keepers, townsmen, pounders and planters.

Facing an undeveloped wilderness, Old Greenwich townsmen created the entire town’s original template. They designed six great common fields along our coastline and created our first, 1600s complete town masterplan.

They also struggled to newly balance religious and civic authorities, private and common interests and to address financial inequities on each side of the Mianus.

The first “strivers” here often found it more challenging to please their own than it was to please their God. They fashioned an idealized, yet still imperfect new society they proudly called the Greenwich Plantation.

— You can see videos of past Greenwich Retired Men’s Association talks

Wolfe details the strategies and setbacks of creating Greenwich in colonial America’s First Period.

This is the third visit of Missy Wolfe to the RMA.

A Greenwich native, she is a lifelong student of history, particularly Connecticut in the 1600s. Her research discovered that Greenwich was actually a Dutch territory for its first 16 years and the launch point of the largest Indian massacre in the northeast.

Her new book details the creation of Greenwich, the product of her comprehensive transcriptions of the town’s extensive 1600s archives. She received her MBA from Columbia University and, after an early career in advertising and raising a family, she pursued her interests in history and design with further studies.

Her first book about the founding of Greenwich, Insubordinate Spirit,won the Washington Irving Medal for literary excellence.

The talk begins at 11 a.m. at First Presbyterian Church, Lafayette Pl, Greenwich, and is free and open to the public.

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