Career
He arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the summer of 1635 after sailing from London on May 21, 1635 aboard the ship Mathew. He was one of the founders of Hartford, Connecticut. His home lot in Hartford in 1639 was on the west side of the “road from Seth Grant’s to Centinel Hill” which is now Trumbull Street.
The location of his lot is evidence that he was with Thomas Hooker’s party in 1636.
He is also listed as an inhabitant who had a right to undivided lands. He received 36 acres of land in the division of upland in East Hartford in 1666 that he sold to William Pitkin and William Goodwin.
He sold his share of land received in 1674 on the west side of Hartford to Thomas and Samuel Olcott. William Parker’s six acres were sold in 1684 to Joseph Collier.
William Parker moved from Hartford to Saybrook in 1649.
He was a large landholder and also had land in Hebron that he had acquired from Joshua, the third son of Uncas. Edward Johnson in his work published in 1654 wrote of him: “Mr. William Parker, a man of pregnant understanding, and very usefull in his place.”
William Parker was Deputy to the General Court at the special session of 1652, at the May sessions in 1679 and 1681, and at the October sessions of 1678, 1679, 1680, and 1681.