findagrave.com claims he died in Woodbury, Conn. Also has his birth year as 1678 but calculations from grave marker indicates 1677.
Graduation: 1697, Harvard College, A.B.
Graduation: 1715, Harvard College, A.M.
Ordination: 27 May 1702, pastor of 1st Church of Christ in Woodbury, CT (findagrave.com)

His son Eliakim's findagrave.com page states Anthony's second and third wives were Mary and Hannah Sherman, but Anthony's page states that in addition to Prudence he was married to a Thankful Stoddard (EAD)

Reverend Anthony Stoddard passed after two days of illness on September 6, 1760.
It would be hard to summarize the life of so great a man as Reverend Anthony Stoddard better than that provided by Reverend Anson Atwood at the Woodbury bicentennial celebration on July 5, 1859, when he said the following words about Reverend Anthony Stoddard in a speech, titled, "The Early Clergy of ancient Woodbury:"

“A part of his name ROMAN [Anthony], but all the rest of him was STODDARD, from the crown of his head to the sole of his foot; and he had a brave, strong Christian heart, that beat full and clear, as it sent out its pulsations through all the channels of the duties of his sacred office. Who was his father? Whence came he? We have the answer. He had an enviable descent, from one of the ablest divines New England had raised on her soil. Solomon Stoddard, of Northampton, Mass., was that father, who had few equals, if any superior, in the ministry of that day. He was of a liberal heart, and he gave to the cause of Christ some large donations. He had a daughter, Esther, much beloved, and he gave her away to be the wife of Rev. Timothy Edwards of East Windsor, Conn., and the mother of the immortal Jonathan Edwards. He had a son, Anthony, equally beloved, and he gave him to Ancient Woodbury. This son honored his parentage. His intellect and furniture of mind were of high order; and one would think from the amount of labor he performed, his mind must have been kept from rusting. He must have had almost a giant’s strength, to have, in no unimportant sense, discharged the duties of three professions: that of a pastor, a physician, and a counsellor or judge, while it is said, he neglected no part of his ministry. It was from a necessity of the times that all these labors devolved upon him. It must be remembered, that education was almost with and in the hands of ministers in the early infancy of our colonial State. Hence, they had to do many things that belonged to other professions. To teach school–masters, and to fit them for their work, draw deeds, wills, keep records, and even be judges, in some cases of probate. Many of these burdensome duties pressed upon Stoddard, but he met them cheerfully, manfully devoting soul and body and every energy of his being to the advancement of the best interests of his flock, temporal and eternal, and not without blessed results. A long, prosperous and happy ministry of sixty years crowned his labors. The divine approbations set its seal to his ministry, in permitting him to see almost constant additions to the church through the whole period of his ministry, numbering in all four hundred and seventy–four persons."

“At an advanced age, having served his generation fully, he came to the grave, “as a shock of
corn fully ripe,” and his record is high.”