previous next

6% of the text is displayed below. If you wish to view the entire text, please click here

[7]

March 19, 1627-8.

AS the shortest sketch of the life and labors of an individual is incomplete without some mention of his origin and ancestry; as the life of the child is intimately connected with that of the parent until the former arrives at his majority; so our account of the town of Waltham must be prefaced by some statements concerning its parent town, Watertown,—which, in the earliest days, embraced not only the territory included within the limits of the present town of that name, but also Waltham, Weston, and parts of Cambridge, Concord, and Lincoln,—with a reference also to the earlier New England settlements.

The history of these settlements, for the first decade after the landing of the Pilgrims on Cape Cod on the afternoon of the 11th of November, 1620, is a history of struggles and privations unparalleled in severity and extent, and ‘indured with a wonderfull patience.’ But notwithstanding the discouragements that beset the seekers for religious liberty while laying the foundations of their settlement at Plymouth, a more ambitious class were burning with zeal to found a commonwealth where political as well as religious liberty would be secured.

The fishing stations previously established by the merely speculative Adventurers for money-making purposes had proved failures; numbers of persons throughout the English realm were ‘disaffected to the rulers in church and state;’ and the time had come to take steps to secure a domain for a colony. On March 19, 1627-8, John Endicott and five associates, the new Dorchester Company, obtained from the Council for New England ‘a grant of lands extending from the Atlantic to the Western Ocean, and in width from a line running three miles north of the river Merrimac to a [10] line three miles south of the Charles.’ The former grant of the New England coast to the Earl of Warwick and others, six years before, was by them resigned to this company. Mr. Matthew Cradock, ‘a prudent and wealthy citizen of London,’ was the first governor chosen by the company, and ‘sworn in chancery’ March 23, 1628-9, Mr. Thomas Goffe being chosen and sworn deputy governor at the same time.

June 20th Endicott, commissioned as agent of the patentees, sailed with a small party to take charge for the new company of the old station at Naumkeag.1 Those on the spot disputed their claim at first, but the matter was amicably adjusted ‘by the prudent moderation of Mr. Conant, agent before for the Dorchester merchants,’2 and the place took the name of ‘Salem,’ the Hebrew name for peaceful.3 All told their numbers were ‘not much above fifty or sixty persons.’ From the Charlestown records it appears that an exploring party from this small colony began a settlement at Mishawum, now Charlestown, before the winter of this year set in.

The new Dorchester Company had been successful in procuring the grant of lands, but it had no corporate powers, therefore the Company was much enlarged, solicited and obtained a royal charter, March 4, 1628-9, creating the corporation known as the ‘Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England.’ ‘But forasmuch as the publick affairs of the intended colony were like to be but ill managed at so great a distance, as was between the Massachusetts and London,’4 this company immediately organized a government for its colony,—placing their agent of the year before, Endicott, at the head as governor under the company, with seven persons to act as a council to him in connection with two additional to be chosen by the old planters,—prepared six vessels, and obtained a license from the Lord Treasurer for the embarkation of ‘eighty women and maids, twenty-fix [11] children, and three hundred men,5 with victuals, arms, and tools, and necessary apparel,’ and ‘one hundred and forty head of cattle and forty goats.’

Francis Higginson and Samuel Skelton were the two most prominent and influential of the ‘godly ministers’ provided by a committee of the company for this band of colonists.

Three of the vessels set sail in the early part of May, and arrived at Salem in June, the rest of the fleet soon following. Of their arrival Higginson wrote: ‘When we came first to Neihum-kek,6 we found about halfe a score Houses, and a faire House newly built for the Gouernour, we found also abundance of Corne planted by them, verie good and well likeing. And we brought with us about two hundred Passengers and Planters more, which by common consent of the old Planters were all combined together into one Body politicke, under the same Gouernour. There are in all of us both old and new Planters about three hundred, whereof two hundred of them are settled at Neihum-kek, now called Salem; and the rest have Planted themselves at Masathulets7 Bay, beginning to build a Towne there which we doe call Cherton, or Charles Towne.8 We that are Settled at Salem make what hast we can to build Houses, so that within a short time we shall have a faire Towne.’

On July 20th, a day set apart for fasting and prayer, Higginson and Skelton were respectively chosen teacher and pastor, and both were ordained with ‘simple solemnity,’ and on August 6th thirty persons assented to ‘a Confession of Faith and Church Covenant according to Scripture,’ drawn up by Mr. Higginson, of which each of the thirty received a copy. Governor Bradford of Plymouth had been invited to witness the organization of the church, and he, ‘and some others with him, coming by Sea, hindred by cross winds [12] that they could not be there at the beginning of the day, came into the Assembly afterward, and gave them the right hand of fellowship, wishing all prosperity and a blessed success unto such good beginnings.’9 Thus was organized the first church in the colony of Massachusetts Bay.

The next important action taken by the Massachusetts Company was to provide for transferring the charter and government of the company to New England, and this was determined upon August 29, 1629. The old officers resigned; and, on October 20th, John Winthrop was chosen Governor, with John Humphrey for Deputy-Governor, and eighteen others for Assistants. Humphrey's departure was delayed, and, March 23, 1629-30, at a Court kept aboard the Arbella, at South-Hampton, on the eve of embarkation, his place was supplied by Thomas Dudley, and several Assistants were chosen, in place of those who were not yet ready to sail to the new colony.

Active measures were taken at once to transport to the colony large accessions of men, women, children and supplies. Seventeen vessels in all, bearing about a thousand passengers, some from the West of England, but the larger part from the vicinity of London, came over before the winter of 1630. The expense of this equipment and transportation was £ 21,200.10

John Winthrop, writing to his wife ‘From aboard the Arbella,11 riding at the Cowes, March 28, 1630,’ says: ‘We have only four ships ready, and some two or three Hollanders go along with us. [13] The rest of the fleet (being seven ships) will not be ready this sennight.... We are, in all our eleven ships, about seven hundred persons, passengers, and two hundred and forty cows, and about sixty horses. The ship which went from Plimouth12 carried about one hundred and forty persons.’

On the 12th of June the Arbella arrived at Salem, the Jewell on the 13th, and several other vessels during the first week in July. On the 8th of July Winthrop records in his journal: ‘We kept a day of thanksgiving in all the plantations,’ ‘all the whole fleet being safely come to their port.’

The Mary & John, of 400 tons, Capt. Squeb, master, sailed from Plymouth March 20, 1629-30, bearing the assistants Edward Rossiter and Roger Ludlow, and about 140 others, ‘godly families and people from Devonshire, Dorsetshire, and Somersetshire,’ accompanied by two ministers, Revs. John Warham and John Maverick. On the 30th of May, ‘when we came to

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.

An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.

hide Places (automatically extracted)

View a map of the most frequently mentioned places in this document.

Sort places alphabetically, as they appear on the page, by frequency
Click on a place to search for it in this document.
Watertown (Massachusetts, United States) (105)
Waltham (Massachusetts, United States) (22)
New England (United States) (22)
Charles (Massachusetts, United States) (21)
Salem (Massachusetts, United States) (15)
Dorchester, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (14)
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (11)
Accomack (Massachusetts, United States) (11)
Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (10)
Concord (Massachusetts, United States) (9)
Sudbury, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (6)
Roxbury, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (6)
Lancaster, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (6)
Carmans River (New York, United States) (6)
Nantasket (Massachusetts, United States) (5)
Mount Feake (Massachusetts, United States) (5)
Hartford (Connecticut, United States) (5)
Weathersfield (Vermont, United States) (4)
Dutch (West Virginia, United States) (4)
Weston (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Meeting House (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Massachusetts Bay (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Lynn (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Long Island City (New York, United States) (3)
Groton (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Charlestown, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Cape Cod (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
Block Island (Missouri, United States) (3)
Windsor, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (2)
Windsor (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Suffolk, Va. (Virginia, United States) (2)
Providence, R. I. (Rhode Island, United States) (2)
Northfield, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Mohegan (Connecticut, United States) (2)
Masters Brook (Maine, United States) (2)
Deerfield, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Dedham (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Chester Brook (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Castle Island (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Yorkshire (United Kingdom) (1)
Swansea (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Suffolk County (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Stamford, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (1)
Springfield (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Southampton (United Kingdom) (1)
South Hampton (New Jersey, United States) (1)
Somerset (United Kingdom) (1)
Sherman Pond (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Scotia (1)
School House (Pennsylvania, United States) (1)
Saybrook, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (1)
Puritan (Ohio, United States) (1)
Point Allerton (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Pocomoke City (Maryland, United States) (1)
Plymouth, Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (1)
Piscataway (Maryland, United States) (1)
North River (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Norfolk (Virginia, United States) (1)
Noddle's Island (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Natick (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Narragansett Bay (Rhode Island, United States) (1)
Narragansett (Rhode Island, United States) (1)
Nahant (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Mount Auburn (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Milford, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Milford, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (1)
Middlesex Village (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Medford (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Ipswich, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Holland (Netherlands) (1)
Halifax (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
East Lexington (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Dorset (United Kingdom) (1)
Devonshire (United Kingdom) (1)
Cowes (United Kingdom) (1)
Chelmsford, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Charlestowne (South Carolina, United States) (1)
Canada (Canada) (1)
Brookline (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Brookfield, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Brighton, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Boston Harbor (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Boston Bay (Wisconsin, United States) (1)
Bermuda (1)
Amsterdam (New York, United States) (1)
Agawam (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
hide People (automatically extracted)
Sort people alphabetically, as they appear on the page, by frequency
Click on a person to search for him/her in this document.
John Winthrop (23)
George Phillips (21)
John Oldham (18)
Bond (16)
Adam Winthrop (15)
Richard Saltonstall (14)
Pequot Indians (13)
John Endicott (12)
Samuel Angier (12)
Zechariah Weston (11)
Charles Towne (10)
Richard Browne (10)
John Sherman (9)
Palfrey (9)
ZZZ (8)
Thomas Dudley (8)
John Mason (7)
Hubbard (7)
Waterton (6)
John Knowles (6)
English (6)
John Bailey (6)
Wilson (5)
Josselyn (5)
George E. Johnson (5)
Francis Higginson (5)
William Freeman (5)
J. W. Colby (5)
Roger Clap (5)
Henry Bright (5)
Arbella (5)
John Underhill (4)
F. M. Stone (4)
Hugh Mason (4)
Thomas Mahew (4)
Roger Ludlow (4)
Henry Gibbs (4)
John Eliot (4)
Alden Bradford (4)
Savage (3)
Rec (3)
Plaine (3)
Patrick (3)
Thomas Mayhew (3)
John Lyford (3)
Lincoln (3)
William Jenison (3)
Hooker (3)
John Holland (3)
Dedham (3)
Matthew Cradock (3)
Jesus Christ (3)
Aaron Wood (2)
Samuel Wadsworth (2)
Thomas (2)
Squeb (2)
John Smith (2)
Samuel Skelton (2)
Sewall (2)
Pynchon (2)
Thomas Morton (2)
Joseph Mixer (2)
Mather (2)
Thomas Livermore (2)
Jenings (2)
Ireland (2)
John Humphrey (2)
Hist (2)
Joshua Hewes (2)
Tim Hawkins (2)
Robert Harrington (2)
George Harrington (2)
Henry Green (2)
Robert Gorges (2)
Joseph Garfield (2)
John Gallup (2)
Thomas Flagg (2)
C. H. Fiske (2)
Robert Feake (2)
Courts (2)
John Chinery (2)
Leonard Chester (2)
Cattell (2)
Thomas Carlyle (2)
Abraham Brown (2)
Richard Beers (2)
Thomas Bailey (2)
Adam (2)
Wollaston (1)
Winter (1)
Edward Winslow (1)
John Windam (1)
Warham Williams (1)
Roger Williams (1)
John Williams (1)
Willard (1)
Joseph Whitney (1)
Steven White (1)
John Whettny (1)
John Wenthorp (1)
Warwick (1)
Indian Wars (1)
Danill Warren (1)
John Warham (1)
Waltham (1)
Theophilus W. Walker (1)
Thomas Walford (1)
Joseph Waight (1)
Vineyard (1)
Uncas (1)
Gwalter Twilly (1)
Nathaniel Turner (1)
Tuck (1)
Trumbull (1)
Tim (1)
Joseph Tayntor (1)
William Stoughton (1)
Israel Stoughton (1)
Southcot (1)
Joseph Smith (1)
Wickham Skeith (1)
Sharpe (1)
Sele (1)
Daniel Sawin (1)
Nathanall Sanger (1)
Gilbert Saltonstall (1)
Charles Ryuer (1)
Edward Rossiter (1)
Reg (1)
River Quonehtacut (1)
N. E. Prospect (1)
Pond (1)
Jonathan Philips (1)
William Penn (1)
Brian Pembleton (1)
William Peirce (1)
John Parkhurst (1)
Nowell (1)
Norton (1)
Norcross (1)
Noah (1)
Henry Nichols (1)
Newbury (1)
Nassau (1)
George Munnings (1)
Nathaniel Morton (1)
Morse (1)
John Monoco (1)
Milton (1)
John Maverick (1)
Martin (1)
Lothrop (1)
Nathaniel Livermore (1)
Lancaster (1)
T. Starr King (1)
Oneeyed John (1)
Jewell (1)
William Jennifon (1)
Irish (1)
Ile (1)
Hutchinson (1)
Hull (1)
Hudson (1)
House (1)
Thomas Hill (1)
George Herrington (1)
John Haynes (1)
William Hagar (1)
Governour (1)
John Gorges (1)
Christopher Gore (1)
Thomas Goffe (1)
Edward Garfield (1)
Richard Gale (1)
John Gale (1)
Abraham Gale (1)
Frost (1)
Convers Francis (1)
James Forrett (1)
William Flagg (1)
Sarah Fiske (1)
Caroline Fiske (1)
Essex (1)
S. Eire (1)
John Edye (1)
Edgarton (1)
Nathaniel Eaton (1)
Easterbrook (1)
John Dunton (1)
Richard Dummer (1)
Jeremie Dummer (1)
John Dorrell (1)
Dom (1)
George Dill (1)
Richard Davenport (1)
Enfign Davenport (1)
Corne (1)
Conant (1)
Coll (1)
John Clark (1)
Jacob Bullard (1)
Bull (1)
Brooke (1)
Simon Bradstul (1)
Nathaniel Biscoe (1)
John Bigulah (1)
Richard Bellingham (1)
Bastable (1)
Barry (1)
John Barnard (1)
Anna (1)
John Adams (1)
hide Dates (automatically extracted)
Sort dates alphabetically, as they appear on the page, by frequency
Click on a date to search for it in this document.
1634 AD (7)
1630 AD (6)
1644 AD (5)
1637 AD (5)
1635 AD (5)
1663 AD (4)
1632 AD (4)
September (4)
July (4)
1675 AD (3)
1665 AD (3)
1650 AD (3)
1636 AD (3)
May 18th, 1631 AD (3)
December (3)
1860 AD (2)
1815 AD (2)
1719 AD (2)
1703 AD (2)
1697 AD (2)
1692 AD (2)
April, 1690 AD (2)
October 6th, 1686 AD (2)
1686 AD (2)
1680 AD (2)
1657 AD (2)
1653 AD (2)
1647 AD (2)
1643 AD (2)
1642 AD (2)
1641 AD (2)
1640 AD (2)
July 17th, 1638 AD (2)
May 6th, 1635 AD (2)
May 14th, 1634 AD (2)
November 5th, 1633 AD (2)
1633 AD (2)
March 4th, 1628 AD (2)
March 19th, 1627 AD (2)
October (2)
August 30th (2)
August (2)
June (2)
March (2)
13th (2)
July 4th, 1876 AD (1)
1858 AD (1)
1856 AD (1)
1830 AD (1)
1827 AD (1)
1825 AD (1)
May 8th, 1761 AD (1)
1756 AD (1)
January 18th, 1737 AD (1)
1733 AD (1)
December 10th, 1723 AD (1)
June 11th, 1723 AD (1)
1722 AD (1)
1721 AD (1)
November 19th, 1720 AD (1)
1720 AD (1)
October 3rd, 1718 AD (1)
January 21st, 1718 AD (1)
January 8th, 1718 AD (1)
1718 AD (1)
1716 AD (1)
May 13th, 1715 AD (1)
January 1st, 1712 AD (1)
1699 AD (1)
December 12th, 1697 AD (1)
October 6th, 1697 AD (1)
June 27th, 1697 AD (1)
June 20th, 1697 AD (1)
May 25th, 1697 AD (1)
August 28th, 1696 AD (1)
February 4th, 1696 AD (1)
October 2nd, 1694 AD (1)
April 17th, 1694 AD (1)
March 7th, 1694 AD (1)
January, 1693 AD (1)
1693 AD (1)
October 14th, 1690 AD (1)
1690 AD (1)
January 21st, 1688 AD (1)
November 2nd, 1687 AD (1)
September 27th, 1687 AD (1)
1687 AD (1)
August 8th, 1685 AD (1)
April 10th, 1685 AD (1)
December 24th, 1684 AD (1)
November, 1684 AD (1)
November, 1680 AD (1)
1678 AD (1)
January 22nd, 1677 AD (1)
1677 AD (1)
September 26th, 1676 AD (1)
June, 1676 AD (1)
December 19th, 1675 AD (1)
December, 1675 AD (1)
August 22nd, 1675 AD (1)
March 2nd, 1675 AD (1)
February, 1675 AD (1)
1673 AD (1)
1672 AD (1)
1669 AD (1)
July, 1665 AD (1)
March 17th, 1654 AD (1)
May, 1653 AD (1)
October 22nd, 1652 AD (1)
May 5th, 1652 AD (1)
October 16th, 1651 AD (1)
May, 1651 AD (1)
1651 AD (1)
November 8th, 1647 AD (1)
November 4th, 1646 AD (1)
October 28th, 1646 AD (1)
1646 AD (1)
1645 AD (1)
July 1st, 1644 AD (1)
December, 1643 AD (1)
July 5th, 1642 AD (1)
September, 1641 AD (1)
June 2nd, 1641 AD (1)
December 9th, 1640 AD (1)
November 8th, 1640 AD (1)
December 31st, 1639 AD (1)
December 21st, 1639 AD (1)
December, 1639 AD (1)
November 27th, 1639 AD (1)
May 22nd, 1639 AD (1)
1639 AD (1)
December 10th, 1638 AD (1)
October 14th, 1638 AD (1)
September 6th, 1638 AD (1)
September, 1638 AD (1)
June 8th, 1638 AD (1)
April 23rd, 1638 AD (1)
March 12th, 1638 AD (1)
March, 1638 AD (1)
1638 AD (1)
November, 1637 AD (1)
June 26th, 1637 AD (1)
May 10th, 1637 AD (1)
December, 1636 AD (1)
July 25th, 1636 AD (1)
July 20th, 1636 AD (1)
June, 1636 AD (1)
March 16th, 1636 AD (1)
March 9th, 1636 AD (1)
February 28th, 1636 AD (1)
January, 1636 AD (1)
November 26th, 1635 AD (1)
October 15th, 1635 AD (1)
October 12th, 1635 AD (1)
September 3rd, 1635 AD (1)
August 7th, 1635 AD (1)
July 30th, 1635 AD (1)
July, 1635 AD (1)
May 29th, 1635 AD (1)
February 10th, 1635 AD (1)
November 5th, 1634 AD (1)
November, 1634 AD (1)
September, 1634 AD (1)
April 1st, 1634 AD (1)
April, 1634 AD (1)
March 14th, 1634 AD (1)
March 4th, 1634 AD (1)
March, 1634 AD (1)
January 3rd, 1634 AD (1)
November, 1633 AD (1)
June, 1633 AD (1)
March, 1633 AD (1)
December, 1632 AD (1)
November, 1632 AD (1)
July 2nd, 1632 AD (1)
May 9th, 1632 AD (1)
May 8th, 1632 AD (1)
May 1st, 1632 AD (1)
November 23rd, 1631 AD (1)
August 16th, 1631 AD (1)
July 21st, 1631 AD (1)
July 6th, 1631 AD (1)
July 4th, 1631 AD (1)
April, 1631 AD (1)
March 29th, 1631 AD (1)
March 28th, 1631 AD (1)
February, 1631 AD (1)
January 27th, 1631 AD (1)
1631 AD (1)
December 28th, 1630 AD (1)
November 21st, 1630 AD (1)
October, 1630 AD (1)
September 28th, 1630 AD (1)
September 7th, 1630 AD (1)
August 23rd, 1630 AD (1)
July 30th, 1630 AD (1)
March 28th, 1630 AD (1)
August 29th, 1629 AD (1)
March 23rd, 1629 AD (1)
March 20th, 1629 AD (1)
1629 AD (1)
June, 1628 AD (1)
March 23rd, 1628 AD (1)
1628 AD (1)
July, 1624 AD (1)
1624 AD (1)
August, 1623 AD (1)
November 11th, 1620 AD (1)
1616 AD (1)
1613 AD (1)
1597 AD (1)
1555 AD (1)
December 28th (1)
December 10th (1)
December 8th (1)
December 7th (1)
November 30th (1)
November 7th (1)
November 3rd (1)
October 20th (1)
October 19th (1)
October 9th (1)
October 7th (1)
October 6th (1)
September 28th (1)
September 25th (1)
September 14th (1)
September 7th (1)
September 6th (1)
September 4th (1)
September 1st (1)
August 29th (1)
August 25th (1)
August 14th (1)
August 7th (1)
August 6th (1)
July 20th (1)
July 8th (1)
June 24th (1)
June 20th (1)
June 12th (1)
May 30th (1)
May 20th (1)
May 10th (1)
May 9th (1)
May (1)
April 18th (1)
April 16th (1)
April 12th (1)
9th (1)
7th (1)
3rd (1)
1st (1)
hide Display Preferences
Greek Display:
Arabic Display:
View by Default:
Browse Bar: