History & Culture · Capital Region
Hartford Started as a Patent Cut Into Farm Lots
Hartford's Washington County story begins with an old patent, war-service land, survey lots, and a town name settled in 1793.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Hartford’s origin story starts before the town name settles down. The land sat inside old Charlotte County, which became Washington County after the American Revolution. Then the Provincial Patent entered the story.
That patent covered 26,000 acres and was granted on May 2, 1764, to 26 commissioned officers of the New York Infantry who had served in the French and Indian War. Archibald Campbell directed the survey into 104 lots of about 300 acres each. That detail makes Hartford easier to picture: not as an accidental rural shape, but as land cut into service-reward lots before town government took its later form.
The patent was included in Westfield and covered more than present Hartford. The town history ties it to present Putnam, Fort Ann, Dresden, part of Kingsbury, and Hartford itself. By 1793, the patent had enough inhabitants to be set off from Westfield, and the Town of Hartford received its name on March 12 of that year.
So Hartford’s local texture is not loud. It is in the way a Washington County town still carries a patent map, old county names, military service, and survey lines under the quiet modern road pattern.