previous next

7% of the text is displayed below. If you wish to view the entire text, please click here

Chapter 3:


Civil history.

When the Europeans took possession of North America, by the right of discovery, their entry of lands, countries, and continents was deemed by them as legal ownership for their sovereign. The discoveries of John and Sebastian Cabot, Bartholomew Gosnold, and others, were understood to give to James I., of England, the coasts and country of New England. The king accordingly claimed, in the eighteenth year of his reign, the entire continent between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. In that same year, he granted to “the Council of Plymouth, in the county of Devon, for the planting, ruling, ordering, and governing of New England, [94] in America,” “all that part of America lying and being in breadth from forty degrees to forty-eight degrees of north latitude, and in length of and within all the breadth aforesaid throughout the mainland, from sea to sea,” --“to be holden of him, his heirs, and successors, as of his manor of East Greenwich, in the county of Kent, in free and common sockage, and not in capite, nor by knight's service;” the grantees “yielding and paying therefor the fifth part of the ore of gold and silver which should happen to be found in any of the said lands.”

Medford was included in the territory granted, Dec. 30, 1622, by the Plymouth Company to Robert Gorges. It was the tract “commonly called or known by the name of the Messachusiack,” lying “upon the north-east side of the bay, called or known by the name of the Messachusett.” It extended “ten English miles towards the north-east, and thirty English miles unto the main land, through all the breadth aforesaid.”

Hutchinson says that this grant, being loose and uncertain, was never used.

March 19, 1628: The Council of Plymouth, under their common seal, by a deed indented, granted and sold to Sir Henry Roswell and five others “all that part of New England, in America, which lies and extends between a great river there, commonly called Monomack (Merrimack), and a certain other river there, called Charles; being in the bottom of a certain bay there, commonly called Massachusetts.”

These are the first grants, under legal authority, of the territory within which Medford stands. The Council also sold “all the lands being within the space of three English miles on the south of Charles River and Massachusetts Bay, and within the same space on the north of the river Monomack, and of all parts of said rivers and bay, and from the Atlantic Ocean on the east to the Pacific Ocean on the west.” “Upon the petition of said Henry Roswell and five others, and their associates, twenty in number, to have and to hold to them, &c., by the same tenure, and incorporated them by the name of ‘ The Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England.’ ”

Holding under these grants and by these titles, the Governor and Company of Massachusetts Bay made grants of lands to companies and individuals for towns and plantations, usually annexing certain conditions to their grants; such as, [95] that a certain number of settlers or families should, within a stated time, build and settle upon the same; or that the gospel should be regularly preached, or a church gathered upon the granted premises. In this manner, forty-four towns were constituted and established within the Plymouth and Massachusetts Colonies before the year 1655, without any more formal act of incorporation. Among the oldest are the following: Plymouth, 1620; Salem, 1629 ; Charlestown, 1629; Boston, 1630; Medford or Mystic, 1630; Watertown, 1630; Roxbury, 1630; Dorchester, 1630 ; Cambridge or Newton, 1633; Ipswich, 1634; Concord, 1635; Hingham, 1635; Newbury, 1635; Scituate, 1636; Springfield, 1636; Duxbury, 1637; Lynn, 1637; Barnstable, 1639; Taunton, 1639; Woburn, 1642; Malden, 1649.

London, May 22, 1629: On this day “the orders for establishing a government and officers in Massachusetts Bay passed, and said orders were sent to New England(.”

Although, in the first settlement of New England, different sections of country were owned and controlled by “Companies” in England, yet the people here claimed and exercised a corporate power in the elections of their rulers and magistrates. This was the case with Medford.

To show what form of government our ancestors in Medford recognized and supported, we subjoin the following records:--

Oct. 19, 1630: First General Court of Massachusetts Colony, and this at Boston: Present, the Governor, Deputy-Governor, Sir Richard Saltonstall, Mr. Ludlow, Capt. Endicott, Mr. Nowell, Pynchon, Bradstreet. Since their arrival here, the first form of their government was that of Governor, Deputy-Governor, and Assistants; the Patentees with their heirs, assigns, and associates, being freemen. But now, in this General Court, they agree on a second form, as follows; proposed as the best course: For the freemen to have the power of choosing Assistants, when they are to be chosen; and the Assistants, from among themselves, to choose the Governor and Deputy-Governor, who, with the Assistants, to have the power of making laws, and choosing officers to execute the same. This was fully assented to by the general vote of the people and the erection of hands.

May 25, 1636: Mr. Bishop, as magistrate, appointed to keep the county court at Salem.

1643: Massachusetts Colony had thirty towns, and was [96] divided into four counties,--Middlesex, Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex.

1646: Selectmen were empowered to try causes in a town where the magistrate could not, or where he was a party.

The first mention of Medford in the public records of the Province is the following:--

At a Court of Assistants at Charlestown, 28th Sept., 1630. It is ordered that there shall be collected and raised by distress out of the several plantations, for the maintenance of Mr. Patrick and Mr. Underhill, the sum of £ 50, viz.: out of Charlton, £ 7; Boston, £ 11; Dorchester, £ 7; Rockbury, £ 5; Watertown, £ 11; Meadford, £ 3 ; Salem, £ 3; Wessaguscus, £ 2 ; Nantascett, £ 1.

It appears from the records that the inhabitants of Medford did not receive legal notice of their incorporation as a town till fifty years after the event. Wishing to be represented in the General Court, they petitioned for an act of incorporation, and were answered, that “the town had been incorporated, along with the other towns of the province, by a ‘ general act’ passed in 1630; and, under this ‘ act,’ it had at any time a right to organize itself and choose a representative without further legislation.” Thus Medford was an incorporated town in 1630. The first representative was Stephen Willis, elected Feb. 25, 1684. The annual meeting was always held in February.

In the absence of early records, we are left to conjecture, from what afterwards appeared, what existed in the earliest times. We therefore presume that the first settlers of

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.
Medford (Massachusetts, United States) (113)
Charlestown, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (31)
New England (United States) (15)
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (11)
Dorchester, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (7)
Watertown (Massachusetts, United States) (6)
England (United Kingdom) (6)
Concord (Massachusetts, United States) (6)
Roxbury, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (5)
John Brook (Connecticut, United States) (5)
Mystick River (Massachusetts, United States) (4)
Massachusetts Bay (Massachusetts, United States) (4)
Charles (Massachusetts, United States) (4)
Winchester, Va. (Virginia, United States) (3)
United States (United States) (3)
Salem (Massachusetts, United States) (3)
London (United Kingdom) (3)
Washington (United States) (2)
Mystic River (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Menotomy (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Ipswich, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Cambridge (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Accomack (Massachusetts, United States) (2)
Woburn (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Valley Forge (Pennsylvania, United States) (1)
The Common (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Taunton (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Suffolk, Va. (Virginia, United States) (1)
Springfield (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Scituate (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Piscataqua River (United States) (1)
Pacific Ocean (1)
North America (1)
Norfolk (Virginia, United States) (1)
Newburg, N. Y. (New York, United States) (1)
Middlesex Village (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Middlesex County (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Lynn (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Long Island City (New York, United States) (1)
Kent (United Kingdom) (1)
Hingham (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Fort Stanwix (New York, United States) (1)
Europe (1)
Essex (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
East Greenwich, R. I. (Rhode Island, United States) (1)
Duxbury (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Devonshire (United Kingdom) (1)
Chelsea bridge (United Kingdom) (1)
Charlton, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Bunker (New York, United States) (1)
Bedford, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Barnstable, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (1)
Atlantic Ocean (1)
Andover (Massachusetts, United States) (1)

Download Pleiades ancient places geospacial dataset for this text.

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.
Caleb Brooks (21)
Stephen Willis (16)
Samuel Brooks (12)
Nathaniel Wade (11)
John Brooks (10)
Benjamin Willis (7)
George Washington (7)
Simon Tufts (6)
Mathew Cradock (6)
John Bradshaw (6)
Abner Bartlett (6)
Jonathan Tufts (5)
Benjamin Parker (5)
Stephen Hall (5)
Jonathan Brooks (5)
William Willis (4)
Thomas Willis (4)
John Whitmore (4)
John T. White (4)
Turell Tufts (4)
Peter Tufts (4)
Joseph Tufts (4)
Benjamin Tufts (4)
Horatio A. Smith (4)
Jeduthan Richardson (4)
Alexander Gregg (4)
James O. Curtis (4)
Timothy Cotting (4)
Andrew Blanchard (4)
John Bishop (4)
Joseph Wyman (3)
Henry Withington (3)
Samuel Wade (3)
Benjamin R. Teel (3)
John Symmes (3)
Thomas Seccomb (3)
Jonathan Porter (3)
Lafayette (3)
House (3)
Peter C. Hall (3)
Joseph P. Hall (3)
J. T. Foster (3)
Timothy Dexter (3)
Burgoyne (3)
John Bradstreet (3)
Stephen Bradshaw (3)
James Wyman (2)
William Wood (2)
Francis Whitmore (2)
Jonathan Watson (2)
William Ward (2)
Joseph Wade (2)
Jonathan Wade (2)
James Tufts (2)
Joseph Swan (2)
Strong (2)
John Sparrell (2)
Benjamin H. Samson (2)
Isaac Royal (2)
Henry Roswell (2)
William Rogers (2)
Samuel Reeves (2)
George W. Porter (2)
Zechariah Poole (2)
Thomas R. Peck (2)
David Osgood (2)
James Noyes (2)
Increase Nowell (2)
Joseph Manning (2)
Galen James (2)
Charles S. Jacobs (2)
Amos Hemphill (2)
Jonathan Harrington (2)
Stephen Greenleaf (2)
Richard Frothingham (2)
Stephen Francis (2)
John Francis (2)
John Dixwell (2)
Dea (2)
Pyam Cushing (2)
Damaris Cradock (2)
Chairman (2)
Causey (2)
Sebastian Cabot (2)
Samuel Buel (2)
Thomas Brooks (2)
Peter Chardon Brooks (2)
Jonathan Bradstreet (2)
Ephraim Bailey (2)
John Albree (2)
John Agricola (2)
Daniel Woodward (1)
John Winship (1)
John Wilson (1)
John Willis (1)
David Willis (1)
William Wicker (1)
John Watson (1)
E. Waterman (1)
Isaac Warren (1)
Jonathan Warner (1)
Nathaniel Ward (1)
Edward Walker (1)
Nathan Waite (1)
Nathan W. Wait (1)
James Wade (1)
Underhill (1)
Calvin Turner (1)
William Tufts (1)
Seth Tufts (1)
Samuel Tufts (1)
John Tufts (1)
Gershom Tufts (1)
Daniel Tufts (1)
Simon Tuft (1)
Jonathan Tompson (1)
Elisha Tolman (1)
Gersham Teel (1)
Elbridge Teel (1)
Benjamin Teal (1)
James Taylor (1)
Henry Taylor (1)
Tacitus (1)
Ebenezer Symonds (1)
Samuel Swan (1)
Steuben (1)
J. Stetson (1)
Elisha Stetson (1)
Richard Sprague (1)
Solon (1)
Socrates (1)
Joshua Simonds (1)
William Shirley (1)
Sexton (1)
Joseph Serjant (1)
Semer (1)
Peter Seccomb (1)
Schuyler (1)
James M. Sanford (1)
Thomas Sanders (1)
J. Sanborn (1)
Richard Saltonstall (1)
Saint Leger (1)
Thomas Russell (1)
Samuel Ripley (1)
Lewis Richardson (1)
John Richardson (1)
Joseph Pynchon (1)
Jonathan Prescott (1)
Henry Porter (1)
Zachariah Poole (1)
Zachary Pool (1)
Jacob Polly (1)
Phinney (1)
Nathaniel Peirce (1)
Ichabod Peirce (1)
Benjamin Peirce (1)
Jonathan Patten (1)
Patrick (1)
E. S. Parker (1)
Paley (1)
Jonathan Oldham (1)
Edward Newton (1)
Newbury (1)
Monroe (1)
Andrew Mitchell (1)
Medford (1)
Thomas Mayhew (1)
Thaddeus Mason (1)
Ebenezer Marrow (1)
William Manson (1)
Thatcher Magoon (1)
Nathaniel Lyon (1)
Ludlow (1)
Judah Loring (1)
Nathaniel Locke (1)
Benjamin Lincoln (1)
Nathaniel Laurans (1)
Samuel Lapham (1)
Francis Laithe (1)
Kosciusko (1)
John King (1)
Samuel Kendal (1)
Samuel Joyce (1)
Oakman Joyce (1)
John Jenks (1)
Henry H. Jacquith (1)
Patrick T. Jackson (1)
Mary Hutchinson (1)
A. Hutchens (1)
John Howe (1)
John Hosmer (1)
Herkemer (1)
E. Hayden (1)
Patrick Hay (1)
Willis Hall (1)
John Hall (1)
Benjamin Hall (1)
Andrew Hall (1)
Samuel Haeson (1)
Bartholomew Gosnold (1)
Robert Gorges (1)
John Goold (1)
George T. Goodwin (1)
Thomas Gillard (1)
Edmund Gates (1)
A. H. Gardner (1)
Freeman (1)
Samuel Francis (1)
Ebenezer Francis (1)
T. T. Fowler (1)
Henry Fowle (1)
James T. Floyd (1)
William D. Fitch (1)
John B. Fitch (1)
Fish (1)
Thomas Fillebrown (1)
Isaac Farwell (1)
John Endicott (1)
R. E. Ells (1)
Peter Edes (1)
Thomas Dudley (1)
John Dixen (1)
Thomas Dill (1)
John Degrushy (1)
Eleazer Davis (1)
Paul Curtis (1)
Abram Cumins (1)
Walter Cranston (1)
Robert Crane (1)
John Cotton (1)
Aaron Cleveland (1)
Aaron Cleaveland (1)
J. Clapp (1)
Jesus Christ (1)
John Choub (1)
Jacob Chamberlain (1)
John Chadson (1)
Charles Caldwell (1)
Willard Butters (1)
John Burrage (1)
Joseph Bucknam (1)
Peter C. Brooks (1)
Edward Brooks (1)
Ebenezer Brooks (1)
Brayman (1)
Simon Bradshaw (1)
William Bradbury (1)
James Bowdoin (1)
Joseph Blodgett (1)
Luke Blashfield (1)
Hezekiah Blanchard (1)
Oliver Blake (1)
J. Belcher (1)
Hosea Ballou (1)
Joseph Ballard (1)
Benedict Arnold (1)
Samuel Angier (1)
Nathan 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.
1630 AD (13)
1635 AD (5)
1846 AD (4)
1820 AD (4)
1810 AD (4)
1767 AD (4)
1743 AD (4)
1726 AD (4)
1850 AD (3)
1836 AD (3)
1827 AD (3)
1817 AD (3)
1808 AD (3)
1803 AD (3)
1794 AD (3)
1790 AD (3)
1786 AD (3)
April 19th, 1775 AD (3)
1773 AD (3)
1750 AD (3)
1729 AD (3)
1728 AD (3)
1721 AD (3)
1718 AD (3)
1634 AD (3)
March (3)
February 15th, 1855 AD (2)
1855 AD (2)
1845 AD (2)
1840 AD (2)
1838 AD (2)
1837 AD (2)
1834 AD (2)
1831 AD (2)
1830 AD (2)
1828 AD (2)
1826 AD (2)
March 1st, 1825 AD (2)
1823 AD (2)
1818 AD (2)
1816 AD (2)
1804 AD (2)
1798 AD (2)
1797 AD (2)
1796 AD (2)
1795 AD (2)
July 4th, 1787 AD (2)
1779 AD (2)
1778 AD (2)
1777 AD (2)
1771 AD (2)
1770 AD (2)
February 26th, 1768 AD (2)
1763 AD (2)
1761 AD (2)
May, 1752 AD (2)
1749 AD (2)
1748 AD (2)
1745 AD (2)
1738 AD (2)
1735 AD (2)
1733 AD (2)
1732 AD (2)
1730 AD (2)
1725 AD (2)
1719 AD (2)
1714 AD (2)
1711 AD (2)
1709 AD (2)
1708 AD (2)
1700 AD (2)
1696 AD (2)
1689 AD (2)
1685 AD (2)
1684 AD (2)
1643 AD (2)
1641 AD (2)
1640 AD (2)
1639 AD (2)
1638 AD (2)
1637 AD (2)
1636 AD (2)
May 14th, 1634 AD (2)
September 28th, 1630 AD (2)
1629 AD (2)
1620 AD (2)
October 7th (2)
February (2)
February 15th, 1854 AD (1)
1854 AD (1)
1853 AD (1)
July 19th, 1852 AD (1)
April 30th, 1850 AD (1)
March 4th, 1850 AD (1)
1849 AD (1)
March 13th, 1848 AD (1)
March 8th, 1847 AD (1)
1847 AD (1)
1844 AD (1)
February 13th, 1843 AD (1)
1841 AD (1)
April 6th, 1840 AD (1)
1839 AD (1)
April 3rd, 1837 AD (1)
May 7th, 1836 AD (1)
1835 AD (1)
1832 AD (1)
1829 AD (1)
1825 AD (1)
November 1st, 1824 AD (1)
August 28th, 1824 AD (1)
1824 AD (1)
1822 AD (1)
1821 AD (1)
1819 AD (1)
March 22nd, 1818 AD (1)
1813 AD (1)
1812 AD (1)
March 12th, 1810 AD (1)
March 5th, 1810 AD (1)
March 6th, 1809 AD (1)
1806 AD (1)
1800 AD (1)
March 6th, 1797 AD (1)
May 9th, 1796 AD (1)
March 7th, 1796 AD (1)
1793 AD (1)
1792 AD (1)
1789 AD (1)
1788 AD (1)
March, 1787 AD (1)
1787 AD (1)
June 12th, 1786 AD (1)
February 7th, 1785 AD (1)
1785 AD (1)
March, 1783 AD (1)
1783 AD (1)
1782 AD (1)
1781 AD (1)
1780 AD (1)
August, 1777 AD (1)
1776 AD (1)
March 6th, 1775 AD (1)
1775 AD (1)
May 13th, 1773 AD (1)
1769 AD (1)
April 1st, 1768 AD (1)
1768 AD (1)
1765 AD (1)
1764 AD (1)
1762 AD (1)
March 6th, 1758 AD (1)
May 10th, 1756 AD (1)
1756 AD (1)
March 3rd, 1755 AD (1)
1755 AD (1)
August 5th, 1754 AD (1)
May 8th, 1754 AD (1)
April 17th, 1754 AD (1)
March 4th, 1754 AD (1)
December 13th, 1753 AD (1)
1753 AD (1)
1751 AD (1)
May 15th, 1749 AD (1)
November 28th, 1748 AD (1)
March 7th, 1748 AD (1)
1747 AD (1)
1746 AD (1)
1744 AD (1)
1742 AD (1)
1740 AD (1)
1739 AD (1)
December 3rd, 1737 AD (1)
1737 AD (1)
1736 AD (1)
May 28th, 1735 AD (1)
May 20th, 1735 AD (1)
June 19th, 1734 AD (1)
1734 AD (1)
January 31st, 1732 AD (1)
April 17th, 1729 AD (1)
February 9th, 1729 AD (1)
April 25th, 1728 AD (1)
October 27th, 1727 AD (1)
1727 AD (1)
1724 AD (1)
1723 AD (1)
1722 AD (1)
May 12th, 1718 AD (1)
March 3rd, 1718 AD (1)
1717 AD (1)
1715 AD (1)
May 10th, 1714 AD (1)
1713 AD (1)
1712 AD (1)
March 6th, 1710 AD (1)
1710 AD (1)
1707 AD (1)
1706 AD (1)
May 7th, 1705 AD (1)
1705 AD (1)
1703 AD (1)
March 17th, 1702 AD (1)
March 2nd, 1702 AD (1)
February 14th, 1702 AD (1)
1702 AD (1)
May 19th, 1701 AD (1)
1701 AD (1)
1699 AD (1)
1698 AD (1)
1695 AD (1)
March 5th, 1694 AD (1)
1694 AD (1)
April 21st, 1693 AD (1)
1693 AD (1)
1690 AD (1)
October 19th, 1686 AD (1)
October 15th, 1684 AD (1)
February 25th, 1684 AD (1)
February 25th, 1683 AD (1)
1683 AD (1)
1681 AD (1)
1679 AD (1)
1678 AD (1)
1677 AD (1)
1676 AD (1)
1675 AD (1)
1674 AD (1)
1655 AD (1)
1650 AD (1)
1649 AD (1)
1646 AD (1)
March 4th, 1645 AD (1)
1642 AD (1)
June 2nd, 1641 AD (1)
November 5th, 1639 AD (1)
September 8th, 1636 AD (1)
May 25th, 1636 AD (1)
March 3rd, 1635 AD (1)
September 3rd, 1634 AD (1)
1633 AD (1)
1632 AD (1)
May 18th, 1631 AD (1)
April 12th, 1631 AD (1)
March 8th, 1631 AD (1)
October 19th, 1630 AD (1)
May 22nd, 1629 AD (1)
March 19th, 1628 AD (1)
December 30th, 1622 AD (1)
December 29th (1)
November 19th (1)
October 1st (1)
July 4th (1)
June 16th (1)
May 6th (1)
May 1st (1)
May (1)
April 19th (1)
March 2nd (1)
17th (1)
hide Display Preferences
Greek Display:
Arabic Display:
View by Default:
Browse Bar: