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(BENEDICT ARNOLD III) Famous Traitor Benedict Arnold’s Father!

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:500.00 USD Estimated At:800.00 - 1,000.00 USD
(BENEDICT ARNOLD III) Famous Traitor Benedict Arnold’s Father!
Autographs
1746 Legal Document Involving Benedict Arnold’s Father!
(BENEDICT ARNOLD III) (1683-1761). Father of American Revolutionary War General and Famous Traitor, Benedict Arnold V.
June 30, 1746-Dated, Manuscript Document, measuring 3.25” x 4.5” from the Court of Justice Isaac Huntington of Norwich, Connecticut, regarding a Lawsuit between BENEDICT ARNOLD and Daniel Woodworth, Choice Extremely Fine. Here, the decision of Judge Huntington is boldly and well written, in deep brown ink upon period laid paper, that is fresh clean and choice in quality. It bears the name “Benedict Arnold” being written twice on this court document itself, and upon the reverse docket. Stated by a prior owner to have a pedigree to the papers of Justice Jabez Huntington.

The BENEDICT ARNOLD in this case was the father of the infamous American military hero, and later Traitor of the American Revolution, GENERAL BENEDICT ARNOLD, himself a native of Norwich, Ct. A rare document, in superb quality, that directly involves Benedict Arnold III (the Traitor’s father).
The Traitor, American Revolutionary War General Benedict Arnold, was born the last of six children to Benedict Arnold III (1683–1761) and Hannah Waterman King in Norwich, Connecticut, in 1741. He was named after his great-grandfather Benedict Arnold, an early governor of the Colony of Rhode Island, and his brother Benedict IV, who died in infancy before Benedict Arnold V was born. Only Benedict and his sister Hannah survived to adulthood; his other siblings succumbed to yellow fever in childhood. Through his maternal grandmother, Arnold was a descendant of John Lothropp, an ancestor of at least four U.S. presidents.

The Arnold family was well off until the future general's father made several bad business deals that plunged the family into debt, and became an alcoholic, forcing his son to withdraw from school at 14 because the family could not afford the expense.

His father's alcoholism and ill-health prevented him from training Arnold in the family mercantile business, but his mother's family connections secured an apprenticeship for Arnold with two of her cousins, brothers Daniel and Joshua Lathrop, who operated a successful apothecary and general merchandise trade in Norwich.