Taylor Sherman

Taylor Sherman
Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Norwalk
In office
May 1794 – October 1794[1][2]
Preceded byThomas Belden,
Samuel Comstock
Succeeded byEliphalet Lockwood,
Samuel Cook Silliman
In office
May 1795 – October 1795[1][2]
Serving with Eliphalet Lockwood
Preceded byEliphalet Lockwood,
Samuel Cook Silliman
Succeeded byEliphalet Lockwood,
Samuel Comstock
In office
May 1796 – October 1796[1][2]
Serving with Eliphalet Lockwood
Preceded byEliphalet Lockwood,
Samuel Comstock
Succeeded byEliphalet Lockwood,
Matthew Marvin
Personal details
Born(1758-09-05)September 5, 1758[3][4]
Woodbury, Connecticut[4]
DiedMay 14, 1815(1815-05-14) (aged 56)[4]
Norwalk, Connecticut
Resting placeMill Hill Burying Ground,
Norwalk, Connecticut[3]
Spouse(s)Elizabeth Stoddard
(m. 1787)[3][4]
ChildrenCharles Robert Sherman, Daniel, Elizabeth[3]
Residence(s)89 Main Street,
Norwalk, Connecticut
Occupationlawyer, judge

Taylor Sherman (September 5, 1758 – May 14, 1815) was a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from Norwalk in the sessions of May 1794, May 1795, and May 1796.

Sherman was born in Woodbury, Connecticut[4] on September 5, 1758.[3] He was the son of Judge Daniel Sherman.[4] and Mindwell Taylor Sherman.

He married Elizabeth Stoddard of Woodbury in 1787.[4] After he was admitted to the bar, he moved to Norwalk, where he practiced law.[4]

He was a judge of Probate for the District of Norwalk from the creation of the district in 1802 until his death.[4]

He was appointed collector of Internal Revenue for the Second District of Connecticut by James Madison.[4]

He was appointed Agent to survey land in the Connecticut Western Reserve consisting of a half million acres which was granted to those who suffered losses from the Battle of Norwalk.[4] He acquired a large tract of this land in Sherman township, Huron County, Ohio, which bears his name.[4][5]

He was the father of Charles Robert Sherman, justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio, and grandfather of General William Tecumseh Sherman.[4]

The Taylor Sherman House was located at 89 Main Street in Norwalk, and the house's design was studied for the Historic American Buildings Survey by the Library of Congress.

  1. ^ a b c Roll of General Assembly Members
  2. ^ a b c An historical discourse in commemoration of the two-hundredth anniversary of the Settlement of Norwalk
  3. ^ a b c d e "Judge Taylor Sherman (1760-1815) - Find a Grave". Find a Grave.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Taylor Sherman
  5. ^ Baughman, Abraham J. (1909). History of Huron County, Ohio: Its Progress and Development, with Biographical Sketches of Prominent Citizens of the County, Volume 1. S. J. Clarke Publishing Company. p. 268.