A 1764 property deed from Godfrey Malbone, Sr., of Newport, RI, lists a woman named Dinah and 26 other women, men, and children as among the “stock” he was giving to his sons, Godfrey Malbone Jr. and Evan Malbone. Dinah and the others would move to the Malbones’ large farm in Brooklyn, CT, where they remained the property of Godfrey Malbone, Jr. Nearly three decades later, in 1792, another Dinah, likely the daughter of the Dinah named in the 1764 deed, was married at Brooklyn’s Old Trinity Church to Cuff Fellows, an enslaved man from Woodstock. It is not clear whether Dinah was enslaved or free at the time of the wedding, but records suggest that at some point she was enslaved to “Mrs. Malbone.” The church where Dinah and Cuff were married was built in the early 1770s at Godfrey Malbone Jr’s behest, with labor provided by those he enslaved. After her marriage to Cuff Fellows, Dinah moved away from Brooklyn, joining her husband in Woodstock, where he would gain his freedom in 1798 and they would raise their children. In 1827, James Arnold leased a life-long indenture for one-third an acre of land where Cuff and Dinah Fellows built a house. The cost was one dollar a year. Cuff Fellows died in 1848 . It is not clear when Dinah Fellows died.