Yale University Library 39002029125995 m mm < : ! >m iii ;:; ni<: i V ! | f ' liliiii liliiilllillll E=^E sSE John Hill Morgan Farmington Connecticut 1YALE UNIVERSITY! > SCHOOL OF THE PINE ARTS < £j Qots-cf-c [j CT1~J r> ^l-rtf- %ty .jFountiers Portraits of Persons Born Abroad Who Came to the Colonies in North America Before the Year 1701 WITH AN INTRODUCTION, BIOGRAPHICAL OUTLINES AND COMMENTS ON THE PORTRAITS BY CHARLES KNOWLES BOLTON VOLUME II " It has been my wifli to preferve the heads of the firft Settlers. This is a mem. to mow where they may be found." — Bentley, 1707 Printed from the Income or the Robert Charles Billings Fund THE BOSTON ATHENAEUM 1919 PORTRAITS OF THE FOUNDERS NEW ENGLAND Contents Portraits and Biographical Outlines Page New England Thomas Amory ....... 339 Sir Edmund Andros 343 Rev. John Bailey 347 James Bowdoin 351 Simon Bradstreet . . . . . . . 355 Nathaniel Byfield 359 Charles Chambers . . . . . . . 536a John Clark, M.D 363 John Colman ........ 367 George Curwin ....... 371 Rev. John Davenport . . . . . . 375 Mrs. Mary (Mirick) Davie 379 Sir George Downing ...... 383 John Endecott 385 John Freke 389 William Goffe 393 Edward Gray 397 Mrs. Mabel (Harlakenden) Haynes . . . 401 George Jafrrey ....... 405 Rev. Hanserd Knollys ...... 409 John Leverett . . . . . . . 413 Rev. Richard Mather 419 Richard Middlecott 423 Richard Montague . . . . . . . 427 Mrs. Margery (Bray) Pepperrell . . . . 431 William Pepperrell . . . . . . 435 Rev. Hugh Peter 439 Robert Pike 443 Mrs. Anne Pollard 447 William Pynchon . . . . . . . 451 v New England— Continued Edward Rawson Sir Richard Saltonstall Thomas Savage Samuel Sewall Stephen Sewall Mrs. Elizabeth (Richardson) Stoddard Mrs. Elizabeth (Roberts) Stoddard . William S tough ton .... Rev. Thomas Thacher Sir Henry Vane, the younger . Thomas Venner .... John Walley ..... Rev. John Wheelwright . Edward Winslow .... Mrs. Penelope (Pelham) Winslow . John Winthrop .... John Winthrop, the younger . Mrs. Mary (Luttrell) Winthrop . Stephen Winthrop .... The West Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle Jacques Marquette .... Page 455459 463 467471 475479483 487 491495499503507 5"515525 529533 539 543 Portraits under Discussion Rev. Charles Chauncy John Clarke, M.D. William Coddington Rev. John Cotton . Colonel Darnall Rev. John Eliot Martin Hoffman Rev. Nathaniel Mather . Madam Patteshall and child Edward Shippen Myles Standish 549 55355756i565571575 579 583 587 59i Portraits under Discussion — Continued Page Van Rensselaer Portraits 596a Van Schoenderwoert-Bleecker ..... 596e Rev. John Wilson 597 Comments on the Portraits Carolina 601 Virginia and Maryland 607 New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware 621 New England 633 The West 659 Index 663 Thomas Amory, the son of Jonathan and Rebecca Amory, was born at Dublin in May, 1682. His father, a merchant on the banks of the Liffey, soon removed with his family to the West Indies, and, about 1 690, to Charles ton, where he appears as speaker of the Assembly in 1696. The boy was sent back to London about 1 694, and was for several years at school. After the death of his father, in 1 699, he spent the years 1 706-1 7 1 8 at the Azores, engaged in business. His letter books give a vivid picture of trade in countries which are to us only.lands of bygone adventure and romance — where trade was carried on by the use of coins known to the American schoolboy only as the cur rency of Flint and John Silver. He was English and Dutch consul at Angra, and his "correspondents" ranged as far north as Portsmouth in New England, where he did busi ness with George Jaffrey. Jonathan Amory had been an intimate friend of Colonel William Rhett, and Thomas Amory came to Charleston on the promise of the colonel that if his daughter Sarah would consent, Amory could marry her. An offer had come from the colonel in 17 13, and Amory himself had sug gested a marriage by proxy, but received no answer. Mrs. Rhett now wrote, in 17 18, that Sarah knew writing, arith metic, French, music, dancing, etc. ; and although not a cele brated beauty, was modest, of an agreeable humor and good sense. Arthur Middleton advised his friend Amory to cut his hair, get a wig and a sword, "to please the Lady for she is very Gentele & briske." In June, 1720, Amory, after a visit of six months in Charleston, was in Boston, having found that the young lady's heart was committed to a gentleman in Jamaica, and that Mrs. Rhett had absorbed the Amory property, while 339 acting for the son. He did not effect a settlement until 1723. In Boston, Mr. Amory had much social intercourse with the Holmes family, which, like his own, had ties with the South. He married, 9 May, 1721, Rebecca, daughter of Francis Holmes, owner of the popular Bunch of Grapes Tavern in Boston, and of a large estate in South Carolina. Rebecca was the second owner of the tavern, and her sister's husband, William Coffin, ancestor of the famous admiral and baronet, the third owner. He was now busy with commercial activities along the Atlantic coast, with the Azores, Ireland, and England. He corresponded with Arthur Middleton on business and political affairs, and with his kinsmen in Ireland. After seven years of happi ness, Thomas Amory died, 20 June, 1728. The widow left this account of her husband's death : "Going into the still-house to look after some necessary affair [he] fell into a cistern of returns. There being nobody therein there [he died] as was the sovereign will of God, and I must submit, though the loss & aggravating circumstances are beyond expression. Nothing but infinite power & mercy can sustain me under the weight of it." Of their five children, Thomas, Mary, Rebecca, Jonathan, and John, the first and last named are the ancestors of many well-known Bostonians. The portrait is from a crayon copy made before the original was lost. "The Descendants of Hugh Amory, 1605— 1805." London, 1901. 340 THOMAS AMORY i 682-1728 (34i) Sir Edmund Andros was born, 6 December, 1637, at London, the son of Amice and Elizabeth (Stone) Andros, of the Isle of Guernsey. The father was cup-bearer to the King and a major; the mother was sister to Sir Robert Stone, cup-bearer to the Queen of Bohemia, and a captain of horse in Holland. The world was by inheritance his stage, and the boy began his career in Holland as a trooper, followed by service in Denmark and Bohemia. In 1666 he was major of a regiment in America, and in Feb ruary, 1 67 1/2, he married Mary, daughter of Thomas Craven. She accompanied him to New York in October, 1674, where, as governor, he took over the administration from the Dutch. He was efficient, dealing tactfully with the Indians during King Philip's war, preserving peace and prosperity in his province. During the winter of 1677/8 he was in England and received knighthood. He was again in London in the spring of 1 68 1, having been recalled under charges of dishonesty, which he vigorously denied. Andros was in favor at Court, and, Massachusetts hav ing lost its charter in 1684, he was commissioned governor in chief over the dominion of New England in June, 1686. He was resolute, and strove to make the province more firmly a part of the empire ; he demanded tolerance in re ligion, and better trade relations for English merchants. Inevitably he was doomed to unpopularity. At about the same time the territory under his command was extended southward to include New York and New Jersey. The landing of William of Orange in England offered an occa sion for rebellion, and on 18 April, 1689, Andros, at Fort Hill in Boston, was arrested and imprisoned. In about a year he was sent back to England, where his ability pro cured him, in 1692, the governorship of Virginia. Here 343 he encouraged education and manufactures, but ran coun ter to the quarrelsome Commissary Blair, of William and Mary College, and again lost his office in November, 1698. His last governorship, in 1 704, was over the Isle of Guern sey, where he had large hereditary estates and honors. But he was feeble, and soon resigned. He died in February, 1 7 13/4, and was buried on the 27th at St. Anne's Soho, Westminster — a part of London frequented by the Hugue nots. Andros married three times, but left no children. Lady Andros died 22 January, 1687/8. His second wife was Elizabeth Crispe, his third was Elizabeth Fitz- herbert. Mr. Whitmore, in his memoir of Andros, pre pared for the Prince Society, writes : "We may class Andros among those statesmen, unwelcome but necessary, whose very virtues and abilities are detested in their life time, because they do so thoroughly their appointed work and initiate new periods in national history." Andros is referred to often in the "Journal" of the Labadist traveler, Jasper Danckaerts, whose stories give Andros the character of an irritable administrator, and at times the temper of a petty tyrant. The portrait here reproduced is from the engraving made, in 1868, from a photograph of the painting then owned by Amias Charles Andros, Esq., of London. 344 SIR EDMUND ANDROS 1637-1713/14 (345) The Rev. John Bailey was born, 24 February, 1643/4, near Blackburn, Lancashire. Thomas, his father, as described by Cotton Mather, "was a man of a very licentious conversation ; a gamester, a dancer, a very lewd company-keeper. The mother of this elect vessel one day took him, while he was yet a child, and, calling the family together, made him to pray with them. His father coming to under stand at what a rate the child had prayed with his family, it smote the soul of him with a great conviction, and proved the beginning of his conversion unto God." Having walked far to attend non-conformist services, and having suffered imprisonment several times, John Bailey began, at the age of twenty-two, to preach so successfully at Chester, and then at Limerick, that "he seemed rather to fish with a net than with a hook." When arrested, he asked his judges if praying and preaching with inoffensive Chris tians was a greater crime than carousing at a tavern. The recorder of the court replied: "We will have you to know, it is a greater crime." After fourteen years in Ireland he came over to Boston, in 1683/4, remaining there as assistant at the Old South Church until he was installed at Watertown, in October, 1686. Dunton, the bookseller, visited Bailey and his brother the same year, and said: "When I tell you they are true pictures of Dr. Annesley (whom they count a sec ond St. Paul) it is as high as I need go." To Dunton's mind no one stood higher than Mrs. Dunton's father, so this was praise indeed. Bailey's wife, Lydia, died "April ye 16, 1691" (grave inscription), after a day of singular expressions of piety and resignation. He writes: 347 "She desir'd that we would sing some psalm of praise to the riches of free grace : but our harps were hang'd on the willows ; we did it not. Yet there was melodious singing at that very time ! I heard it myself, but intended never to speak of it until the nurse B. and M. S. spoke of it. They went unto the fire, thinking it was there ; but they heard it best when within the curtains. God, by his holy angels, put an honour upon my dear little woman ; and by it reprov'd us, that seeing we would not sing, (being bad at it) they would ! " In the church records Bailey wrote : "But Lyddy is dead and I feel entirely indisposed to everything." In 1693, Bailey went to the First Church in Boston, where he remained as an assistant until his death, 1 2 De cember, 1697. No children are recorded, but his brother is said to have left a child.1 His book, "Man's Chief End to Glorifie God," and several shorter compositions survive him, and Cotton Mather gives many quotations from his diary. His concern was for his soul and the salvation of his flock. He had an emotional nature and was often depressed. As he lay dying he seemed to see his Saviour, and said to his second wife, Susanna (daughter of Richard Wilkins, the bookseller) : "Oh! what shall I say? He is altogether lovely ! " And to his sister-in-law he said : "His glorious angels are come for me!" and closing his eyes at three in the afternoon of the Lord's Day, he opened them no more this side of heaven. "Magnalia Christi Americana," Volume i. 'Descendants mentioned in Massachusetts Historical Society Proceedings, New Series, Volume 9, page 478, are from John's brother Thomas, as a fuller quotation would show. 348 k-vv\ JOHN BAILEY' 1643/4-1697 (349) James Bowdoin, Boston merchant, was born, in 1676, at La Rochelle, France, the son of Pierre Baudouin, who fled to Ireland some years later with his wife and four chil dren. In 1686, Pierre came to Casco Bay, and in May, 1690, he moved to Boston, where he died, in September, 1706. James, the son, went to sea as a lad, and rose rap idly to the command of a ship. Being shrewd in handling his cargoes, he soon became a shipping merchant, a member of the Council in 1 744-1 746, and a man of great wealth and influence. He was one of the leaders in a movement, in 1733, to provide a paper currency to serve as a stable and sufficient medium of trade, to take the place of gold and silver coin, which had been sent to England in payment for manufactured articles. Bowdoin married first, on 18 July, 1706, Sarah Camp bell, who died in 17 13, having had James, Elizabeth, John, and Pierre (who died in infancy), as well as Mary, who married Balthazar Bayard, and William, a merchant; second, on 15 or 16 September, 17 14, Hannah Portage, by whom he had Samuel, who died in infancy; Elizabeth, who married James Pitts; Judith, who married Thomas Flucker; and James, a member of the Continental Con gress and governor of Massachusetts ; third, on 24 April, 1735, Mehitable Lillie, a widow. James Bowdoin died in Boston, 8 September, 1747, and was buried in the Granary Burying Ground, on Tremont Street. His portrait was painted by Joseph Badger, a short time before his death. The Boston News-Letter referred to his "prudence, care and industry in merchan dise," and his will disposed of a large estate. He gave £40 to the Rev. Andrew Le Mercier, and an annual allowance of £20, so long as he should continue in the ministry at the 35i French church, so called; and £20 annually to the poor of the church, under the same terms. To the poor of Boston he left £30 per annum for ten years after his death, and also a legacy of £50 to the Rev. Samuel Cooper. "Some Account of the Bowdoin Family," by Temple Prime. New York, 1900. 352 JAMES BOWDOIN i 676-1747 (353) Simon Bradstreet, governor of Massachusetts, was baptized, 18 March, 1603/4, at Horbling, Lincolnshire, by his father, of the same name, the vicar. The father died early in 1 62 1 , leaving a widow, Margaret, and three surviv ing sons, Samuel, Simon, and John. Simon matriculated at Emmanuel College, 9 July, 161 8, as a sizar; received his A.B. in 1620/1, and his A.M. in 1624. In 1630 he came over in the Arbella with Winthrop, having been elected an assistant of the company in England before sailing. He continued to hold the office until 1678, and was secretary in 1630— 1636; deputy governor in 1678; governor in 1 679-1 686 and 1 689-1 692; agent to Eng land in 1662; commissioner of the United Colonies often from 1644 to 1672; president of the United Colonies in 1653, 1663, 1664; president of the Council for the Safety of the People in 1689 ; councilor in 1692. He settled at Andover, and there lived until after the death of his first wife, Anne, the poetess, daughter of Gov ernor Thomas Dudley, whom he married in England about 1628. When he first brought her over to "a new world and new manners," her heart rose in rebellion, but the muse and her faith in God reconciled her to illness and other afflictions. Her book of poems, published in Lon don, bore the title, "The Tenth Muse, lately sprung up in America." She became the mother of four sons and four daughters, Samuel, Dorothy, Sarah, Simon, Hannah, Dud ley, John, and Mercy, and died, 16 September, 1672, at Andover. The happiness of his home-life is mirrored in his first wife's poems, which tell of separation, fear of shipwreck, illness, and the joy of reuiiion. To her husband she said : 355 "If ever two were one, then surely we; If ever man were loved by wife, then thee ; If ever wife was happy in a man, Compare with me, ye women, if you can." Bradstreet married for a second wife, in 1676, Anne, widow of Captain Joseph Gardner, and daughter of Em manuel Downing, whose wife was John Winthrop's sister. The governor was a man of moderate but dependable ability, kindly and intelligent, and when Andros was de posed, in 1689, the venerable magistrate, the last survivor of those elected to office before the Puritan exodus, was a dignified and suitable administrator for the interregnum. Danckaerts, the Dutch traveler, refers to him, in 1680, as "an old man, quiet and grave, dressed in black silk, but not sumptuously." A famous passage in Sewall's Diary refers to a walk which he took with the governor on the 8th of May, 1685: "Walk with the honored Governour up Hoar's Lane, so to the Alms House ; then down the length of the Common to Mr. Dean's Pasture, then through Cowell's Lane to the New Garden, then to our House, then to our Pasture by Engs's, then I waited on his Honour to his Gate and so home. This day our old Red Cow is kill'd, and we have a new black one brought in the room, of about four years old and better, marked with a Cross and slit in the Left Ear, and a Cross off the right Ear, with a little hollowing in. As came with his Honour through Cowell's Lane, Sam. came running and call'd out a pretty way off and cried out the Cow was dead and by the Heels, meaning hang'd up by the Butcher." Governor Bradstreet died at Salem, 27 March, 1696/7, at about ten at night, and was buried the 2d of April. Sewall writes : "Col. Gedney and Major Browri led the Widow; I bore the Feet of the Corps into the Tomb." 356 SIMON BRADSTREET i 603-1 697 (357) Nathaniel Byfield, first judge of the Court of Vice- Admiralty, was born in 1653, at Long Ditton, Surrey, the twenty-first child of Richard Byfield, rector there, and grandson of the vicar of Stratford-on-Avon. His father, as a member of the Westminster Assembly, helped to pre pare the "Shorter Catechism." His mother, Sarah Juxon, was, like many early New Englanders, "nearly related" to an Archbishop of Canterbury. Byfield arrived in Boston in 1674, and the next year married Deborah, daughter of Captain Thomas Clarke. Having been drafted to fight the Indians, he based a claim for exemption on xxiv Deuteronomy 5. At the close of King Philip's war he in vested heavily in Rhode Island lands, becoming a settler at Bristol, and living part of the time at Pappoosquaws Point — better known in connection with Herreshoff, the yacht builder. Byfield joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company in 1679, was a member of the General Court in 1696 and 1697, and served as speaker in 1698. He was commissioner for forming the excise, and judge of probate for Bristol County, as well as of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas in Bristol and Suffolk. In June, 17 10, he was suspended from the office of judge of probate "for unmannerly and rude behaviour," but resumed office in December, 1715. He was the first judge of the Court of Vice-Admiralty from 9 June, 1699, to 20 May, 1700, when Wait Winthrop obtained the place. Byfield threat ened Winthrop and succeeded, through Dudley, in secur ing his removal in 1701 ; he obtained the office for himself in December, 1703, holding it until 17 15, and a third time from 1728 to 1733. In earlier years the judge exercised much influence 359 through his political alliance with Governor Dudley and his marriage, in 171 8, to Governor Leverett's daughter Sarah, following the death of his first wife. Cotton Mather, in February, 1702/3, received a visit from Gov ernor Dudley, whom Mather advised to allow no people to say that the governor's policies were dictated by Byfield and Leverett. Mather continues : "The Wretch went unto those Men, and told them, that I had advised him, to be no ways advised by them: and inflamed them into an implacable Rage against me." Byfield was a man of positive traits, dictatorial and over bearing, ambitious and revengeful, yet so sound that no decision of his was ever, upon appeal, reversed by a higher court. He printed and gave away thousands of copies of the "Shorter Catechism"; he strenuously opposed the witchcraft delusion, gave hundreds of pounds yearly in charity, and devoted his eloquence freely to public affairs. He died between the hours of one and two of the morn ing of the 6th of June, 1733, at Boston, and was buried in the Granary Burying Ground. Two of his five chil dren grew to maturity, one the wife of Lieutenant Governor William Tailer, another the wife of Edward Lyde, whose son, Byfield Lyde (son-in-law of Governor Belcher), was his chief heir. 'Manual First Congregational Church, Bristol." Providence, 1873. 'The History of Bristol, Rhode Island," by W. H. Munro. Providence, 1880. 360 NATHANIEL BYFIELD 1653-1733 (36') Dr. John Clark, physician, of Boston, came to New bury about 1637, and was granted a farm of four hundred acres at the mouth of Cart Creek, 23 January, 1637/8. In September he was freed from all rates so long as he should exercise his calling there. A rather lurid light is thrown upon the value of his services by a note in the Rev. John Eliot's "Record of Roxbury Church Mem bers." The wife of Richard Dummer came under the in fluence of Anne Hutchinson, and when the Dummers moved to Newbury she declared her faith. Dr. Clark, who agreed with her, gave her a vomit, when ill, "wh did in such maner torture & torment her . . . y4 she dyed in a most uncomfortable maner ; but we believe God tooke her away in mercy, from worse evil, wh she was falling unto." In 1639 he became a magistrate of the County Court at Ipswich, and was elected a deputy for 1639 and 1643. After ten years of practice in Newbury he was at Ipswich, and in December, 1651, when he sold the farm, he was of Boston. While in Boston he invented a stove for warm ing houses and saving firewood, a device for the control of which the General Court allowed him exclusive rights, in October, 1652. Dr. Holmes, in his "Medical Essays," 1842-18 8 2, speaks of Dr. Clark on page 326 : "His portrait, in close-fitting skull-cap, with long locks and venerable flowing beard, is familiar to our eyes on the wall of our Society's antechamber. His left hand rests upon a skull, his right hand holds an instrument which deserves a passing comment. It is a trephine, a surgical implement for cutting round pieces out of broken skulls, so as to get at the fragments which have been driven in, and lift them up. It has a handle like that of a gimlet, with a claw like a hammer, to lift with, I suppose, which last contrivance I 363 do not see figured in my books. . . . Dr. Clark is said to have received a diploma before he came, for skill in lithotomy. He loved horses, as a good many doctors do, and left a good property, as they all ought to do. His grave and noble presence, with the few facts concerning him, told with more or less traditional authority, give us the feeling that the people of Newbury, and afterwards of Bos ton, had a wise and skilful medical adviser and surgeon in Dr. John Clark." Dr. Clark married Martha, called "aunt" by Sir Richard Saltonstall's son Robert, who was in turn called "cosen" by Clark. If she was a sister of Sir Richard or his wife, no other trace of her is known.1 Martha died 19 September, 1680, aged eighty-five, leaving John, a physician and poli tician, and Jemima, the wife of Robert Drew. Dr. Clark died in Boston, in November, 1 664. His por trait was painted in the sixty-sixth year of his age, but we do not know the date of his birth, and no year is mentioned on the canvas. "The History of Newbury," by J. J. Currier. Boston, 1902, page 662. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, April, i860, page 171. "Massachusetts Historical Society Proceedings," July, 1844; October, 1833. 'Martha, daughter of another Sir Richard, the Lord Mayor, married a Mr. Bonner, and their son, perhaps, is referred to in Robert Saltonstall's will as appren ticed to "Capt Miditon," in the Barbados; this Martha's sister, Hester, married Sir Thomas Middleton, Lord Mayor. 364 JOHN CLARK i598(?)-i664 (365) John Colman, a prominent Boston merchant, was born on Tower Hill, London, 3 January, 1 670/1, less than nine years after Sir Henry Vane had lost his head there, and was brought over to Boston at the age of two by his parents, William and Elizabeth Colman. He married, 19 July, 1 694, Judith, daughter of William Hobby, and with her he lived for nearly fifty years, dying, 19 September, 1751, in Boston. They had eight sons, of whom two, John and Benjamin, lived beyond infancy and married; and six daughters, of whom two lived to mature years, one as the wife of Dr. Thomas Bulfinch, another married to Peter Chardon. His brother, the Rev. Benjamin Colman, of the church in Brattle Square, was distinguished in his day. John Colman served frequently in town offices, and was a leader in public affairs; in 1704 he had a hand in the arrest and "judicial murder" of Captain Quelch, the so- called pirate ; in 1706 he advocated a monthly packet from England to New England; and in 1720 he was on the committee to consider a spinning school. He was one of the founders of the Brattle Square Church, in 1699, and thus aroused the enmity of Cotton Mather, who referred in his diary, seventeen years later, to Colman thus : "A very abusive Creature, in whom the three parts of the Satanic Image, Pride, Malice, and Falsehood, are very Conspicuous, must be pittied and pray'd for." Colman was for many years interested in endeavors to deal with problems arising from a scarcity in the currency ; and was arrested, in 1720,, for writing a pamphlet on "The Distressed State of the Town of Boston," reflecting on the government and advocating a bank to emit bills on real security. The case was dismissed in July. He had a man- 3^7 sion house on the site of the American House, Hanover Street, and large warehouses. His portrait, by Smibert, owned by Mrs. Clayton C. Hall, of Baltimore, is reproduced in the "Publication of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts" for 1899, and a biographical notice by Mr. H. H. Edes may be found in the same volume. 368 JOHN COLMAN 1670/1-1751 (369) Captain George Curwin, or Corwin, was born, 10 December, 1610, the son of John Curwin, of Sibbertoft in Northamptonshire, of an ancient Cumberland family. He became a merchant at Northampton, and in 1638, with his wife and daughter Abigail, came over to Salem, where his energy and ability laid the foundation for the commer cial prosperity of the town. He built and managed ships, and carried on an extensive and varied wholesale and retail business in dry goods and hardware at his house on the present Essex Street, near Town House Square. He was licensed to sell "strong water" in 1651, and again in 1662, when he was made captain of a troop of horse. Thereafter one occupation may be said to have supplemented the other for several years. His advice was much esteemed in military matters, such as the laying out of the fort at Marblehead, and the conduct of the war against King Philip. He was a deputy to the General Court in 1666, 1667, 1669, 1670, 1672, 1674, and 1676, and in 1670 was on a committee to revise the laws of the colony. Curwin will always exemplify the saying that "As a man dresses so is he esteemed." Bentley writes: "He had a round large forehead, large nose, high cheek bones, grey eye. His dress was a wrought & flowing neckcloth & a belt or sash covered with lace, a coat with short cuffs & reaching half way between the wrist & elbow, the shirt in plaits below, a cane, & on the ring finger an octagon ring. This dress was preserved till the present Century & was stolen & the lace ripped off & sold, for which the offender wfcs publickly whipped." Curwin married first, in England, Elizabeth, daugh ter of Gregory (?) Herbert and widow of John White; second, 22 July, 1669, Elizabeth, daughter of Governor Edward Winslow and widow of Robert Brooks. His chil- 37i dren were: Abigail; John, a Salem merchant, who mar ried Margaret, granddaughter of Governor Winthrop, and had a son, Sheriff George, executioner of the witches; Jonathan, a judge in the witchcraft trials of 1 692 ; Hannah ; Elizabeth ; Penelope, born in 1670 ; Susannah ; and George, who died early. Curwin died at Salem, 3 January, 1684/5, leaving a large estate, a homestead, four dwelling houses, four ware houses, two wharves, three farms, four ketches, and property in Boston. "The Giles Memorial," by John A. Vinton. Boston, 1864, page 339. "An Inventory of the Contents of the Shop and House of Captain George Corwin," by George Francis Dow. Salem, 1910. 372 GEORGE CURWIN 1610-1684/5 (373) The Rev. John Davenport, of New Haven, "the Universal Scholar," was baptized, 9 April, 1597, at Holy Trinity Church, Coventry, ' where his father, Henry, and grandfather, Edward, had been prominent in times past. His mother, Winnifred, had the curious surname of Barnabit. Very early a student at Oxford, he became, at the age of nineteen, a successful preacher in London, fear less alike before the plague and ecclesiastical authority. Meanwhile he studied till well into the mornings "and never felt his Head ake, yet his Counsil was that other Students would not follow his Exemple." In 1633, under the influence of John Cotton, he fell into non-conformity, called his flock at St. Stephen's together, resigned, and re tired to Holland. There he soon found himself at odds, early in 1635, over baptism, and, as Cotton Mather writes, "he told his Friends, That he thought God carried him over into Holland, on purpose to bear Witness against that Promiscuous Bap tism, which at least Bordered very near upon a Profanation of the Holy Institution." His Christian friends thought otherwise, and he returned to London. Two years later Cotton welcomed him to Boston, as Moses did Jethro, and he settled down at New Haven with his old Coventry friend, Governor Eaton, to become famous for his energy, his gravity, his "ejaculatory prayers," and the severity of the terms of his communion. Mather says that "Davenport employed Golden snuffers so much in the Exercise of Discipline that the New Haven church became the New Jerusalem" — and then devotes five pages to the awful private life of a criminal who had been a revered member of Davenport's church. 375 While at New Haven, in 1661, Davenport is said to have secreted Colonels Goffe and Whalley, the regicides, in his own house, but in a long letter to Colonel Temple, King's agent, inAugust, he evades pitifully, saying"that the poor colony, the Governor and magistrates wanted neither will nor industry to have served His Majesty in apprehend ing the two Colonels, but were prevented & hindered by God's overruling Providence." Some years later, Davenport very reluctantly accepted a call to Boston, where the Half-way Covenant and other radical innovations were much in favor, and became the successor of John Wilson, 9 December, 1668 ; but as "it is ill Transplanting a Tree that thrives in the Soyl," he lan guished and died, 15 March, 1670. His wife was Eliza beth Wolley, who died 15 September, 1676, having had a son, John, and possibly other children. Davenport left many sermons and controversial works in printed form. The portrait is from the painting which hangs in Alumni Hall at Yale. "Massachusetts Historical Society Collection," Third Series, Volume 8, page 327. 376 JOHN DAVENPORT 1597-1670 (377) Mrs. George Davie, famous as an aged person, was born on or about 3 June, 1635, probably Mary, the daugh ter of John Mirick, cooper, who became an inhabitant of Charlestown in 1641/2. When still a girl she was married; she took a second husband a few years later, and it is prob able that she had several children, whose names may be found by some diligent student. A third husband was George Davie, a sea captain and pioneer in the beautiful country at the mouth of the Sheepscot River in Maine,; where he obtained a large tract of land in 1663. The vil lage of Wiscasset now occupies part of the site; and he owned other lands in 1668, lying perhaps on Westport Island, where Marie Antoinette was once offered a refuge, or at Edgecomb. Mr. and Mrs. Davie did much to improve the town and to encourage settlers. A petition of his, in 1676, shows that he sailed up and down the coast in trade, dealing much with Richard Patteshall, and holding also official commissions at various times. Mrs. Davie heard of his death more than once, from shipwreck or Indian attack. Finally, about 1677, the settlers were obliged to leave Wis casset, and not long after this date Captain Davie died. In 1689 his widow was in Charlestown, Massachusetts, where she was admitted to full communion in the church on the 30th of June, and had her son William, a boy of thir teen, baptized on the 1 ith of August. This William, her only son by Mr. Davie, went back to the Sheepscot, and died before 171 9, leaving a daughter Alice, wife of Jacob Clark, of Newcastle, and another daughter, whose name is not known. In 1689, Mrs. Davie's father and husband being dead, and her brother Benjamin, a mariner, having been long absent at sea, she perhaps joined Mrs. Benjamin Mirick in 379 keeping a tavern. At last, in 171 1, Cotton Mather records on the 6th of November : "There is a Woman arrived in my Neighbourhood, who was once in better Circumstances, but is now reduced unto the lowest Poverty; and but meanly provided for the Circumstances of the approaching Winter. I will dispense Releefs unto her. (Aa|3ie)." She had already been aided by the town. It is said that she had had nine children, 45 grandchil dren, 200 great-grandchildren, and 800 great-grandchil dren's children. With one of them she may have settled down in Newton, Massachusetts, where, at Oak Hill, she swung the scythe and used the hoe vigorously. At one hundred and four she could shell corn all day, and at one hundred and ten she sat at her spinning wheel. Far and near she was known as Goody Davie, and famous people came to hear her talk, and to see her smiling face and blue eyes. Among her visitors was Governor Belcher, who asked Judge Dudley to have her portrait painted by Smibert. This was done in 1715, when she began to fail in body and mind. She died at Newton, 23 September, 1752, aged one hundred and seventeen years and one hundred and fifteen days.1 Jackson's "History of Newton," page 267. Maine Historical and Genealogical Recorder, April, 1893, page 74. 'The Hyde Manuscript at the Genealogical Society says, "Supposed to be 1.16 years old." Seth Davis gave her age as above. 380 MARY DAVIE 1635-1752 (3»i) Sir George Downing, Baronet, soldier and politician, was born about 1624 in Dublin, the son of Emmanuel Downing, of the Inner Temple and of Salem, Massachu setts, and grandson of another George, who was master of the Grammar School at Ipswich, England. His mother was Lucy, sister of Governor John Winthrop. He was brought across the sea in 1638. After graduating at Har vard, in 1642, he became a tutor, but in 1645 went to Barbados as a ship's chaplain. Five years later he emerged as scout-master-general under Cromwell, and with the powerful Howard connection, having married Frances Howard, sister of Charles, later Earl of Carlisle, he began a long parliamentary career. In 1657 he favored offering the crown to Cromwell, and had already represented him in negotiations with Mazarin. He acted often as mediator on the continent, and for many years lived at The Hague, to promote Protestantism and English trade. Through Howard influence he made his peace with Charles II in April, 1660. "Charles, when residing at Brussels, went to the Hague at night to pay a secret visit to his sister, the Princess of Orange. After his arrival, 'an old reverend-like man, with a long grey beard and ordi nary grey clothes,' entered the inn and begged for a private inter view. He then fell on his knees, and pulling off his disguise, discovered himself to be Mr. Downing, then ambassador from Cromwell to the States-General." When many were losing their heads, Downing grew in royal favor, and amassed wealth. He was knighted in 1660, and was made a baronet in 1663. His betrayal and arrest of three regicides, his former brothers in arms, dis gusted men like Admiral Penn, and also Pepys, who said : "All the world takes notice of him for a most ungrateful villain for his pains." 0 3°3 But the diarist admired his ability, and approved his re forms in the treasury. When King Charles wanted to pick a feud with the Netherlands, he sent Downing back to The Hague. It was said, "The rabble will tear him in pieces." The King smiled and replied, "Well, I will venture him." Downing soon fled for his life, and the cynical Charles put him in the Tower for deserting his post. He was an able speaker on finance and commerce, and was called "the house-bell to call the courtiers to vote." Downing must have died in 1684, since his will was proved on the 19th of July. His name survives in Down ing Street. Of his three sons and five daughters, George, William, and Charles, Frances, Philadelphia, Lucy, Mary, and Anne, all married except William, but no descendants, as far as known, survived the middle of the eighteenth century, except a natural daughter of Sir George's grand son, the third baronet, and founder of Downing College. Pepys, the diarist, was a clerk in Downing's office in Jan uary, 1659/60, when Downing was one of the Four Tellers of the Receipt of the Exchequer. He speaks bitterly at times of Sir George, as a "stingy fellow" and a "perfidious rogue." Sir George had, however, a sane restraint, as when he opposed death as punishment for James Nayler, accused of blasphemy before Parliament in December, 1656; but as Nayler's tongue had "bored through God" (said Down ing) it might be bored with a hot iron. His portrait faces the title-page of this volume. Sibley's "Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University," Volume I, 1873- 3«4 Governor John Endecott was born about 1588, probably at or near Chagford in Devon, a quaint village six or eight miles southeast of Okehampton. The Endecotts had been engaged in the mining of tin in this neighborhood for a century or more. With five other "religious persons" he purchased, 19 March, 1628, a patent of the Massachu setts Bay. Matthew Cradock and Roger Ludlow secured rights immediately, and Endecott, being related to the former through Ann, his wife, was sent out in June to Naumkeag, later Salem. He showed himself "earnest, zealous, and courageous;" he was just in dealing with the Indians, but was curiously impatient with some of his neigh bors, with those, for example, who used tobacco or allowed their hair to go uncut. He was "of so tender a conscience" in religious matters that he allowed three Quakers to be executed, and others to be flogged, while he was governor, a policy which brought protests from men like Vane, Peter, and Saltonstall. And yet he himself protested against harsh treatment of Roger Williams, and was forced to apologize for this patience with a friend in error. Endecott was the chief office holder of his time in New England; he was assistant in 1628/9, 1 630-1 634, 1636- 1640, 1645-1648; deputy governor in 1641-1643, 1650, 1654; governor of London's plantation in the Massachu setts Bay, 30 April, 1629 — 12 June, 1630; governor of Massachusetts in 1644, 1649, 1651-1653, 1655-1664; major general in 1 645-1 648 ; commissioner of the United Colonies in 1 646-1 648 and president in 1658. He had moved from his "Orchard Farm" to Boston in 1655. The governor strove valiantly to save the Massachusetts Bay charter during the last two or three years of his life, but powerful influences were against him. His opposition 385 to the English church service, and his attitude toward the regicides, had undermined his reputation in London, and Sir William Morrice, Secretary of State, wrote to the Gen eral Court of Endecott's disaffection and the King's dis content. While trouble was thus brewing the governor died, 15 March, 1664/5, aged seventy-seven, and was buried "with great honour and ceremony" in the Granary Burying Ground at Boston. By his first wife, Ann Gower, it is supposed he had no children ; by his second, Mrs. Eliz abeth (Cogan) Gibson, of Cambridge, England, whom he married 18 August, 1630, he had two sons, John and Zerubbabel. Strong emotion led Endecott to mutilate the English flag in order to destroy the "popish" cross of St. George, but of this incident Winthrop wrote : "The only difference between him and others was, he manifested his opinions by his acts, while they, with more prudence and safety, retained theirs in secret." He could give as one reason for the blowing up of twenty- one barrels of powder on a ship, God's wrath, because the captain "read the booke of common prayer so often over that some of the company said hee had worne that threed- bare"; yet he could, in beautiful and heartfelt language, commit his sick friend "into the armes of our deare and loving Father, the God of all our consolation, health, and salvation." The original portrait here reproduced was painted the year that Endecott died. It hung for many years over the fireplace at the Orchard Farm where, said Bentley, "it grows dimmer by the smoak." Putnam's Historical Magazine, Volume -, 1899. JOHN ENDECOTT 1589-1665 (387) John Freke, attorney and merchant, of Boston, was born in England, between February and July inclusive, 1635. The coat of arms on his, tomb in the Granary Burying Ground in Boston is the same as that used by a "visitation" family of the name at Ewern Courtney, alias Shroton, County Dorset. These Frekes were closely inter married with the Colepepers and Harlakendens, two fami lies intimately associated with colonization in the New World. John Freke seems to have arrived in Boston about 1660, when his name begins to appear on the records in shipping controversies, and in connection with the business of the courts. He signed himself " Jno Freke." Freke was associated with the leading merchants of the day in Boston; he was a petitioner, in 1666, to the authori ties to uphold the King's unpopular commissioners, who were then in Boston, and was a constable and juryman. The lives of many of these immigrants would be incom plete without the mention of pirates, and John Freke's was no exception. In the summer of 1674, Captain John Rhoade, of Boston, induced Captain Jurriaen Aerrtouts, of the Dutch privateer, Flying-Horse, to join an expedition for the cap ture of the French settlements on the coast of Maine be tween the Penobscot and the St. John's Rivers. This con quest proved an easy matter, and the territory, under the name of "New Holland," was claimed for the Prince of Orange. Captain Aernouts sailed away, but Rhoade and two Dutchmen set about reaping a harvest in trade under a dubious commission from Aernouts. They soon fell foul of several rival traders, and at last had a melodramatic victory over the Philip, a shallop owned by John Freke and Samuel Shrimpton ; blunderbusses, damp powder, and treachery were the order of the day. 389 Freke appealed for redress to the governor and Council. Captain Samuel Moseley was appointed to chase and cap ture Rhoade and the Dutchmen. He brought them into Boston, 2 April, 1675, and they were in prison awaiting trial as pirates when a tragedy ended Freke's career. He had gone on board a ship from Virginia, in Boston harbor, on the 4th of May, in company with Captain Scarlet and another merchant. An explosion of gunpowder blew out the cabin of the ship. Freke was killed outright, and Captain Scarlet died the next day. The Athenaeum windows look out upon the tomb of Mr. and Mrs. Freke, on which are the Freke arms, impaling Clerke, of Warwick and Kent. Frekehad married, 28 May, 1 66 1, Elizabeth, daughter of Major Thomas Clarke, of the present North Square, Boston, a merchant and mill owner, as well as a leader in public affairs. Mrs. Freke was born in 1642, probably at Dorchester, and had become by this marriage the mother of several children: Mary, Elizabeth, Clarke, John, Jane, Mehitable, Thomas, and a second Mary; and following her husband's death she mar ried Elisha Hutchinson, grandfather of the famous gov ernor, by whom she had three more children. A charming portrait of Mrs. Freke with her little daughter Mary, born in 1 674, is owned by Mrs. Gilbert H. Harrington, of Worcester, Massachusetts, and Andrew Sigourney, Esq., who together also own the portrait of Mr. Freke which is reproduced here. 'The Dutch Pirates in Boston," by George M. Bodge. Bostonian Society Publica tions, Volume 7. See Volume 3 for Thomas Clarke. 390 JOHN FREKE 1635-1675 (390 Colonel William Goffe, the regicide, was born about 1610, at Stanmer in Sussex, the son of the Rev. Stephen Goffe, "a severe Puritan," and brother of a Roman Cath olic priest and a Church of England clergyman. He was apprenticed to a London salter, but soon turned to soldier ing and exhorting — two accomplishments sure to lead to advancement under Cromwell. In 1 645 he was a captain ; in 1655, a major general for three counties; in 1654 and 1656, a member of Parliament, and so close to Cromwell that those who did not favor a crown for the Protector, hinted that Goffe might be a worthy successor in the hum bler office. Ten years of steady rise witnessed the King executed and the great Protector dead. Goffe had married Frances, daughter of Major General Edward Whalley, whose mother was the Protector's aunt. Both Goffe and Whalley had signed the warrant for the execution of King Charles. With the restoration of the Stuarts came an order on the 1 8th of May, 1660, for the arrest of sixty-six mem bers of the High Court of Justice, who had signed the death warrant. Whalley and Goffe had sailed for Boston a few days before the proclamation became known, and arrived in July, 1660, the latter leaving his wife and three daughters in England. Judging from Goffe's diary he was well fitted by religious fervor to please the New England people. On the 19th of August he wrote: "I am banished from my own house; but feasted in ye house of God; oh, yt I might dwell yrin [i.e., therein] forever." The leading men received the regicides cordially, and protected them from capture at New Haven, where they lived with the Rev. John Daven port ; at Hartford, where the Rev. John Whiting knew the secret ; and at Hadley, where they were with the Rev. John 393 Russell. Goffe, under the name of Walter Goldsmith, cor responded with his wife. She sent him this significant hint in 1 67 1 : "It is reported that Whally and Goff and Ludlow is sent for; but I think they will have more wit than to trust them, for it is to be feared that after this sunshine there will be a thick darkness." In a letter of his to Mrs. Goffe (whom he addressed as "mother") he shows the strain under which he labored: " My Deare mother, I once againe begg the continuance of your prayers, for I have grt need of them. I know you cannot forget me, day nor night, if I may conclude from the continuall workings of my own thoughts, affections, & desires, towards yourselfe & my Deare sisters, & the motherly affection you have hetherto shewed to an vnworthy childe, that hath caused you so much sorrow." In September, 1675, Goffe is said to have emerged from hiding to lead the settlers against the Indians, but the story is of doubtful value. His last letter is dated 2 April, 1 679, and no trace of him is found after that year. New England has always sympathized with the regicides, but the parliamentary debates of their time do not add luster to their reputation. One Nayler, a weak fellow who impersonated Jesus and imitated his entry into Jerusalem, having been convicted of blasphemy, was to be punished. Whalley opposed cutting Nayler's hair, as it might "make the people believe that the Parliament of England are of opinion that our Saviour Christ wore his hair so, and this will make all people in love with the fashion." He favored slitting his lips, and Goffe favored restraining him from the society of women. One member, in ridicule of the debate, proposed that he be sent to the "Isle of Dogs." "Memoranda respecting Edward Whalley and William Goffe," by F. B. Dexter. New Haven Colony Historical Society Papers, Volume 2, 1877, page 117. 394 WILLIAM GOFFE i6io(?)-i679 (?395 ) Edward Gray, ropemaker, was born in Lancashire about 1673, and appears in Boston, in 1686, as a young apprentice to John Barton, of Barton's Point, owner of a ropewalk. He spent his savings in visiting England, and on the return voyage was impressed to serve on a man-of- war. The ship's surgeon proved to be a family friend, and secured his release. Returning to Boston, he soon hired a ropewalk, and in course of time became a very successful manufacturer. In 1736, with Samuel Adams and others, he offered the ropewalk to the town for a public highway. Mr. Gray married, 11 August, 1699, Susanna Harrison, by whom he had Harrison, treasurer of the Province and ancestor of Harrison Gray Otis; Edward; Ann; Persis; Susanna; Bethiah; and John. Mrs. Gray died 4 June, 1 7 13, and he married, second, 2 July, 17 14, Hannah Ellis, an English niece of the wife of the Rev. Benjamin Colman, of the Brattle Street Church. She was called, in the family circle in England, the "Lump of Love," and when she crossed the ocean to visit in America, very soon attracted the affections of Mr. Gray. Her children were Ellis, col league minister of the Second Church in Hanover Street; Mary; Sarah; Thomas; William, best known perhaps as the father of Edward, the lawyer ; and Thomas, the Rox- bury minister; Benjamin; and Edward. Edward Gray, the ropemaker, died 2 July, 1757, aged eighty-four, and was buried in the Granary Burying Ground. He left property extending the entire length of the present Pearl Street — the ropewalk, warehouse, yarn- houses, knotting house, and a dwelling house. He had also ten slaves. His portrait, painted about 1745 by Joseph Badger, is now owned by Mrs. Gedney K. Richardson, of Boston. 397 The Rev. Charles Chauncy, pastor of the First Church, preached a sermon at the funeral, which was printed. In it he says : "Your thoughts, I doubt not, are at once fixed on that dear brother of our's, and friend of Christ and the poor, who departed this life yesterday Morning. "What is said upon such occasions is sometimes apt to give dis gust, as being esteemed a compliment to the dead, rather than their just character. But, in the present case, I am in no fear of giving offence, the person I am to speak of was so unexceptionable, so unenvied unless for his goodness, and so universally well spoken of, both while living, and now he is dead. "He was of an active spirit, diligent in business; but did not pursue it to the neglect of the one thing needful. His share of this world's goods, the fruit of his own labour, under the divine blessing, was very considerable; but he did not keep it to himself. He 'honored the Lord with his substance;' chearfully embracing the opportunities providence put into his hands of relieving the neces sities of the poor. . . . And what added much to the beauty and value of his charities, he dispensed them without noise and bustle, without shew or ostentation ; not seeking, not regarding, the praise of men, and concerned chiefly to approve himself to his great Lord and Judge." "Gray Genealogy," by M. D. Raymond. Tarrytown, 1887, page 191. 398 EDWARD GRAY i673(?)-i757 (399) Mabel Harlakenden, wife of Governor John Haynes, of Connecticut, and daughter of Richard Har lakenden, was born, 27 September, 1614, at Earls Colne, County Essex, an estate with a group of ancient buildings over against a pleasant rolling hill. She was deprived of her father by death in 1631, and of a mother's care when Mrs. Harlakenden lost the use of her mind. The family circle was influential, however, and she must have seen Cromwell, Richard Baxter, and other grave Puritans who visited at Earls Colne. She was attractive, and it appears that she had her share of romance in those days of austerity. When Roger, her brother, determined on a voyage to New England in 1635, Mabel, then at the age of twenty- one, crossed with him and his wife in the ship Defence. The face of their brother, Colonel Richard, intelligent and resolute, may be seen in the "Stokes Records," edited by Anson Phelps Stokes (1910). Mabel's brother, Roger Harlakenden, quickly became prominent, and in 1636 was made lieutenant colonel of a regiment commanded by Colonel John Haynes, an emi grant from Copford Hall in Essex. Haynes was a young widower, and at about this time married Mabel Harlaken den. They moved to Hartford the next year, and in 1639 her husband became governor. He had a large mansion, furnished with leather and flag-bottom chairs, a gilt looking- glass, and a "tinn hanging candelstick," also a garden, orchard, ox pasture, and meadows. Every alternate year he was chief magistrate of Connecticut, until his death on the first of March, 1654. Mrs. Haynes was very ill in the spring of 1648, and her husband wrote : 401 "My wife is yett in the land of the livinge, only weake, keepes her bedd constantly — If she tryes to sitt upp, falls presently into her violent fitts." Later the Rev. John Wilson, of Boston, referred to "the miraculous cure of sweet Mris. Haines." Their children were John, Roger, Joseph, Ruth, and Mabel. John graduated at Harvard in 1656, and died in England in 1670, as vicar of Stanaway, near Copford Hall. He was a crony of Fitz-John Winthrop, and in early life had innumerable love affairs, which he discussed in his well-written letters. Joseph was "the reverend teacher of the first church in Hartford." Ruth married Samuel Wyllys, and Mabel became the wife of James Russell. Mrs. Haynes, after the governor's death, married, 17 November, 1654, Samuel, son of Governor Theophilus Eaton, of New Haven, but lived only until July of the next year. The portrait here reproduced is from a photogravure of the painting as it looked when it hung at Earls Colne. Mr. Stokes writes : "It was very dirty. The canvas was rotten and had to be re newed. A sword-thrust over the right eye was said to have been made by a rejected suitor. . . This photograph was taken before sending the painting to the London cleaner, whose work proved somewhat disastrous." A reproduction of the restored portrait may be seen in Mr. Stokes's book. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, October, 1861. 402 MABEL (HARLAKENDEN) HAYNES I6I4•-I<>,^,; (403) George Jaffrey, a Scotch merchant of New Hamp shire, born about 1638, was in Newbury, Massachusetts, in 1665, when he married, 7 December, Elizabeth Walker. He very soon moved to Great Island (later Newcastle), and in 1677 was well established, when he engaged Samp son Sheafe to look after his merchandise and wharves. He was one of the Lords of Trade, and among his many en terprises was an attempt to stimulate the mining of tin, by inducing miners to emigrate from Cornwall to New Hamp shire. His house, near the present Jerry's Point, and about a mile from Fort Constitution, was handsomely furnished, as befitted a gentleman of fine taste and comfortable for tune. In 1 68 1, his first wife being now dead, he married Anne, a young woman whose surname is not known. Mrs. Jaffrey died 6 December, 1682, aged eighteen, having had a son born on the 22d of November, who was named George. His third wife was Hannah, who survived him, and married Colonel Penn Townsend, of Boston. An incident of the year 1684 threw town and church into turmoil, and resulted in imprisonment for the local minister. The story is repeated here only because it was a ripple above deep counter currents iti a New Hampshire controversy. As far as it relates to Mr. Jaffrey, who is referred to in the "Annals of Portsmouth" as "George Janvrin," one must bear all the circumstances in mind in deciding how seriously his act is to be taken. "A small vessel belonging to George Janvrin had been seized by the collector of the port, for a breach of some of the laws of trade. A number of persons took forcible possession of her by night, and carried her out of the harbour. A prosecution was instituted on account of it, and upon the trial the owner swore, that she had been carried off without his knowledge. Strong suspicions arose that he 405 had sworn falsely ; however, he settled the matter with [Governors] Cranfield and Randolph, and all legal proceedings were stopped. But as Mr. Janvrin was a member of Mr. Moody's church, it was thought necessary for the honour of the church, that enquiry should be made respecting the matter. Mr. Moody applied to the Governor for evidence against the offender ; but Cranfield informed him that the action had been settled to his satisfaction, and forbade Mr. Moody's instituting any enquiry respecting it before the church. Notwithstanding which, Mr. Moody preached a sermon upon the evil of false swearing ; several church-meetings were held upon the occasion; the person suspected was brought before them, and charged with the crime, which he at length acknowledged and made a public confession of it." Jaffrey was a member of the Scots' Charitable Society in 1685, speaker of the Assembly in 1695, and a member of the King's Council from 1702 until he died, 13 February, 1 706/7, aged sixty-nine. The Rev. John Pike in his Journal speaks of Mr. Jaffrey's death : "Thrsday. George Geffrey sen: of Portsmouth Esq: — & one of the Councill journeying from Boston towards Piscataqua, in a very cold day, was taken sick of flux & feaver at Ipswich ; and died after ten days sickness at Col. Appeltons, was interred the 17th of Feb. A man of singular understanding & usefulness among us." His son and grandson both bore his name, both graduated at Harvard, and each served as Treasurer of the Province, one known as Chief Justice of the Superior Court, the other as Clerk of the Supreme Court. The name has been a distinguished one in New Hampshire and in Boston. 406 GEORGE JAFFREY i638(?)-i7o6/7 (4°7) The Rev. Hanserd Knollys, famous as a Baptist, was born about 1599, at Cawkwell in Lincolnshire, studied at the Great Grimsby Grammar School and at Cambridge, was ordained 30 June, 1629, and became vicar of Humber- stone in 1631, where he remained until 1633. He was arrested for non-conformity in 1636, at Boston, but was allowed to escape to London, where his funds were ex hausted in waiting for a ship. In 1638, with six brass farthings in his purse, he sailed with his wife and child, and reached America after a voyage of three months. He worked daily with a hoe for three weeks in Boston, and finding the magistrates suspicious of his beliefs, he accom panied two gentlemen to Dover in New Hampshire, where, in September, with the aid of Captain John Underhill, he gathered a congregation. All went well for two years, for he was a brilliant preacher. Then one Larkham arrived, a man of wealth, ready' tongue, and unscrupulous methods. He replaced Knollys in the affections of the more worldly sort and was excommunicated. The two men came to blows ; Larkham snatched KnoUys's cap, claiming it had not been paid for (which might well be true) . Knollys and his supporter, Underhill, one with a Bible on a pole, the other with a pistol, routed their opponents, but were eventually besieged in Mr. KnoUys's house; then the governor of Strawberry Bank, later Portsmouth, was called in to restore order. The Rev. Hugh Peter, of Salem, and two others, were sent by Massachusetts to make peace. But both lead ers had been scorched by the bitter tongues of slander, and their influence was gone. Knollys returned to London in December, 1641, and gathered a church in Great St. Helen's, in 1645, where he continued to preach when possible until his death, 19 Sep- 409 tember, 1691, an aged and very distinguished man. He had signed the Baptist Confession of Faith in 1 646, and probably wrote the preface to the Confession of 1689; he compiled a Hebrew Grammar in 1648, and at times preached to congregations of a thousand worshipers. He carried on a successful school at one time, at another he served as an army chaplain under Cromwell, and at the outbreak of Venner's Insurrection in January, 1661, he was imprisoned, but apparently without reason. During the searching days of the Restoration he sought refuge in Wales, in Holland, and in Germany, and his property was confis cated. Mather had a cautious but kindly word for him in the "Magnalia." Knollys wore long hair, a scull cap, and no beard. His portrait was engraved at the age of sixty- seven and at the age of ninety-three by Van Hove. His wife's name is unknown. She died 30 April, 1671, leaving a son, Isaac, and three other children. New Hampshire Historical Society Collections, Volume 5, page 175. Concord, 1837. " Dictionary of National Biography." 4IO HANSERD KNOLLYS iS99(?)-i6gi (4") John Leverett, governor of Massachusetts, was bap tized, 17 July, 1 61 6, at St. Botolph's Church, Boston, County Lincoln, the son of Thomas Leverett, "a plain man, yet piously subtle." His mother was Jane Fisher. In July, 1633, his father resigned as alderman of the borough, and brought his family to New England in the ship with John Cotton, the late vicar. In a copy of the "Breeches Bible," 1599, the governor has recorded his marriage, 18 June, 1639, t0 Hannah, daughter of Ralph Hudson, as well as her death on 7 July, 1646 ; and his second marriage, 9 September, 1647, t0 Sarah, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Sedgwick. By his first wife he had four children, including a surviving son, Hudson, the father of President Leverett, of Harvard; by his second, he had fourteen children, of whom Sarah married Judge Byfield. Leverett, in early life while in England, served in Colonel Thomas Rainborow's regiment (1644— 1645), officered largely by friends and relatives of the New Eng land Winthrops, and had come under the eye of Cromwell. On his return to Massachusetts, he was chosen a member of the General Court, but was soon in Cromwell's service again, for he held the forts in Acadia in 1655. From this year until 1662, he was at Court as agent of the colony, protecting it by personal influence from Cromwell's dis pleasure at religious persecution here — bigotry which did not, however, meet with his approval. After the Restora tion, he was addressed by King Charles as a knight. If this was not an error he chose to ignore the honor, perhaps a mark of consideration dangerous to make too evident at such a time. He was an assistant from 1665 to 1671; major general, 1 663-1 673; deputy governor, 1 671-1673; and governor of Massachusetts, 1673 to the time of his 413 death, at four o'clock on the morning of the 16th of March, 1678/9. His wisdom and military skill fitted him for leadership during the perils of King Philip's War, and made him a popular office holder all his life. His funeral was an occa sion for great ceremony, only excelled in pomp by his epitaph, which declares him to be "N. E's Heroe, Mars his Generall, Vertues standard-bearer and Learning's Glory." The Saltonstall family have a small miniature (repro duced here) set in gold, and the colors are still bright. Bentley, in his Diary, 15 February, 1813, says: "I visited the Land Bank apartment in the State House & ob served the Gov. Leverett there was of him when old & not young like that from which mine was taken at Ipswich." This portrait, now at the State House, is reproduced in the Genealogical Register, Volume 4. The three-fourths length here given is from the painting at the Essex Institute, Salem. "Ancestry and Descendants of Sir Richard Saltonstall." 1897. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, April, 1850; October, 1858. 414 JOHN LEVERETT 1616-1678/9 Miniature (4-5) JOHN LEVERETT 1616-1678/9 (417',') The Rev. Richard Mather, first of the Mathers in America, was born in 1596, at Lowton, near Warrington, Lancashire, the son of Thomas and Margaret Mather. At the age of fifteen he took charge of a school at Toxteth Park, near Liverpool, where for seven years, his family being in reduced circumstances, he taught and fitted others for the university. He entered Brazenose College 9 May, 161 8, but the same year returned to preach at Toxteth and at Prescot. He soon attracted the attention of the mayor of Liverpool and of local religious leaders, one of whom said that he had "substance in him." After fifteen years he was suspended from his ministry in August, 1633, for non conformity. Meanwhile Cotton and Hooker urged him to remove to New England, and he decided to leave his home early in 1635. He was six weeks getting away from land and six more crossing the ocean. His journal of the voyage is delightful for its evidence of healthy enjoyment of por poises, mackerel, gulls, seaweed, weather, food, and events. He had a normal body and usually a sane mind, although one could wish he had not pressed for the excommunication of Mrs. Hutchinson later on. Mather was made "teacher" of a new church at Dor chester, 23 August, 1636, and there he lived and labored until his death from an attack of the stone, 22 April, 1669. In old age he lost the use of one eye and had become par tially deaf. By his wife Katharine, daughter of Edmund Hoult, of Bury, whom he married, 29 September, 1624, he had six sons, Samuel, Timothy, Nathaniel, and Joseph, born in England, and Eleazer and Increase, born in Amer ica. Samuel and Nathaniel were clergymen abroad, and Increase, president of Harvard College, was the father of Cotton Mather, preacher, antiquarian, and diarist. Mrs. 419 Mather died in February, 1655, and he married the widow of the famous John Cotton. His influence and wisdom were shown at the synod, called in 1648 to combat Presbyterianism, when his plan for congregational polity was adopted. His portrait is in the American Antiquarian Society at Worcester, and as Bentley says, "it agrees as well as pos sible" with an engraving by John Foster, which was used in the life issued in 1670. He was the author of several publications, and when a committee was appointed in 1639 to prepare a metrical translation of the Psalms, Mather was admonished by Mr. Shepard, of Cambridge, in these words : "And you of Dorchester, your verses lengthen ; But with the text's own words you will them strengthen." 'Chronicles of the First Planters," by Alexander Young. Boston, 1846. 'Athena? Oxonienses," by Anthony a Wood. London, 1817, Volume 3, column 832. 420 RICHARD MATHER 1596-1669 (4») Richard Middlecott, merchant, was born probably at Boston, England, where Sir Thomas Middlecott had been mayor and was a benefactor, or at Warminster, County Wilts, where the family was prominent. Richard was ap prenticed to a merchant in Bristol, and, then or later, obtained a knowledge of law. His first wife's name is unknown, but he came over to New England about 1670, with his son Edward. In 1672 he married Sarah, daughter of John Winslow and niece of Governor Edward Winslow. She had already had two husbands, Myles Standish, 2d, and Tobias Paine. By Mr. Middlecott she had Mary, born in 1674, and married to Henry Gibbs in 1695; Sarah, born in 1678 ; and Jane, who married, in 170,2, Elisha Cooke, Jr. Middlecott began, very soon after his arrival in Boston, to act as an attorney in the courts, and in 1674 he first appeared before the Court of Assistants, in behalf of Samuel Winslow. Middlecott became a freeman in 1 690, a member of the Council under the new charter in 1691, and a member of Cotton Mather's church in March, 169 1/2. He had owned a pew there for several years. In May, 168 1, Mather writes : " 16 d. 3 m. Choosing, for the sake of some Con veniences, to retire for my Studies, into our spacious Meet ing-house, I had a strong Impression, on my Mind, there to make a Prayer, in one of the Pewes; and particularly, in a Pew belonging to one Mr. Middlecot; a Gentleman of good Fashion and Quality, in our Neighbourhood ; but one of an airy Temper, and not yett making much Show of Acquaintances with the Wayes of God : nor indeed, was hee any other than a Stranger to myself. Here, I cried unto the Lord, for this Gentleman, who was the owner of the Pew, that the Lord would work thoroughly and savingly on his 423 Heart, and make him a really renewed Person, and lett mee live to see the Answer of these my Prayers. And I had my Heart filled, with a strange and a strong Hope, that my Prayers would at one Time or other bee graciously an swered. "Memorandum, [in the margin] About eleven years afterwards, I saw the Answer of these Prayers^ when the very Gentleman joined unto our Church, and proved him self in further Instances a pious Person, and a great Bless ing and Comfort unto myself." He died, 13 June, 1704, leaving by will lands in England to his son Edward, and legacies to his daughters. Portraits of Mr. Middlecott and his son Edward are owned by a descendant, Richard M. Saltonstall, Esq., of Boston. 424 (Szt) foli-{i)ttgt jLiooaiaaiiM cdjvhoih Richard Montague was at Wells, Maine, about 1 640, with a wife Abigail. So much we know. It is probable that he is the Richard mentioned in the "Visitation of Buckinghamshire" in 1634, as the son of George and Susan Montague, of Boveney, in the parish of Burnham, where the family had been prominent for a century. George Montague had a son Peter, born about 1603, who was in Virginia as early as 1621. Still another son, William, was a Master of Arts and Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. Their cousin, another Richard Montague, was just begin ning an ecclesiastical voyage between the Scylla of Puri tanism, and the Charybdis of Romanism, that was to win King James as his pilot, and two bishoprics as his havens of refuge. f.! Abigail was "my cousin Mountagew" [i.e., niece], men tioned by Emmanuel Downing, of Salem, who had come over in 1638. She was the daughter of Emmanuel's brother, Joseph Downing, rector of St. Stephen's Church, Ipswich, England, and was baptized in 161 7. The rector's sister, Abigail Downing, was the wife of John Goade, of London, skinner, whose family appears to have come from Wraysbury, seven miles from Boveney. Abigail, the rector's cousin (as we use the term), was destined for Virginia in 1 623, by the will of her father, John, the skinner of London ; possibly she was about to marry Peter Mon tague. The Montagues were noticed first at Wells. Then in the spring of 1 646, with a small daughter, they came to Boston, where the Rev. John Wilson later baptized two children. In the spring of 1651, they set out for Wethersfield on the Connecticut River, armed with Mrs. Montague's letter of transfer from the First Church, and a letter from Mr. 427 Downing to his nephew, Governor John Winthrop the younger. They had money also for the purchase of much land, and the tools of a miller and baker, as well as a modest library of books. In 1659, Montague moved up the river to Hadley, where he obtained land close to the church and the palisade. He served as selectman in 1671 and 1677, was clerk of the writs in 1681, and active as a baker, miller, and farmer. He belonged to a family long devoted to Episcopacy, if he was of the Boveney line, and possibly moved often on account of his religious views. His wife, however, was a member of the Puritan church wherever she went. He died at Hadley, 14 December, 1681, leaving a considerable estate ; and his wife survived until 8 Novem ber, 1699, living with her younger son John. Their other children were Mary, Sarah, Martha, Peter, and Abigail. The portrait here reproduced is said to represent Richard. It is from a miniature on copper, one and eleven- sixteenths inches high by one and seven-sixteenths inches wide, owned by Henry W. Montague, Esq., of Boston. "Visitation of Buckinghamshire in 1634.1 Muskett's "Suffolk Memorial Families." 428 RICHARD MONTAGUE i6i4(?)-i68i Miniature (429) When William Pepperrell, the young curer of fish at the Isles of Shoals, came in 1677 to do business with John Bray, the merchant and shipbuilder at Kittery Point, he fell in love with Margery, the merchant's daughter. She was then seventeen, and he, like Jacob, had to wait for his Rachel, although William served only a week for every month that Jacob served. On land near Bray's house, which still stands, they built the Pepperrell mansion that became famous later as the birthplace of Margery's sixth child, Sir William, the conqueror of Louisburg, the Governor of Massachusetts, and the friend of Lord Mayors and Kings across the water. Mrs. Pepperrell taught her children to read, to write, and to do sums. An English grammar was on the family book shelf, but the pages do not show much thumbing, and Sir William's early letters prove that he, at least, endeavored to do without it. All the children acquired geography from the captains of a hundred ships. The two boys studied the more advanced subjects with the local clergymen, and the six girls absorbed housewifery from an efficient mother. As her husband, and then her children, grew in prosperity and fame, Mrs. Pepperrell became widely known for her charity and modesty. After her death, on 24 April, 1741, the Boston Post Boy published this announcement of her death and character on the 1 ith of May: "Kittery, April 30, 1741. Last Friday (after a short Illness) departed this Life, and this Day was decently interr'd, Madam Margery Pepperell, of this Place, in the eighty-first Year of her Age. She was born at Plymouth, in Old England, came hither with her Parents in her Youth, who left their native Country for the free Enjoyment of their religious Privileges. " She was thro' the whole Course of her Life very exemplary for unaffected Piety and amiable Vertues; especially her Charity, her 431 courteous Affability, her Prudence, Meekness, Patience, and her unweariedness in Well-doing. As it pleased God to afford her great worldly Advantages, and a large Capacity of doing Good so she improved them to the Honour of God and the Service of her Generation; being charitable without Ostentation, and making it her constant Rule to do good to all as she had Opportunity. She was not only a loving and discreet Wife, and tender Parent, but a sincere Friend to all her Acquaintance. "She hath left behind her one Son and five Daughters, and many Grandchildren, who rise up and call her blessed. She was justly esteemed while living, and at Death as much regretted. As she lived a Life of Faith and constant Obedience to the Gospel, so she died with great inward Peace and Comfort, and the most cheerful Resig nation to the Will of God. The work of Righteousness shall be Peace, and the Effect of Righteousness Quietness and Assurance forever." "The Life of Sir William Pepperrell, Bart.," by Usher Parsons. Boston, 1855. Boston Weekly Post Boy, May n, 1741. 432 MARGERY PEPPERRELL 1660-1741 (433) The rise of the Pepperrells is the story of prudence and romance. William Pepperrell, a young man of twenty-two in 1668, came from Revelstoke in Devon, it is said, to fish at the Isles of Shoals. He had already served on the Grand Banks as apprentice to a sea captain, and soon accumulated enough money to begin the curing of fish, while his ships, like circling pigeons, swept farther each year from the home nest to trade with the world. Margery Bray at Kit tery Point, when a girl of seventeen, had attracted his attention, and in 1680 he had by thrift and one or two lucky adventures acquired enough property so that they could be married. The Brays were industrious and religious emigrants from old Plymouth. They built ships, and all the members of the family ventured their share of fish and oil and lumber for the hope of luxuries from the West Indies, Portugal, and London. Meanwhile Mr. Pepperrell took an interest in public affairs; he held the office of Justice of the Peace from 1690 to 1725, and of a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1694/5 to 1702, and from 1708 to 1720. He rose in the militia to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and became a founder of the church in Kittery, when it was organized in 1 7 14. When at the height of his prosperity, he began nego tiations for the purchase of an estate in Devon, but some losses in shipping and the exacting duties at home soon caused his plan to fail. He continued, nevertheless, to cor respond with his relatives there, and his niece, Mary Nicholls, wrote to her "Hond uncle and ant," from "Revelstock" [in Devon], May 16, 1722, to thank him for a gift of money and to beg "a line or two in answer to this for I have sent you four Leters Since I Received any." He lived to be over eighty, and to see every one of his two 435 sons and six daughters come to maturity and marry. When he died, 15 February, 1733/4, honored and loved by a wide circle of friends and relatives, he had heard of the birth of fifty grandchildren. His children were Andrew, Mary, Margery, Joanna, Miriam, William (victor at Louisburg and baronet) , Dorothy, and Jane. The baronet married a granddaughter of Chief Justice Sewall, and of their distinguished descendants in England, Edward Wal- ford, the antiquary, is well known in America. Governor Belcher said of Colonel Pepperrell, who was an intimate and dear friend : "God had furnisht him with a large share of prudence and understanding, which had made him not only a blessing to his own family, but of great service to his King & country, and his death becomes a publick loss, but since it is a debt we must pay, being annext to our natures, for it is appointed for all men once to dye, and there is no discharge in that war." Essex Institute Historical Collections, July, 1901. 436 WILLIAM PEPPERRELL 1646-1733/4 (J437) Hugh Peter, the second son of Thomas Dyck- woode (?), alias Peter, and Martha, daughter of John Treffry, was baptized, 29 June, 1598, at Fowey in Corn wall, took his B.A. in 1617/18 at Trinity College, Cam bridge, and his M.A. in 1622. He had come under the religious influence of Thomas Hooker, and soon began to preach in Essex, where, in 1624, he married Elizabeth, widow of Edmund Reade, of Wickford. Having been ordained, he lectured at St. Sepulchre's to enormous audi ences. Envy and suspicion forced upon him a public sub mission to the Church of England, but since he "would not conform to all" he went over te Holland about 1629, where he became minister at Rotterdam. He soon began to fear the influence of Laud, and went to New England in the fall of 1635, becoming minister at Salem in December. He publicly rebuked Vane for sympathy with Mrs. Hutch inson, was an accuser at her trial, and tried to browbeat her defenders. His preaching, however, attracted worshipers, and his civic enterprise was unflagging; he encouraged fisheries and shipbuilding, and relieved famine. His wife died in 1637, and he married, some months later, Deliver ance Sheffield. Of the courtship of "Mrs. D. Sh.," Peter said: "Could I with comfort and credit desist this seems best," and later to Winthrop : "If you find I cannot make an honorable retreat then I shall desire to advance." Mrs. Peter was living in New England, a charge on charity, as late as 1677. In 1 641 he went to England on an ecclesiastical and commercial mission for the colony. He endeavored to have Laud, then out of favor, sent to Boston in his care — an adventure that would have been interesting — and he won recruits for the parliamentary army by his preaching. Be- 439 fore battles and executions he was the leading figure to exhort and warn. He became the semi-official publicity agent of the Cromwellians in and out of Parliament, called by some "the vicar-general of the independants," by others "an imprudent and temerarious man." In 165 1 he was on the crest of the wave, with a pension and part of Laud's library. When Governor Coddington merrily addressed him as Archbishop of Canterbury "it passed very well." He continued an intermittent activity in public affairs until his arrest, 31 August, 1660. Conversations with Cromwell and Ireton were reported, which, together with his political sermons, sent him to the block at Charing Cross, 16 Octo ber, 1660. The story of his last hours would move the stoutest heart. He was compelled to sit within the enclosure to see his friend John Cook hanged, cut down alive, dis embowelled, beheaded, and then quartered. "And by and by the Hangman came to him all besmer'd in Blood, and rubbing his bloody Hands together, he (tauntingly) ask'd, ' Come, how do you like this, Mr. Peter, how do you like this Work?' To whom he reply'ed, 'I am not (I thank God) terrifyed at it, you may do your worst ! ' " To a bystander who upbraided him for causing the death of King Charles, he replied: "Friend, you do not well to trample on a dying man. You are greatly mistaken : I had nothing to do in the death of the King." So ended a career devoted to religious and civic duty as Peter understood them, for he was unselfish, untiring, tolerant, although in discreet in action and violent in his language, both of jest and invective. His daughter Elizabeth, by his second wife, was living as late as 1 704 in London, the widow of Thomas Barker, of All Hallows, London Wall, she and her eight children being destitute. 440 wh o 3 ^^gp?* : O (441 Major Robert Pike, of Salisbury in New England, gentleman, was born early in 1616, at Langford, County Wilts, the son of John Pike and Dorothy Day. With his parents he came, in 1635, to Newbury, but in 1639 was one of the founders of Salisbury. He married, first, 3 April, 1 641, Sarah Sanders, who died 1 November, 1679, having had five daughters and three sons, John, Robert, and Moses; second, Martha Moyce, the widow of George Goldwyer. Major Pike died, 12 December, 1706, having been, wrote Whittier, "by all odds the most remarkable personage of the place and time . . . one of the wisest and worthiest of the early settlers of that region." His son, the minister at Dover, wrote in his diary : "My aged & Dear father Major Robert Pike deceased in the 91 or 92 year of his age, after long weakness & Illness, but no great sickness, & he was Interred upon ye 19th of v2 same. He was always very temperate in Ref: to meats & drinks, & Generally very healthy." He was a deputy to the General Court frequently from 1648 to 1681; assistant in 1682-1686, 1690, and 1691; member of the Council of Safety in 1689, and commander- in-chief of the forces sent against the common French and Indian enemy in 1690; councilor in 1 692-1695. In the winter of 1675/6 the Major and Wheelwright, the pastor at Salisbury, fell out, the former's absence from church and "constant pleading the wicked causes of delin quents" seeming to undermine ministerial authority. Wheelwright excommunicated Pike, and the Major asked the General Court to remove Wheelwright from office. Finally, acting on a committee report, the General Court persuaded the church to receive Major Pike again, and peace reigned. 443 Pike's next great battle was in 1692, when at the peril of his own life, he defended persons accused of witchcraft. "This heroic act," it has been said, "seems to have been but one of several similar efforts by him to convince those jurists of the injustice of their course. It stands out against the deep blackness of those proceedings, like a pillar of light upon a starless midnight sky. Confronting these judges stood this sturdy old man, his head whitened with the frosts of seventy-six winters, possessing a deeply religious character, and with convictions moulded into fixed and rigid forms by the views and practices of a lifetime. He was hampered by his belief in the power of the devil and his imps, living in an invisible world close to our own, to vex and ruin the bodies as well as the souls of men ; accepting in full faith, like nearly all his contemporaries, the most literal interpretation of those passages of Scripture supposed to bear upon the subject. The judges might have told him, as they told Philip English, the richest and most active merchant of Salem, when he tried to persuade them to acquit his wife, that this showed he was a witch himself, and have arrested him on the charge, as English was arrested. But all such considera tions, though prevailing with others, were discarded by him. He laid before the court his argument against the convictions, made not from the stand-point of our times, which would be a comparatively easy task, but from that of the judges and prosecutors themselves. He demonstrated that there was no legal way of convicting a witch, even according to the laws and beliefs of those times." Instead of withdrawing to Maine with Wheelwright, or to Rhode Island with Roger Williams, or bowing to biogtry as Cotton and Higginson did, Pike held his ground and fought like a man. He deserves a large place in New England history, but his biography is unknown to the makers of encyclopedias. "The New Puritan," by James S. Pike. New York, 1879. 444 ROBERT PIKE 161 6-1706 (445) Mrs. Anne Pollard, the first lady of Boston, was born in or near Saffron Walden, County Essex, about the year 1 62 1. She is supposed to have come over with the Win throp company to Charlestown in 1630, a healthy young girl in a circle of sedate magistrates and matrons. Each day must have seemed like a church service sixteen hours long. When the settlers began to complain about the water supply a red Indian — or was it Mr. Blackstone? — pointed to the wooded peninsula across the bay and told of a spring of clear water. It was decided to send a boat to explore ; at the incoming of the tide the boat was made ready and Anne clambered in to get a seat in the bow. As the boat drew into shallow water, where the shells and seaweed could be seen, Anne stood up, and with the grounding of the prow leaped ashore. Hers was the first white girl's foot on soil now pressed by a million eager feet each day. While some of the men crossed over to the present Spring Lane to view the spring, she ran in and out of the blueberry bushes that skirted the swampy lands along the present Charles Street. A few years later she married Mr. William Pollard, innholder, and they lived, as she herself said, on "a certain piece or parcel of land, scituate near the bottom of the Common at the Westerly part thereof, in Boston aforesaid and bounded on the Sea southwest." Here she had a house which had been built by Richard Pepys, perhaps a kinsman of the famous Samuel, and here old Mr. Blackstone, and Mr. Pepys, and Mr. Pollard, and Anne used to get to gether for friendly gossip, as she once related in 171 1. In 1 72 1, when her age was supposed to be one hundred years and three months, her portrait was painted, and it is 447 still preserved at the rooms of the Massachusetts Historical Society. During her old age she was visited by the curious, and enjoyed her prominence. Any Harvard student who could smoke a pipe with her, and would listen to her tale of that momentous quest of the spring, was a welcome visitor. Doubtless the story added detail with the years, but the essentials may well be true. She died on Monday, 6 De cember, 1725, in her one hundred and fifth ( ?) year, and was buried on Thursday, borne to the grave by six dis tinguished men, including Chief Justice Sewall. She had twelve children; and one hundred and thirty descendants survived her for the upbuilding of Boston. She became a mother for the last time in 1668, when her child, David, was born, and the same year she became a grandmother, when the wife of her oldest son, John, gave birth to a daughter. Notes and Queries, v. August, 1913, page 94. 448 ANNE POLLARD i62i(?)-i725 (449) William Pynchon, author of "The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption," was born in 1590, probably at Springfield, Essex, although the family had been associated for centuries with the neighboring town of Writtle, where his father, John, and cousins, Sir Edward Pynchon and the Countess of Portland, had many kinsmen. His grand mother, Mrs. Jane Pynchon, later wife of the distinguished statesman and scholar, Thomas Wilson, LL.D., had re cently, died, and Jane's father, a brutal courtier under Henry VII, had long ago lost his head on Tower Hill. There was also a close kinship with a lovelier character, Dorothy Osborne, of Chicksands, whose letters still sur vive. Pynchon was sent at the age of eleven to Oxford, and returned, to serve as churchwarden, at Springfield, in 1624. He had already married Ann, daughter of William Andrew, of Twiwell, County Northampton, by whom he had Ann, Mary, (Colonel) John, Margaret, and a son who was drowned. His second wife was Mrs. Sanford, whose son, Henry Smith, by a former husband, married Ann Pynchon. Colonel Pynchon died at Wraysbury, near Windsor, 29 October, 1662, where from his "study" he had sent forth several learned books in his leisurely and scholarly old age. His heraldic seal ring is still preserved. Pynchon came to Massachusetts in 1630, having been named a patentee in the Charter of the colony in 1628. He settled at Roxbury as a merchant or trader ; was treasurer, 1632-1634; assistant, 1630-1636, 1643-1650; commis sioner to govern Connecticut in 1635/6, and to govern settlements on the Connecticut River in 1641. He had moved, in 1636, to Agawam (later Springfield), and lived there as a trader in furs, magistrate, and kindly autocrat of white man and Indian alike. Meanwhile he was busy with 451 a book, destined to stir the Calvinist host to hot anger the moment it arrived from the press in England. The magis trates deemed it wise not to delay action until the book could be read with care. It was enough that on the title- page they saw "that Christ did not suffer for us those un utterable torments of Gods wrath, that commonly are called Hell-torments, and that He did not bear our sins by Gods imputation." The General Court ordered the book to be burned and an answer to be prepared. John Eliot called it "a book full of error & weakens & some heresies," but Sir Henry Vane and other famous men defended it in letters to the magistrates. Finally Pynchon stated to the Court that "it hath pleased God to lett me see that I have not spoken in my booke so fully of the prize and merrit of Christs sufferings as I should have done." He was, how ever, deprived of further honors, placed under bonds, and, in 1652, returned to England where another book was published the same year. "The Puritan in England and New England," by Ezra H. Byington. 1896. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, April, 1894. 452 WILLIAM PYNCHON 1590-1662 (453) Edward Rawson, secretary of Massachusetts, was born, 15 April, 161 5, at Gillingham, Dorset, the son of David Rawson, a citizen and merchant tailor of London, and Margaret, sister of the Rev. John Wilson, later of Boston in New England. His father died in 1617/18, leaving to him £100 and part of his silver plate. He mar ried Rachel, daughter of Richard and Rachel (Greene) Perne, of Gillingham, then "a convenient place," where Judge Sewall once stopped to call upon the Pernes. Rawson came to Newbury in 1636 or 1637, and soon became a selectman (1638) and public notary, and had the right to perform marriages. He was a deputy from New bury almost every year from 1638 to 1649, serving as clerk two years. He moved in 1650 to Boston, and was chosen secretary of the colony annually until 1 686. Edward John son says that he was " of ripe capacity, a good yeoman, and eloquent inditer." On account of these qualities, no doubt, he was made recorder for the County of Suffolk in October, 165 1, and held the office until October, 1670, when his portrait and that of his daughter Rebecca were painted and dated that year. One of his last important official acts as secretary was to sit on horseback in the High Street in Boston, surrounded by the great officials of state, horse men, foot soldiers, drummers, and trumpeters, to proclaim James the Second as King of England, 20 April, 1685. In a petition to the General Court for financial aid in 1679,, he relates how, in the Indian Wars of 1675-1676, he signed over six thousand commissions, working often from six in the morning until eleven at night. He was now by the new government deprived of an income, for his com mercial adventures, such as the making of gun powder, had not been successful, and his whole life had been devoted to 455 public service. He died, 27 August, 1693, leaving six sons and six daughters ; three sons returned to England ; William was a yeoman and Grindal, a clergyman ; Rebecca, married to a rogue, had a tragic life. Mrs. Rawson, his wife, died before 11 October, 1677. Rawson had many interests, as a member of the First Church in Boston, and then of the Third or Old South Church, and as agent for the Society for Propagating the Gospel among the Indians in New England. We have occasional glimpses of other activities : he tried to save Mrs. Hibbins, who was executed as a witch, "because," said Norton, "she had more wits than her neighbors," and he brought a limner to the Rev. John Wilson, and begged him to permit his portrait to be painted. Rawson owned at one time the land on both sides of the present Bromfield Street (Rawson's Lane), from Wash ington to Tremont, and lived on the northerly corner of Washington Street for many years. The painting is owned by the New England Historic Genealogical Society. It was engraved when in the posses sion of R. R. Dodge, Esq., of East Sutton, Massachusetts. Proceedings Massachusetts Historical Society, May, 1898. "The Ancestry of Edward Rawson," by E. B. Crane. Worcester, 1887. tfJw,,>-> ?^-]i> 456 EDWARD RAWSON 1615-1693 (457) Sir Richard Saltonstall, of the parish of Halifax, in Yorkshire, was born in 1586, and baptized on the 4th of April, first of the eleven children of Samuel Saltonstall and Anne, daughter of John Ramsden. His uncle of the same name, Lord Mayor of London in 1597, was the father of Sir Samuel Saltonstall of the Virginia Company, named by Captain John Smith as executor of his will. Sir Richard married, first, about 1609, Grace, daughter of Robert Kaye of Woodsome, by whom he had Richard, Rosamond, and Grace, Robert, Samuel, and Henry ; second, Elizabeth West, perhaps daughter of Lord de la Warr, who was captain general of all the colonies in Virginia; third, Martha Wilfred. Early in 1629, Sir Richard's name appears in the records of the Massachusetts Bay Company, and when the pro posal to transfer the government of the colony to the settlers was carried, he was made a member of the emigrant committee, which was to cooperate with a committee of the adventurers at home. His first wife having died, Sir Richard embarked for New England on the Arbella, at Yarmouth, with his chil dren, and arrived 12 June, 1630. He was appointed the first assistant, and organized the settlement at Watertown the same year. Having been under great distress from the inclement weather, he returned to England the following spring, leaving two sons in the colony. Sir Richard seems to have settled in London, where he used his influence at Court to aid Massachusetts and the Connecticut colony. During these years he kept in close and affectionate touch with the New England leaders, but was sorely tried by their intolerance. Some five or ten years before his death, he wrote a long letter to Cotton and Wil- 459 son, leaders of the Boston church, "reverend and deare friends whom I unfeignedly love and respect." We hear so often that bigotry in New England was justified by the standards of the time, that much of his tolerant letter is printed here to refute this view. Perhaps an all-wise God has spared us the sight of some countenances, while pre serving the benign and manly face of Sir Richard : " It doth not a little grieve my spirit to heare what sadde things' are reported dayly of your tyranny and persecutions in New Eng land, as that you fine, whip, and imprison men for their consciences. First, you compell such to come into your assemblyes as you know will not joyne with you in your worship, and when they show their dislike thereof, or witness against it, then you styrre up your magis trates to punish them for such (as you conceyve) their publicke affronts. Truely, friends, this your practice of compelling any in matters of worship to doe that whereof they are not fully persuaded, is to make them sin, for soe the Apostle (Rom. 14 and 23), tells us, and many are made hypocrites thereby, conforming in their out ward man for feare of punishment. We pray for you, and wish you prosperitie in every way, hoped the Lord would have given you so much light and love there, that you might have been eyes to God's people here, and not to practice those courses in a wilderness which you went so far to prevent. These rigid wayes have layed you very low in the hearts of the saynts. I doe assure you I have heard them pray in the publique assemblies that the Lord would give you meeke and humble spirits, not to strive so much for uniformity as to keepe the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. . . ." The writer of this remarkable letter continued his inter est in the Massachusetts colony, and had much to do with the founding of settlements on the Connecticut River. By his will, in 1658, he left a legacy to Harvard College, where his son Henry had graduated in the first class. "Ancestry and Descendants of Sir Richard Saltonstall," 1897. 460 SIR RICHARD SALTONSTALL I586-i6s8(?) (46.) Major Thomas Savage, "the every way accomplished hero," was born in 1607 or 1608, perhaps a son of John Savage, Esq., of Wootton Hall in the County of Salop, and brother of Arthur, prebendary of Carlisle. He seems to have been apprenticed to a merchant tailor. In 1635 ne closed his tailor's shop, and, armed with a certificate from the minister at St. Albans, came to Boston. He soon became a merchant, found a wife, obtained a house on the north side of Bennet Street, and also pur chased a farm in Brookline, and then another in Braintree. His prosperous career was checked temporarily, in 1637, by his sympathy for Anne Hutchinson, whose daughter, Faith, he had married that year. He made an attempt to aid her at her trial, saying : " My mother not beinge accused for any haynows fact but only for opinion ... I cannot con sent that the church should proceed yet to admonish her for this." Two or three others tried to aid her, but Shepard and Wilson were unrelenting, and the latter finally "de livered her up to Sathan" as a "hethen & a Publican & as a Leper." Savage was disarmed, and thought it wise to retire to Aquidneck, where he became one of the founders of Rhode Island. Six months later, he was again in Boston, with a change of heart or with discretion paramount. He had joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company in 1637, and succeeded the famous Robert Keayne as captain in 1651, holding the office again in 1659, 1668, 1675, and 1680. He strengthened the forts in Boston Harbor, erecting a barricade, in 1673, to keep out the Dutch. In 1675, at the head of sixty horse and sixty foot, he marched toward Mount Hope (now Bristol, Rhode Island), "where King Philip and his Wife was ; they came on him at unawares, 463 so that Philip was forced to rise from Dinner . . . Cornellis was in this Exploit and pursued Philip so hard that he got his Cap off his Head." But the English were so slow in getting the head itself that the war was long and disastrous. During those years he acquired a good estate as a mer chant, and in 1656 built a new house on the southerly side of North Street, near Dock Square. His wife had died, 20 February, 165 1/2, at the birth of her seventh child, Perez, that "young martial spark" of the Great Swamp Fight, who was destined to die a captive among the Bar- bary pirates. He married, 15 September, 1652, Mary, the daughter of the Rev. Zechariah Symmes, of Charlestown. The same year he was town clerk and selectman of Boston. In 1654, and at intervals until 1678, he represented Boston in the General Court, and was an assistant from 1680 until he died, 15 February, 168 1/2. Above a grave, near the north wall of King's Chapel, is his stone, which bears a coat of arms — six savaget little lions rampant. Of eleven children by his second wife, eight died in infancy. Habijah and Thomas, his first wife's sons, carried on the name. "Major Thomas Savage, of Boston, and His Descendants," by Lawrence Park. Boston, 1914. "History of the Military Company of the Massachusetts," by Oliver A. Roberts. Boston, 1895, Volume i, page 24. li -HrjAl- l- 464 THOMAS SAVAGE 1607/8-1681/2 (4^5) Samuel Sewall, chief justice of Massachusetts, was born, 28 March, 1652, at Bishopstoke, Hants, the son of the Rev. Henry and Jane (Dummer) Sewall, who had already been for a short season at Newbury, in New Eng land. Henry came back to America in 1659, and Mrs. Sewall, with her little family, returned to Newbury in 166 1. Samuel, their second child, studied at Baddesley and Rum- sey in old England, and was fitted by the minister at our Newbury for Harvard, where he graduated in 1 67 1. In a class of eleven he ranked third in social position. He had a bent for the ministry; but on marrying, 28 February, 1675/6, Hannah, daughter of John Hull, the mint master, he turned for three years to the more lucrative form of public influence, the printer's press, and then as a merchant rose rapidly in prosperity and public regard. It was his misfortune to be associated, in 1692, with the execution of several persons for witchcraft, that handiwork of the devil, in which all more or less believed. But he came to feel that the convictions were based on "spectral evidence" (testimony of the bewitched that they suffered through apparitions of absent persons) — evidence not valid in law ; he publicly confessed his regret, and ever after showed repentance by fasting and prayer one* day in each year. Sewall, although he knew little of law, except as laid down in the Bible, became judge of probate in 17 17, and chief justice of the Superior Court of Judicature in 171 8; he retired from both offices in 1728, and died at Boston "at half an hour past five in the morning," 1 January, 1729/30. He had been a member of the Council for thirty- three years, and had held many other positions of varying importance. 467 Two literary compositions stand out peculiarly as allied with his name, a diary of Boston's social, political, and religious life, from 1674 to 1729 — very frank and there fore valuable for a study of the Puritan mind; and a pam phlet, issued in 1700, and entitled "The Selling of Joseph," in which he discusses and condemns men who "hold their neighbors and brethren under the rigor of per petual bondage," and says: "There is no proportion be tween Twenty Pieces of Silver and LIBERTY." By his wife, Hannah, the judge had fourteen children, of whom Samuel, Elizabeth (wife of Grove Hirst) , Rev. Joseph, Mary (wife of Samuel Gerrish) , and Judith (wife of Rev. William Cooper), lived to make their place in the world. Sewall married, second, 29 October, 17 19, Abigail, daughter of Jacob Melyen, and third, Mary, daughter of Henry Shrimpton. Both were widows of prominence, and in that day marriage of elderly widowers and widows was held to be a duty not to be neglected. For this reason he sought comfort in marriage after each bereavement, and his diary narrates in great detail his courtships, his rebuffs, and his conquests. But Sewall was an able and distinguished citizen, too much associated in our minds, it is to be feared, with social'events which played only a minor part in the main current of his life. "Stately and slow, with thoughtful air, His black cap hiding his whitened hair, Walks the Judge of the great Assize, Samuel Sewall, the good and wise." 'The Diary of Samuel Sewall." Massachusetts Historical Society Collections. Fifth Series. 'Stelligeri and Other Essays," by Barrett Wendell. New York, 1893. 468 SAMUEL SEWALL 1652-1730 Historical Society SAMUEL SEWALL 1 652-1 730 Cutts-Howard Stephen Sewall, first Register of Probate for Essex County, Massachusetts, was born, 19 August, 1657, at Baddesley, County Warwick, England. His father, the Rev. Henry Sewall, was settled there until 1659. Two years later the family were in New England, where the father preached until his death in 1700. Stephen married, 13 June, 1682, Margaret, daughter of the Rev. Jonathan Mitchell, and had, some say, seventeen children, although ten are mentioned in the introduction to Samuel Sewall's Diary. Most of Stephen's life was passed in Salem, where he was prominent in the courts, the militia, and the church. A list of his offices would fill a page. In the summer of the year 1703, Captain John Quelch and his crew had put , to sea in the brigantine Charles, owned by John Colman and other well-known merchants, to prey on Portuguese shipping. After a successful voyage they arrived at Marblehead in May, 1704, loaded with plunder, and their arrest was ordered for possible piracy. They immediately scattered, and word was received that nearly a dozen armed sailors were seen at a lonely house on Cape Ann. Major Sewall, with a small company, went to Gloucester, where he heard that the pirates had set sail. He enlisted over forty volunteers for pursuit; they em barked toward sunset in a shallop, the Trial, and a pinnace, the men on these overloaded boats cheering as they put off. They reached the Isles of Shoals the next morning, sur prised the bloody pirates, and secured them without firing a gun. The prisoners were marched off to Boston, where Major Sewall was warmly thanked by the governor. Pirates were a very real terror in those days, and Chief Justice Sewall, who dined with Mrs. Stephen Sewall the night of the adventure, had ill success in his attempt to quiet 471 her fears. Quelch and his companions were convicted, and hanged in sight of Copp's Hill. Major Sewall was recompensed handsomely from Quelch's treasure for risking his life. Whether Quelch was really a pirate or not is still a subject for dispute. In 1686, Sewall was joint clerk of the Inferior Court of Pleas and General Sessions of the Peace, and in July, 1692, Register of Deeds, two positions which he held until his death, 17 October, 1725. His son, Mitchell, succeeded him as clerk of the courts ; another son, Stephen, became chief justice of the Superior Court of Judicature — sons worthy of their parentage. When Major Sewall was buried in the Broad Street ground the great guns at the fort boomed, the bells of the churches tolled, mourning gloves came forth in profusion to attest the importance of the occasion, and rum and wine flowed for those to whom the luxury of tears had been denied. Essex Institute Historical Collections, February, 1861. "Province Acts and Resolves," Goodell, Volume 8. 472 STEPHEN SEWALL i 657-1 725 (473) Elizabeth Richardson, later Mrs. David Stoddard, of Boston, was born in England, the daughter of John Richardson and of Sarah (Roberts), his wife, whose sister was well known as Mrs. Samuel Shrimpton, and later as Mrs. Simeon Stoddard. Elizabeth Richardson came over to visit her aunt, Mrs. Shrimpton, in Boston, and became engaged to her aunt's son, Samuel Shrimpton, Jr. Judge Sewall made the following record of the wedding, which took place Friday, 7 May, 1696: " Col. Shrimpton marries his Son to his wive's Sisters daughter, Elisabeth Richardson. All of the Council in Town were invited to the Wedding, and many others. Only I was not spoken to. As I was glad not to be there because the lawfullness of the intermarrying of Cousin-Germans is doubted ; so it grieves me to be taken up in the Lips of Talkers, and to be in such a Condition that Col. Shrimp ton shall be under a temptation in defence of Himself, to wound me ; if any should hapen to say, Why was not such a one here ? The Lord help me not to do, or neglect any thing that should prevent the dwelling of brethren together in unity." An only child was born to the younger Mr. and Mrs. Shrimpton, 26 August, 1702, and was named Elizabeth. This child married a prominent Antigua merchant, John Yeamans (pronounced Yemmons), and died at the age of nineteen, leaving a baby, Shute Shrimpton Yeamans. Samuel Shrimpton, Jr., died 25 May, 1703, and for ten years his widow lived in Boston, having her mother and her child as her companions. Her mother then died, and about eight months later, 23 December, 17 13, she married (pri vately, as Sewall says) David Stoddard, of King Street, whose father had married her mother in 1709. By him she had three daughters, who became well known in the social life of Boston: Mary, the wife of the famous Rev. Dr. 475 Charles Chauncy, of the First Church ; Sarah, the wife of Deacon Thomas Greenough; and Mehitable, the wife of William Hyslop. From Mrs. Greenough and Mrs. Hyslop many Bostonians are descended. David Stoddard died, 8 March, 1723, in the thirty- eighth year of his age. Sewall calls him "amiable and be loved." His widow lived for nearly thirty-five years longer, dying 25 June, 1757. Roberts= Elizabeth of England I Her portrait painted in 1675 I .1 Nicholas Capt. Thomas-=Elizabeth=Col. Samuel = Simeon = Roberts Breedon, of Boston first husband, died abt 1670 Roberts, Shrimpton, Stoddard born abt second third 1650 husband, husband Portrait died 1697/8 Samuel: Shrimpton, Jr., only child, born 1673 died 1703 I I : Elizabeth Richardson = David Stoddard, Sarah=John Roberts Richardson, died before 1700 married first in 1696 married again in 1 7 1 3 Portrait as a child second husband, born 1685 Illi Elizabeth --=John Mary-=Rev. Charles Sarahs Thomas Mehitable= William Shrimpton Yeamans Stoddard Chauncy Stoddard Greenough Stoddard Hyslop 476 ELIZABETH STODDARD Died 1757 Formerly Mrs. Samuel Shrimpton, Jr. (477) Mrs. Simeon Stoddard, proprietor of Noodle's Island (nowEast Boston) , and of Beacon Hill, was born about the middle of the seventeenth century1 in England, a sister of Nicholas Roberts, who became a merchant in Boston. She was a young widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Breeden, when she met and married, about 1672, Colonel Samuel Shrimpton, one of the wealthy merchants of New England. They soon returned to his estate of Noodle's Island, which he had acquired in 1670. He at once purchased Beacon Hill, in-. eluding much of the present State House site, but not the plot on which the beacon stood, to add to possessions in King (now State) Street; he also bought the Newdigate farm in Chelsea, lands in Dorchester, in Brookline, and along the Boston water front. Their only child, Samuel Shrimpton, Jr., was born in Boston, 20 April, 1673. Her social life might be traced with the aid of diaries through the forty years which followed. On the 7th of May, 1696, her son married Elizabeth Richardson, daugh ter of her sister Sarah, who had married John Richardson. This was a marriage of first cousins, to which Judge Sewall was known to be opposed. He was not invited to the wed ding, and his sensitiveness, lest the fact should be noticed by his friends, produced an extraordinary outburst of com munion with the Lord, as recorded in his diary. Nearly two years later, on 8 February, 1697/8, Colonel Shrimpton died of apoplexy, aged fifty-five. With boom ing of guns, he was buried in great solemnity; ten military companies, coaches, and horses decked in mourning, with heraldic hatchments and death's heads, wended their way to "the new burying place," where paths had been made at 'See Sewall's Diary, April 18, 1713. 479 great expense in the deep snow. Mrs. Shrimpton was es corted by the minister. Mrs. Shrimpton was now a widow of great wealth, and a center of attention. Sewall visited her in 1705, riding in a calash to her home on Noodle's Island. He was partial to wealthy widows, as his diary shows. She married, third, 31 May, 1709, Simeon Stoddard, a very successful mer chant, who was devoted to charitable and religious work. Mrs. Stoddard, as she now was known, had lost her only child, Samuel, 25 May, 1703, and she willed her large estate, including several brick houses in Boston, to her granddaughter, Elizabeth Shrimpton, who, at her mother's death, was to become the owner of Noodle's Island. Some years later this granddaughter married John Yeamans, of Antigua and Boston ; but the line died out. Mrs. Simeon Stoddard expired 17 April, 17 13. Sewall writes: "Friday, April 17. Madam Elizabeth Stoddard dyes about 4 m. : reckon'd a vertuous Gentlewoman ; Has languish'd a long time." She was buried on the 22d. Her nearest of kin today are the descendants of her niece, Eliz abeth (Richardson) Shrimpton, by a second husband, David Stoddard, son of Simeon, by a former wife. Mem bers of the older family circle are described and pictured in General Sumner's "History of East Boston," published in 1858. Later descendants bear the names of Greenough and Hyslop. 480 ELIZABETH STODDARD Died 1713 Formerly Mrs. Samuel Shrimpton (481) William Stoughton, preacher and witchcraft judge, was born, 30 September, 1631, probably in England, since his father's name (Israel) does not appear on records here until 1632. He was too young to know of his father's punishment for writing a book, obnoxious to the General Court in Massachusetts, but he must have been mature enough to feel his death in 1644, while an officer in Colonel Rainborow's regiment in England. After graduating at Harvard, in 1650, Stoughton studied divinity, and preached in Sussex, receiving meanwhile his M.A. at Ox ford, and a Fellowship at New College. Ejected from his living at the Restoration of the Stuarts, he returned to Dorchester, where he continued to live, unmarried, until his death, 7 July, 1701. He was offered several pastorates, but preferred civil life, serving, first, as a selectman and magistrate, in 1671. In 1674 he began his long service of "keeping Court." Two years later, he was in England on a not wholly suc cessful official mission, and on his return served as deputy president, when Dudley became the head of the New Eng land government in May, 1686. He was appointed to conduct the courts two months later. In December, 1686, Andros arrived, and Stoughton lost his popularity by ac cepting office in the Council. His political affiliations were with the moderates who sought to conciliate the Crown. For several years he was in the background, but won the confidence of Cotton Mather, whose influence with Increase Mather, then in London, brought about Stoughton's ap pointment as lieutenant governor under Sir William Phips. This was in 1692, and witchcraft was the talk of the town. Phips, without adequate authority, appointed Stoughton chief justice of a special tribunal to try the witches. 483 Stoughton set out to clear the land of them, and knew neither mercy nor change of heart. Phips, however, be came alarmed in February, 1692/3, and ordered a reprieve for several who were condemned to speedy execution. He writes: "The Lieut. Gov. upon this occasion was inraged & filled with passionate anger & refused to sitt upon ye bench." Phips left Boston in 1694, and Lord Bellomont arrived in May, 1699, to remain but a few months. Stoughton meanwhile commanded the military and naval forces of the Province, and dominated the legislative, ad ministrative, and judicial functions of government through a period of despotism unknown before in New England. But death came at a time when his power was waning. What are we to think of human evaluation when it is said by one writer that with Stoughton's burial much of New England's glory was entombed, and by another that he was "pudding faced, sanctimonious and unfeeling"? In his sermon, "New-Englands True Interest Not to Lie," he spoke the now famous words : "God sifted a whole Nation that he might send choice Grain over into this Wilderness." He was a generous benefactor to college and church, and showed by his will that he had given thought to elementary, as well as higher, education. The following observation, made by him in 1 670, has lost none of its savour : "There are many empty outside Custom born Christians now adayes : A day of temptation will discover what such as these will come to, when they are catcht in Satans snares, and become the Reproach of the Gospel and of a good Cause. O let us get good sound Principles, for want whereof the Profession of so many hath run itself out of breath, and broke its neck in these dayes." Sibley's "Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University.'' Cambridge, I873- 484 WILLIAM STOUGHTON 1631-1701 (485) The Rev. Thomas Thacher was born, i May, 1620, at Milton Clevedon, County Somerset, where his father, the Rev. Peter Thacher, was vicar, but his youth was spent at the cathedral town of Salisbury. There his father be came rector of St. Edmund's, and as the son walked those narrow streets bystanders pointed him out for his piety, and said: "There goes a Puritan." In 1635 he came to Boston with his uncle, and studied medicine and theology with the Rev. Charles Chauncy, then living at Scituate. He married, 11 May, 1643, Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. Ralph Partridge, of Duxbury; and became minister of the church at Weymouth, 2 January, 1644/5, where he labored for twenty years. "His good sense," says Savage in his curiously abbreviated words, "unit, with a general acquaint, in science of that day, acquir. for him great reput. as a physician, and to complete his honors, Mather wh. always loves an exaggera. makes him compose a Hebrew Lexicon, so compreess. 'that within one sheet of paper, he had every considerable word of the language.' " His wife went, "after a very triumphant manner, to be forever with the Lord," 2 June, 1664. He moved to Boston about 1667, having married Margaret, the widow of Jacob Sheafe and daughter of Henry Webb. He preached occasionally in Boston, but devoted his time chiefly to the work of a physician, and issued a tract, in 1677, on "the small pocks or measels." In 1670 he became the first minister of a new society in Boston, since called the Third or Old South Church, formed at the time Davenport was brought from New Haven to succeed Wilson at the First Church. He had a serious illness in 1676, and in 1678 a colleague was ob tained for his relief. In 1677 his warfare with Quakerism 487 — "that sink of all errors," as Mather describes it — brought trouble, in the form of an invasion of the church, at sermon time, by "a female Quaker, in a Canvas Frock, her hair disshevelled, and loose like a Periwigg, her face as black as ink." After a career of prominence in Boston he died, 15 October, 1678. The last words which he ever spoke in a sermon were these: "God help us, that as we live by faith, so we may walk in it." His influence upon his congregation may be inferred from Chief Justice Sewall's comment, after listening to Thacher, on 18 February, 1676/7: "Methought it was rather a privilege to dye, and therein be conformed to Christ, than remaining alive at his coming, to be changed." Thacher left children, Thomas, Ralph, Peter, Patience, and Elizabeth. His portrait is in the Old South Meeting house, Boston. The mouth is said to be characteristic of the Thachers to this day. Foote's "Annals of King's Chapel," Volume i. Boston, 1882. 488 THOMAS THACHER 1620-1678 (!4»9 ) Sir Henry Vane, the younger, was baptized, 26 May, 1 6 13, at Debden in Essex. He received his education at Westminster School and at Oxford, imbibing republican principles foreign to the training of the time-serving "old Sir Henry." He visited Vienna and Geneva in 1631, and as he matured, he became more and more averse to the Church of England. His sojourn in Boston, from 1635 to 1637, brought him into prominence while he was still un settled in religion and inexperienced in politics. His long hair and fine clothes repelled, until his personal charm was felt. Although very young, the discontented gathered about him, and he was chosen governor. Unfortunately for Vane, Anne Hutchinson, encouraged by two clergymen, John Cotton and John Wheelwright, was this very year giving lectures at her house on religious subjects. The governor approved either her views or her courage, and became known as her defender. Bitter discord followed, and, smarting under a remark made by Hugh Peter, he burst into tears and offered to resign. At the next election Winthrop adroitly had the court of election held at Cam bridge, his support coming from the country. Hot blood was aroused, blows were struck, and Winthrop won, al though Boston stood by Vane. The four halberdiers who accompanied Vane on state occasions and to church re fused to so honor Winthrop, and the populace would not turn out on his home-coming. They elected Vane a deputy, and the election was disallowed. They elected him a second time, and Winthrop did not attempt to thwart him again. Vane, however, grew disgusted with the Massachusetts view of toleration, and returned to England at once, his friends gathering in great numbers, as Winthrop states, to see his ship sail. 49 1 He married in July, 1639, Frances, a daughter of Sir Christopher Wray, of Ashby, in Lincolnshire, by whom he left seven sons and seven daughters. He became a member of Parliament for Hull, joint treasurer of the navy, and a friend of Pym and Hampden ; backed by Cromwell, he was virtually the civil leader of England from 1643 to 1653. "Vane, young in years but in sage counsel old," at the time when Cromwell broke up the Rump Parliament, was in opposition to him, and retired to Raby Castle, where he wrote his "Healing Question" (1656) , and was committed to prison for four months. After Cromwell died he re turned to public life. Charles II said to Clarendon : "He is certainly too dangerous a man to let live, if we can honestly put him out of the way." He was arrested, convicted of treason, and executed on Tower Hill, 14 June, 1662. Pepys speaks of his miraculous courage on that unhappy day. His portrait was engraved by Faithorne. The National Portrait Gallery has a painting by William Dobson, re produced in Butler's "Historical Portraits," page 124. 492 SIR HENRY VANE 1613-1662 SIR HENRY VANE 1613-1662 Thomas Venner, "fifth-monarchy man," was born near the beginning of the seventeenth century, and was connected possibly with a family of the name at Winches ter, England. He first comes into notice, 25 February, 1637/8, as a member of the church at Salem, in Massachu setts. A month later he was made a freeman, in 1638 and 1640 a juryman, and in 1642 a constable. His trade of cooper occupied his hands, but his mind dwelt on religion,' and he attempted to lead a company to the Bahamas to encourage the churches there. About 1644 he moved to Boston to make barrels for a brewer, and settled near the State Street Custom House. The next year he joined the Artillery Company, and learned to wield a halbert to such effect that he later became famous in a day. His restless mind organized, in 1648, a coopers' guild or trades union', showing that he already had become a leader of men. But he very soon sought a larger stage, and in October, 1651, took his family to London. His fanaticism gathered followers in Coleman Street, and their plan to replace first the Cromwellian and then the Stuart power by the Kingdom of Christ — the successor of Assyria, Persia, Macedonia, and Rome, the four mon archies — took shape. Their first venture, in April, 1657, was dealt with gently by the Protector. Their second came in January, 1661, when forty crazy enthusiasts rushed from street to street, shouting "Live King Jesus," and carrying banners inscribed, "For the Lord God and Gideon." This was on the 6th of January. Several men were killed, but the followers of Venner were assured that they were to be protected by divine power, and so had no fear. Pepys thought that five hundred armed rebels were abroad when Venner retired to Hampstead to reorganize his band. 495 London was in a panic, and forty thousand troops were called to arms. Then, on the 9th and 10th, the pitiful little band sallied forth to die for their Christ, forty against forty thousand. Venner, bearing up under many wounds, was taken; and he, with nineteen others, was sentenced, on the 17th, at the Old Bailey, for treason. His plea, that Jesus led them, was of no avail. On the 19th, Pepys, rolling along in a coach toward Whitehall, passed the Boston wine cooper on his sledge, being carried to Swan Alley, in Coleman Street, for execution. What a dramatic moment for the pen of a Dickens ! At the gallows Venner said little, but his fellow-sufferer, Hodgkins, raved until the sheriff ordered the hangman "to hasten from his employment of quarter ing Venner, to turn him off — so, as in that mad religion they lived in the same they died." Throughout the year 1661 the Fifth Monarchy cause kept alive, and from Yorkshire to Devonshire, wherever men hated the Court and the Prayer Book, preachers urged rebellion. Medley, of Seething Lane, who married Ven- ner's daughter, was their scribe and accountant, and Andrews, a rich brewer, furnished the funds. By his wife, Alice, Venner had at least three children, who were born in Salem, Thomas, Hannah, and Samuel ; the last named was probably the Samuel of Barbados, whose will, dated 1671, was probated in Boston. The widow, Alice, died near St. Dionis Backchurch, London, toward the end of February in 1691/2, and was "carried away to be buried to Tindells ground." ' Thomas Venner," by Charles E. Banks. In New England Historical and Genea logical Register, October, 1893. 496 This 3&lm£kwa~s n Ctvon, hyR&v elatiatt, 1 ri ' - 1f~- t L . „/- ^.i _ - — Cs mf-srt* ¦/*** tit r' _ nfdXLiTlL THOMAS VENNER Executed 1661 (497) Major John Walley was born, about 1 644, probably in London, where his father, the Rev. Thomas Walley, was then rector of St. Mary's, White Chapel. He came to Boston as a youth, and for many years was a prominent figure. In an age of discord and uncharitableness he made no enemies. The lands conquered from King Philip were granted by King Charles to the "Colony of New Plym outh" in January, 1679/80, and by the colony they were sold to John Walley, Nathaniel Byfield, and two others the same year. Walley had a home at Bristol in this territory, but was so occupied with official business that he lived much in Boston. He was a member of the Council, but when named a member of Andros's Council, he declined to act. He was judge of the Superior Court from 1700 to 171 1. Walley belonged to the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, and as lieutenant general commanded the land forces of Sir William Phips's expedition against Canada in 1690; during this year he kept a diary of events. The expedition failed through inadequate preparation and, as some said, through lack of dash in execution of the plan of campaign. For a time his reputation suffered some eclipse. In a long statement, or diary, given to the Council, 27 November, 1690, he concludes: "Some question our courage, that wee proceeded no further; as things were circumstanced, others would a questioned our prudence, if wee had ; were it a fault, it was the act of a council of warr ; we must undergoe the censures of many: In the mean time, our con sciences doe not accuse us, neither are we most, yea allmost all, of us, afraid or ashamed to answer our actions, before any that can or shall call us to an account for the same, nor unwilling to give any farther satisfaction to any reasonable men that shall desire it." He married Sarah , and had Sarah, John, Hannah, 499 JOHN WALLEY i644(?)-i7ii/i2 (?5°i ) The Rev. John Wheelwright, who troubled the waters of New England from his coming, in 1636, to the time of his death at Salisbury, in Massachusetts, 1 5 Novem ber, 1679, at the age of eighty-seven, was born in or near Saleby, County Lincoln, the son of Robert and Katherine Wheelwright; he was a graduate of Sydney-Sussex College in 1 614/15, and an athlete whom Cromwell affected to fear above an army in the field. He married, at Billesby, Lincolnshire, 8 November, 1 62 1, Mary Storre, a daughter of the vicar, Thomas Storre, and succeeded to the benefice of Billesby, 2 April, 1623. He buried his first wife 18 May, 1629, and mar ried, second, in the winter of 1629/30, Mary, daughter of Edward Hutchinson, of Alford. Wheelwright was super seded in 1631/2, and came to Boston in 1636. He was scarcely settled at Mt. Wollaston (Quincy) , when he joined the now famous Anne Hutchinson and Governor Vane in contention over "the Covenant of Grace" vs. "the Cove nant of Works." Their opponents, the Conservatives, had Wheelwright convicted of sedition, and when Winthrop, the Conservative candidate for governor, defeated Vane, Wheelwright lost influence, was disfranchised, and ban ished. With his sympathizers, Wheelwright founded Exeter, New Hampshire. When the Bay colony annexed Exeter, some six years later, he led his friends to Wells on the coast of Maine. In October, 1643, Wheelwright, weary of the severe climate, or the rough settlers, or both, ob tained permission to return to Massachusetts, confessing himself misled by "the false glare of Satan's temptations and mine own distempered passions." He became an assist ant to the pastor at Hampton in 1647, but ten years later 5°3 went to England, where he lived much with Vane until Sir Henry was executed. Then he returned to become pastor of the church at Salisbury. He was at heart an "Antinomian," and an opponent of Calvinism to the end, believing that conduct is no evidence of indwelling divine grace. His many children, two or more sons and six daugh ters, showed by alliance and friendship that they were more in sympathy with the Church of England than with Puritan theology. His portrait, at the State House in Boston, is inscribed in yellow paint at the extreme upper left edge : [iEtat] is Suae 8 [o or 84?], and at the left in black, on a level with the white collar: [iEtat] is Suae 84 [Anno D]omini 1677 These two inscriptions would make his birth about 1593, and his age at graduation about twenty-one. The pic ture has been said by Dr. Bentley to represent the Rev. Francis Higginson, who died in 1630, and also his son, John Higginson, 6f whom no portrait, says Mather, was ever made. If the inscription is contemporary with the painting (the date and technique agree measurably with the dated authentic portrait of Rawson), then tradition recorded in Bentley's Diary would seem in error. 504 JOHN WHEELWRIGHT i592(?) -i 679 SAMUEL ANNESLEY Father of Mrs. John Dunton Edward Winslow, governor of Plymouth, was born, 1 8 October, 1595, at Droitwich, near Worcester, the son of Edward and Magdalen (Oliver) Winslow, who had been married in November, 1594. He joined the Pilgrim colony in Leyden in 1617, while on a tour in Holland; and was at work as a printer when he was married, 13 (not 16) May, 161 8, to Elizabeth Barker. They came on the Mayflower from Southampton in July, 1620, to settle in the Bay. Here she died, 24 March, 1620/ 1. Seven weeks later, on 1 2 May, he married Susanna, widow of William White, this being the first marriage to take place in New England. Winslow was a man well fitted for public affairs, and his career was in part that of a diplomat, serving an isolated and somewhat obscure colony of religious enthusiasts. In 1623 he went to England, where he issued a book, en titled "Good Newes from New England." He was chosen an assistant of Plymouth colony from 1624 to 1647, ex cept in 1633, 1636, and 1644, when he served as governor; and was agent of the colony abroad in 1623, 1624, 1635, and 1646. He was sent to England to consult with the adventurers interested in the colony, to obtain protection from the French and Dutch, and to defend the government from charges by disaffected persons. While striving to aid others, he was himself the victim of a charge of preaching, not being in holy orders, and was, as a separatist, thrown into the Fleet prison in 1635, through the influence of Gorges and Morton, but was soon released. His last visit to Eng land did not have the approval of Governor Bradford, and his attempt to controvert charges of cruelty and bigotry at New Plymouth led to bitter pamphlet warfare. The gen- 507 eral effect of his activities, however, was favorable to his reputation, and men like Sir Henry Vane became his sup porters. His compensation for services as agent for Plymouth had been inconsiderable, and as early as 1650 he found opportunity to take part in public business in England. He went out to the West Indies in 1655, as one of three commissioners appointed by Cromwell to accompany the fleet, under Admiral Penn, in its attempt on St. Domingo. After humiliating defeat, the ships left the Island of Hispaniola for Jamaica; Winslow fell ill of a fever, and died on shipboard in the intense heat, 8 May, 1655 (old style) — not in 1654, as often given. In Morton's "Memo rial" his death is commemorated in this doggerel: "The eighth of May, went from Spaniola's shore, God took fronrus our grand commissioner, Winslow by name ; a man in chiefest trust, Whose life was sweet and conversation just." Governor Winslow had several sons who died in infancy, as well as Josiah, who became governor, and a daughter, Elizabeth, the wife, first, of Robert Brooks, and second, of George Curwin. His widow died, 1 October, 1680, at their home in Marshfield. Governor Winslow was a popular administrator, a friend of Cromwell and Vane in England, and of Winthrop and Bradford here. Prominent men in the Barbados once peti tioned for his appointment as governor over them. His portrait shows the face of a man of strong but temperate character, refinement, and fine feeling. "History of Plymouth Plantation," by William Bradford. Boston, 1912. 508 EDWARD WINSLOW 1595-1*55 (5°9) Penelope, the wife of Governor Josiah Winslow, of Plymouth, was baptized in 1633, at Bures, County Suffolk, the daughter of Herbert Pelham, of Ferriers Court, County Essex, by his wife, Jemima, daughter of Thomas Waldegrave. When her mother died, Penelope, with two brothers and two sisters, survived. The Colonial spirit was in the blood, for her grandfather, Herbert Pelham, had married, about 1599, Penelope, sister of the third Lord de la Warr, of the Virginia company ; and several of the Pel ham family were in New England in 1635, including an aunt Penelope, who jilted a lover to marry Governor Bellingham. Penelope's father came out to Boston in 1638, following the death of his wife, Jemima. A little later he married Elizabeth, the widow of Roger Harlakenden, and with their increasing family, Penelope grew to womanhood. In 1657, when at the age of twenty-four, she married Josiah Winslow, the accomplished son of the late governor of Plymouth colony, Josiah was commander-in-chief of the forces of the United Colonies in King Philip's War, and after holding many minor offices, served as governor of Plymouth from 1673 until his death, 18 December, 1680, at "Careswell" in Marshfield. He was buried at the ex pense of the colony, in testimony of the colony's love and affection. "He had," writes Lemuel Shattuck, "acquired the distinction of being the most accomplished gentleman and the most delightful companion in the colony ; and the attractions of the festive board at Careswell were not a little heightened by the charm of his beautiful wife." She and her husband are frequently mentioned in her father's long will, and they received half of his books and other "moveables," then in New England. She had four chil- 5" dren, two of whom grew to maturity, Elizabeth, the wife of Stephen Burton, and Isaac Winslow, the chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas. She died, 7 December, 1703, at Marshfield. Penelope Winslow's portrait hangs beside that of her husband in Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth. It has always been a matter of regret that so few of the Plymouth faces have come down to us. What would we not give for a glimpse of the features of Governor Brad ford, Mary Chilton, John Alden, William Brewster, or John Carver? They were all "the first beginers and, in a sort, the foundation of all the Plantations and Colonies in New England." But it is fortunate that such excellent portraits as those of the Winslows have survived. Edward Winslow's face must do duty for all early Plymouth set tlers, since through him we get our only vision of the May flower type. Penelope Pelham may well be taken as a type of the early settlers of Boston. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, October, 1850, page 299; July, 1879, P^ge 291. 5" PENELOPE WINSLOW 1633-1703 (5-3) John Winthrop, governor of Massachusetts, and "the Moses of New England," was born, 12 January, 1587/8, at Edwardston, Suffolk, the son of Adam and Anne (Browne) Winthrop. His father was a lawyer, associated with the University at Cambridge, and his two grand fathers were prosperous clothiers. His own nephew, Sir George Downing, perpetuated his name in the famous Downing Street of London. Winthrop entered Trinity College, 2 December, 1602, but left early in order to marry, 16 April, 1605, Mary, daughter of John Forth, by whom he had John, governor of Connecticut, two other sons, and two daughters. Mary died 26 June, 161 5. Six months later he married Thomasine, daughter of William Clopton, and lost her, 7 December, 161 6. His third wife, Margaret, daughter of Sir John Tyndal, was married to him 29 April, 161 8. She became the mother of Stephen, four other sons, and two daughters, and died 14 June, 1647. His estate was now at a low ebb, and it was for tunate that his fourth wife was Martha, daughter of Cap tain William Rainborow and the well-endowed widow of Thomas Coytmore. Governor Winthrop died 26 March, 1649, and was buried in the King's Chapel Graveyard, Boston. Winthrop's character was essentially gentle and emo tional, except as modified by the times; in early days, of "the self-accusing puritanic type"; in later years, when re buked for leniency, growing gradually narrower and more severe, yet always, as in his last illness, he was opposed to harsh punishment of those who did not see the truth as he had been taught to see it. His first marriage, at the age of seventeen, left his ideals unsatisfied; he turned morbidly to religious experience, and he wrote of his second wife's 515 death in this strain. Rarely has the passing of a young life from earth been so touchingly and so minutely described as in the death of Thomasine Winthrop. As the story draws toward its end, he writes : "While I spake to hir of any thinge that was comfortable, as the promises of the Gospell, & the happie estate she was entringe into, she would lye still & fixe her eyes stedfastly upon me, & if I ceased awhile (when hir speeche was gone) she would turn her head towards me, & stirre hir hands as well as she could, till I spake, & then would be still againe." His third wife, Margaret, steadied and strengthened him for his work as the fashioner of the social structure of Massachusetts. Her handwriting, as well as her letters, show this sanity and self-poise. While the Arbella lay at Cowes, in March, 1630, he wrote to her of his grief at parting : "Thou hast thy share with me, but I hope the course we have agreed upon will be some ease to us both. Mondays and Fridays, at five of the clock at night, we shall meet in spirit till we meet in person. Yet, if all these hopes should fail, blessed be our God, that we are assured we shall meet one day, if not as husband and wife, yet in a better condition. Let that stay and comfort thy heart. Neither can the sea drown thy husband, nor enemies destroy, nor any adversary deprive thee of thy husband or children. Therefore I will take thee now and my sweet children in mine arms, and kiss and embrace you all, and so leave you with my God. Farewell, farewell." She could write to him : " My good Husband cheare up thy hart in the expectation of Gods goodnesse to us & let nothinge dismay or discorage thee." Nor did she fall into those errors of the insane wife of "the governor of Hart ford upon Connecticut," of whom Winthrop said: 516 J ' JOHN WINTHROP The Portrait on Ivory JOHN WINTHROP The Family Portrait in New York "If she had attended her household affairs, and such things as belong to women, and not gone out of her way and calling to meddle in such things as are proper for men whose minds are stronger, etc. she had kept her wits." Winthrop was elected governor at Cambridge, England, 26 August, 1629, on an agreement of the Massachusetts Company to transfer the administrative powers to the set tlers. He arrived at Salem, 17 June, 1630, and served as governor, 1629-1633, 1637-1639, 1642, 1643, 1646- 1648, holding minor offices when he was not chief magis trate. He was thus an administrator all his mature years. Never a great man, he was, nevertheless, resourceful, de termined, but by nature merciful, virtuous, and as broad as the circle of powerful clergymen of his day permitted, for he was a lover of the saints and of the ministers of the gospel. The governor was so much the product of his time that he could not divorce his thoughts and his imagery from the atmosphere about him. When a snake crawled into the seat of the elders during a sermon, and was crushed by the heel of a Braintree man, Winthrop likened the serpent to the Devil, the synod there to the churches of New Eng land that had admitted the serpent of discord, a serpent that must be trod under foot. His "Journal" was begun at Cowes, and it was charac teristic that he devoted his leisure on the voyage to the composition of a work entitled "Christian Charitie." "Charitie" he had, and he could speak eloquently of civil liberty, as he did on being acquitted of a charge of exer cising arbitrary authority, but he banished or imprisoned all those who dared to question the sway of the religious oligarchy whose leader he was. A study of his career shows how nicely he fitted into the Massachusetts ideals of gov- 519 ernment; or shall we say that he adjusted the conduct of affairs to his attainments ? Through his guidance, Massachusetts stood for a posi tive democracy, strong and clear-cut, more influential and more enduring than the radical and lax administration of Rhode Island, or the theocratic and class-ridden govern ment of Connecticut. In the end his traditions came to dominate all New England. "Collections Massachusetts Historical Society," Third to Sixth Series. 520 JOHN WINTHROP 1587/8-1649 The American Antiquarian Society Portrait at Worcester (5«) JOHN WINTHROP The State House Portrait JOHN WINTHROP The Harvard Portrait John Winthrop the younger, governor of Connecti cut, was born, 12 February, 1605/6, at Groton in Suffolk, son of the future governor of Massachusetts, by his first wife, Mary Forth. Educated at the Bury St. Edmunds Grammar School, and for a time at Trinity College, Dublin, where his uncle, Emmanuel Downing, then lived, he tried law at the Inner Temple, but abandoned this for adventure. In the ship of war Due Repulse he was at the attempted relief of La Rochelle in 1627, and thought of a voyage to New England the next year with Endecott, but set out for Padua, Venice, and Constantinople. On his return he approved his father's plan for settlement in New England, in this fine declaration : "And for myself, I have seen so much of the vanity of the world, that I esteem no more of the diversities of countries than as so many inns, whereof the traveller that hath lodged in the best, or in the worst, findeth no difference when he cometh to his journey's end ; and I shall call that my country where I may most glorify God and enjoy the presence of my dearest friends." His interest in mechanics, medicine, and chemistry now gave way before his marriage, 8 February, 1630, to his cousin, Martha Fones; and in the summer he set sail, to gether with his father's family, for New England, where they were received with volleys of shot and great feasting. He was soon in charge of the settlement of Ipswich. In the early autumn of 1 634, his wife's death was followed by his return to England. There he married, in 1635, Elizabeth, daughter of Edmund Reade and stepdaughter of the Rev. Hugh Peter. Winthrop became by commission of 1 5 July, 1635, governor of the River Connecticut, with the places adjoining thereto, but the project did not prosper. In 164 1 he set forth for England, and remained two years. Of 525 Mrs. Winthrop it was said: "Hir little boy is so mery that it puteth away many a sad thought from his mother." On his return he gave vigorous attention to the setde- ment of Pequot (New London) in Connecticut, during 1645 and 1646. His father's death in 1649 decided him to remain in the colony, where he became an assistant, 1651-1655; deputy governor, 1658; commissioner of the United Colonies, 1658— 1660,, 1663; and governor, 1659- 1676. His later career was burdened by Indian wars and boundary disputes, and by a voyage to England, wher.e he obtained a charter for Connecticut, which included the New Haven colony. His love of science led to membership in the Royal Society for improving Natural Knowledge, and he was much at Court, where he received from Charles II a miniature of the royal countenance. Winthrop passed away in Boston while attending a ses sion of the Commissioners of the United Colonies, in April, 1676. He left seven surviving children, Governor Fitz- John, Chief Justice Waitstill, and five daughters, Elizabeth, Lucy, Margaret, Martha, and Anne. "A Sketch of the Life of John Winthrop the Younger," by Thomas F. Waters. 1899. "Evidences of the Winthrops of Groton, County Suffolk, England." 1894— 1896. fiju>XU_ tb "bo- T,y r 526 JOHN WINTHROP, Jr. i 605/6-1 676 ( 5*7') Mary, the wife of Adam Winthrop, of Boston, was born perhaps in Bristol, England, the daughter of Colonel Luttrell, of that city. Her husband, Adam Winthrop, the son of the governor's fifth son, was born at Boston in New England, 15 October, 1647, and after graduating at Har vard College, in 1668, he became a merchant at Bristol, where they married, about 1675. The Luttrells had a seat at Dunster Castle, and produced three or more "Colonels," who were conspicuous at this period. Diligent effort to identify Mary's father has been unsuccessful. The Win throp family moved to Boston in 1679, and he joined the Second Church in April, 1682. Their son, Adam, born in Bristol, 3 March, 1676, graduated at Harvard in 1694, and became chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas. In 1680 their daughter Mary was born, and twenty years later became the wife of Colonel John Ballantine. During the years which followed we read much of Adam Winthrop's activities, as a member of the Artillery Com pany, as a representative to the General Court, and as a King's Councilor, through the Mather influence. History is strangely silent, however, concerning Mrs. Winthrop, although her bright, alert countenance, as shown in her portrait, would suggest activities social and chari table. Perhaps she belonged to the Church of England, and if so she might, as the wife of a member of a ruling family in the non-conformist hierarchy, find it most be coming to remain in the background. Her husband was one of two or three men — Richard Middlecott was another — on whom Cotton Mather relied for aid in the material affairs of his church. In 1690, Mather prepared a little book to be read by his parishioners. It bore the title, "A Companion for Communicants," and was composed of 529 discourses upon the nature, the design, and the subject of the Lord's Supper, with "Devout Methods of preparing for and approaching to that Blessed Ordinance." The book was dedicated to several persons of prominence, in cluding Mr. Winthrop, and it is reasonable to suppose that they approved it as a useful book for their own homes. On another occasion Mr. Winthrop was a "bearer" at the funeral of Mather's daughter Mary. Evidently Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop were intimate friends of the Mathers: Mr. Winthrop died 3 August, 1700, and was buried in the family tomb, near King's Chapel. He mentioned his wife in almost every paragraph of his will. She was to have thirty pounds a year in current money, paid out of rents from Governor's Island; also two hundred pounds "at her absolute disposal"; and the household goods. She was given, during widowhood, "the use, benefit, and improve ment of all the back and new part, up and down, of the Dwelling house I now live in, at the North End of Boston, with suitable accommodation of Yard and Garden room thereto." She received in addition the negro boy, Cassar. Mrs. Winthrop married, 13 March, 1705/6, Colonel Joseph Lynde, of Charlestown. Of her life as Mrs. Lynde we know nothing of a personal nature, although the burn ing of her home in Charlestown on the evening of May 7, 1709, during a high wind and great drought, must have been terrifying enough. She died 30 October, 17 15, but no account of her death or funeral has been found. 530 MARY (LUTTRELL) WINTHROP Died 1715 (530 Stephen Winthrop, fourth son of Governor Win throp, of Massachusetts, was born at Groton, Suffolk, 24 March, 1 6 1 8 . His father has recorded his ' ' Thankf ull- nesse unto God" that Stephen's mother, Margaret, the daughter of Sir John Tyndal, survived, "she beeing above 40 houres in sore travayle, so it beganne to be doubted of hir life." At the age of twelve, he arrived in the Arbella, became a member of the First Church in Boston four years later, and soon after joined his brother John at New London. Here he was commercial agent for William Pynchon, and we have in the records a characteristic pic ture of him, selling goods to the Pequots from a shallop moored in midstream, and guarded against Indian treach ery by armed men, hidden in every available niche. The General Court, 9 September, 1639, chose "Mr. Steven Winthrop to record things," such as judgments, marriages, deaths, wills, bargains, sales, grants, and mort gages, and as a recorder he is known in Boston. Two years later he joined the Artillery Company, and in 1646, thus trained, he responded to the call of the great Civil War in England by service as an officer of a troop of horse. He was, wrote Roger Williams, "a great man for soule lib- ertie," and favored the Protector. He now had a wife, Judith, the daughter of Captain William Rainborow, of the Parliamentary army, and several little children ; and as no means of employment opened in New England, for which he often longed, he held to his position in the English army. In 1647 he wrote: "My hartt was as fully carried to goe in this shipp, as ever to anything, but I desire to submitt to ye will of God . . . Things standing thus & Pvidence opening a way of imploymt in ye Army, I have accepted of it." Sleeping on the wet earth during long 533 journeys into Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, undermined his health. In 1657 he wrote: "I thanck God my wife & all of us are indifferent well at this time, though I have not my health longe togither heer." The previous year he had sat in Parliament for Banff and Aberdeen, and had taken some part there. Colonel Winthrop was now living in James Street, West minster, troubled by sciatica and a harassing cough. He had lost four sons and a daughter, one or more by the smallpox, although three daughters, Margaret, Johanna, and Judith, still survived. His death occurred in the sum mer of 1658, and his will was probated on the 19th of August. He had always looked forward to an old age in New England, and his will records his loyalty to the New World. He left one hundred pounds to the poor of Boston, provided that the inhabitants would build a tomb over the graves of his father and mother. A portrait, from which the reproduction has been made, came down through several generations of the Winthrop family of New York. Proceedings Massachusetts Historical Society, May, 1898. 534 STEPHEN WINTHROP 1618-1658 (535) Charles Chambers, for many years a member of His Majesty's Council in the Massachusetts Bay, was born about the year 1660, the son of Edward Chambers, of Torksey, Lincolnshire, and of Elizabeth, who was a sister of Major Edward Palmes, of New London, Connecticut, and daughter of Andrew Palmes, of Sherborn, in Hants. As a young man Chambers appeared in Boston, com manding a vessel in the trade with Antigua. He married, 30 January, 1687/8, Rebecca, daughter of John and Amy Patefield, and soon after this date relinquished his life at sea for the career of a merchant. Mrs. Chambers gave birth to an only child, 31 March, 1691, baptized as Rebecca in the Charlestown church of which the parents became members in later years. Mrs. Chambers died 14 June, 1735, and the Captain married, 10 February, 1735/6, Margaret, daughter of William Vaughan, and widow of the well-known Captain John Foye. Chambers became a figure of increasing note in the colony. He was a' nephew by marriage of Wait Winthrop, whose sister had married Major Palmes, and Rebecca Chambers had allied herself with the Hon. Daniel Russell, thus adding social ties of importance. In 1707, Chambers purchased a large estate in Lincoln; upon this land he erected a mansion house, still standing and occupied by his descendants. The Captain served for many years as a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and as a Justice of the Peace for Middlesex County. He had much to do with fitting out the expedition against Port Royal, with erection of buildings at Harvard College, and with legislation relat ing to finance. On July 28, 1719, Chief Justice Sewall records in his Diary that he rode "to Cambridge with Mr. Chambers in 536a his Calash." Six years later, Sewall was shown "great Courtesie" by Mrs. Russell (the daughter Rebecca), on the day of the funeral of a Charlestown clergyman's wife. He sat with other distinguished men in her parlor before going to "the house of Mourning." Judge Chambers owned or held mortgages on many houses, shops, wharves, and warehouses during his long life. His property was divided among a large number of grand and great-grandchildren who are mentioned in his will. Mrs. Chambers, who survived him, was to have half of the home. The Judge died 2 8 April, 1 743, 1 and is buried in Charles town. On the stone which marks his grave are the arms of the very ancient family of Palmes, indicating, perhaps, his regard for a mother long since dead, and also a pride in an honorable "visitation" pedigree. This mother had lost three brothers in the service of King Charles at Worces ter fight, in September, 1 65 1 . Her grandfather, Sir Francis Palmes, of Ashwell in County Rutland, and of Lindley in County York, matriculated at Oxford in 157 1, and had back of him four centuries of landed gentlemen at Naburn in County York. Her cousin, Sir Bryan, had become a D.C.L. of Oxford in 1642. All these worthy men speak to us through the symbolism of "Gules three fleurs-de-lis argents, a chief vaire," the arms on the gravestone in Charlestown. Nichols's "History of the County of Leicester," Volume 2, Part i, page 295. Burke's "History of the Commoners," 1836, Volume 1, page 611, where Andrew Palmes is said in error to have died unmarried. "News-Letter and Holyoke Diary give z8 April, the tombstone 27 April. 536^ CHARLES CHAMBERS i 660-1 743 (5360 THE WEST Rene Robert Cavelier, of La Salle, an estate near Rouen, was baptized, 22 November, 1643, m tne parish of St. Herbland, son of Jean Cavelier, the merchant, and of Catherine Geest. He became a successful mathema tician and teacher among the Jesuits, but in 1666 followed his priestly brother to Canada, and received an estate near Montreal, which he called La Chine. He at once began the mastery of Indian languages, and planned to find the Miss issippi, descend to the Gulf of California, and sail away to China. In July, 1669, he set forth with a motley company, and is supposed to have led a part of his force down the Ohio as far as the site of Louisville. He then began to dream of a great, new France in the milder climate of our Middle West. He had visited France in 1675, and in the autumn of 1677 he went to France again. The next spring he returned, with power to build forts, and to trade in buffalo hides in a greater new France, and brought with him a loyal supporter, Henri de Tonti. Parkman tells the story of the building of the Griffin, of La Salle's voyage to Fort Crevecoeur, in the present state of Illinois, and of attempts to poison and shoot him, while creditors at Montreal tried to ruin him. He again visited France in 1683, leaving Tonti to represent him here. At Court he received a surprising welcome, for France was at war with Spain, and his proposal to fortify the Mississippi and to collect an Indian army was accepted. A great flotilla set sail in July, 1684, for the Gulf of Mexico, carrying four hundred men and women, with a shipload of tools. Henri Joutel, historian of La Salle's last adventure, was another loyal soul in a circle of enemies. To those who spoke of harshness and aloofness, La Salle replied that he used no more severity than was necessary to maintain dis- 539 cipline. He was shy and austere amid revelry and vice. Parkman writes : " La Salle stands in history like a statue cast in iron ; but his own unwilling pen betrays the man, and reveals in the stern, sad figure, an object of human interest and pity." Misfortune dogged him from the start; he missed the mouth of the Mississippi, and was urged by an engineer, Minet, to search for the river, but he resented advice from an inferior, and his pride ruined his dreams. He went still farther south, to land at Matagorda Bay, and Beaujeu, commander of the ships, returned to France. The weeks that followed witnessed disease, hunger, and discourage ment. In October, 1685, leaving Joutel at Fort St. Louis, La Salle sallied forth, with fifty men, to find "the fatal river." He failed, but tried again in 1686, determined to make his way to Canada. Again he met disaster. Finally, a third time, after a severe illness, he set forth in January, 1687, to reach Quebec by way of the Illinois and obtain aid. The vivid story of his assassination by his own men, who lay hidden in the long grass, near the Trinity River in Texas, just above Galveston Bay, is to be read in Park- man's "Discovery of the Great West." He died, shot through the head, on the 18th of March. "He contained," said Parkman, "in his own complex and painful nature the chief springs of his triumphs, his failures, and his death." 540 ROBERT CAVELIER, SIEUR DE LA SALLE 1643-1687 (54') Father Jacques Marquette, missionary to the In dians, was born, i June, 1637, on the Rock of Laon, in France, the son of Nicolas Marquette, of a wealthy family there, and Rose de la Salle. Of a poetic temperament, spiritually minded, and fond of languages, he soon tired of teaching in Jesuit schools, and in 1666 arrived in Canada, ready to devote his life to work among the savages. He was sent to the mission of Sault de Ste. Marie, at the outlet of Lake Superior, to care for a wilderness west of Lake Huron; and when his Hurons and Ottawas were driven eastward by the Sioux, he built a chapel of sap lings and bark at St. Ignace mission on Mackinac Island, at the outlet of Lake Michigan. Here numberless com panies of travelers from north and south set up their tents for a season. In the din and dirt of an Indian village, he sought unceasingly to help the children of the forest. He writes : "They have been more assiduous at prayer, have listened more willingly to The instructions that I gave Them, and have acceded to my requests for preventing grave misconduct and Their abom inable Customs. One must have patience with savage Minds, who have no other Knowledge than of the Devil, whose slaves they and all Their forefathers have been; and they frequently relapse into those sins in Which they have been reared. God alone can give firmness to Their fickle minds, and place and maintain Them in grace, and touch Their Hearts while we stammer into Their ears." But his eyes were still strained toward the south sea and nations unknown. On 17 May, 1673, with Louis Joliet, Frontenac's agent, his little party set forth in two canoes to seek the Mississippi ; they found it in just a month, and ex plored as far south as the mouth of the Arkansas. They then turned north, following the Illinois and Chicago 543 Rivers, and the west shore of Lake Michigan, until they came, in September, to the Jesuit mission of St. Francois Xavier, at the rapids of De Pere, Wisconsin, on the Fox River. Here he remained, ill and weak, for over a year; and then in October, 1674, he set out again for the Chicago River to found a new mission. Once more ill health over came him, and after an unusually harsh winter spent in a wretched cabin, subsisting in part on dried blueberries and corn, he started along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, to make his way back to St. Ignace, preaching to friendly Indians in rude shelters, which were decorated with Chinese taffeta, and also with pictures of the Virgin, until he be came so feeble that his two faithful boatmen had to carry him like a baby. Finally, about midnight, under a frail protection of bark, and lying beside a fire, he died, 1 8 May, 1675, "his countenance beaming and all aglow." The spot is now covered by the city of Ludington, Michigan. "Father Marquette," by Reuben G. Thwaites. New York, 1902. 544 JACQUES MARQUETTE 1637-1675 (545) PORTRAITS UNDER DISCUSSION Chauncy, Rev. Charles. The original painting is at Harvard College, and bears a label to indicate that it represents President Chauncy. It remained in the Chauncy family until 1819, and was purchased for the college soon after by President Quincy. The sitter's form of wig was not in use until the time of Isaac Watts, D.D. — 1725, a century after the second presi dent of Harvard (1592-167 1/2) reached the age shown in this painting, which was, we assume, about 1625. The portrait may represent his great-grandson, the Rev. Charles Chauncy, of Boston, 1705-17 8 7. In the opinion of Lawrence Park, Esq., the portrait was painted by Smibert, about 1735. Edward Waldo Forbes, Esq., director of the William Hayes Fogg Art Museum, believes that the portrait was painted later than the year 1700. This picture has been reproduced in the Harvard Grad uates Magazine for December, 1907, page 248. The head only was engraved for the New England Historical and Genealogical Register for April, 1856. The outer robe is fawn color, covering a black silk gown ; the eyes are brown, and the complexion ruddy. 549 Called THE REV. CHARLES CHAUNCY 1592-1671/3 Knoian to le THE REV. CHARLES CHAUNCY, D.D. 1705-1787 Clarke, John, M.D., 1 609-1 676. Founder of Rhode Island. Possibly Clarke. The following letter from George L. Hinckley, Esq., librarian of the Redwood Library, and dated 2 January, 1 9 1 8, tells the story of this fine portrait : "The Redwood Library has a very dark, unidentified oil portrait of a divine, supposed to be Dr. John Clarke (1 609-1 676), one of the founders of the Colony of Rhode Island and pastor of the Bap tist church in Newport. The portrait, however, is clearly dated in two places 1659, and the inscription to the left of the breast reads, 'Aetatis 59.' So, if these figures are correct, the subject could not be Dr. John Clarke, who would have been about fifty when the por trait was painted. But it is just possible that after two 1659s the painter inadvertently made the age fifty-nine, too. Clarke was in England in 1659, as Agent of the Colony, and might have gone over to Holland ; or the painter, de Ville, might have been in England in that year. "The artist's signature on the paper by the head of the gavel is probably that of Guilliam de Ville ; portrait painter ; son of Jacques de Ville; born in Amsterdam about 161 4; interred there on June 4, 1672; married Helene Symon (See Wurzbach's ' Niederlandisches Kiinstler Lexicon' ( 1910), Volume 2, page 789). " Below the signature is a verse in Low Dutch which is exactly the form, except for insignificant differences of spelling, which Psalm xiii: 6 has in one particular translation of the Bible, which was printed by Lenaert der Kinderen, at Emden, in 1563. The version is known as the Mennonite version, or Biestken's Bible. It would accordingly appear probable that either the subject, or the painter of this portrait dated in 1659, was a Mennonite, or had some relations with them which would cause him in that year to quote the Biestken's Bible rather than the Staatenbybel. "The Mennonite Confession was adopted in 1632, and Dr. John Clarke may have been influenced by it if he did not actually adopt it. There were points on which the Mennonites and the Anabaptists agreed. 553 " Possibly the resemblance between the names of Menno Simons, from whom the Mennonites derive their name, and of Helene Symon, wife of de Ville, may have led to the choice of the Mennonite version." Many years ago the Trustees ordered a frame for "the portrait of Roger Williams." This is supposed by some to be the portrait referred to. At that time, Williams was thought to have been born in Wales, in 1599, but the new theory is that he was born in London about 1605, and this does not conform to the inscription. 554 Possibly JOHN CLARKE, M.D. of Rhode Island i 609-1 676 (555) Coddington, William. The original portrait at the City Hall, Newport, Rhode Island, was owned, in 1843, by Nathaniel Coddington; it passed to the Newport Asylum at his death, in 1850, and to the city in 1855. Neither Coddington nor his niece could throw light on its history. A copy by Charles Bird King was presented by him to the Redwood Library, Newport. According to Mr. Hamilton B. Tompkins, in Bulletin Number 9 of the Newport Historical Society, all reproductions in books (including the 'somewhat trimmed picture here given) are from the Redwood portrait — a good copy of the City Hall original. The periwig seen here did not come into general use until after Pepys first had one — 1663. It is said that the governor did not visit England after 1651. See Judge Darius Baker's admirable paper in Bulletin Number 25, Newport Historical Society. From the costume (period of 1730) , the portrait cannot well be the first Governor William Coddington, of Rhode Island, 1601-1678, although Mr. W. B. Weeden, an authority on Rhode Island history, expressed no doubt in his paper on the first governor, in 19 11 (Proceedings Massachusetts Historical Society, April). The date of the second Governor William Coddington's death, 1689, is too early for the costume here shown. A grandson, Colonel William Coddington, 1680-175 5, was a man of some prominence and is a suitable candidate for the honor. In his inventory there is mention of a family portrait valued at £6. He was a justice of the Court of Common Pleas. A copy at Sayles Hall, Brown University, was made by Thomas Mathewson. There is another copy in the State House at Providence. 557 Called WILLIAM CODDINGTON of Rhode Island (559) Cotton, Rev. John, 1585-1652. .So called. Mather, in "The Magnalia," says of him: "The reader that is inquisitive after the prosopography of this great man, may be informed, that he was of a clear, fair, sanguine complexion, and like David of a 'ruddy countenance.' He was rather low than tall, and rather fat than lean, but of a becoming mediocrity. In his younger years his hair was brown, but in his later years as white as the driven snow. In his countenance there was an inexpressible sort of majesty, which commanded reverence from all that approached him : this Cotton was indeed the Cato of his age, for his gravity ; but had a glory with it which Cato had not." The painting, reproduced here, was purchased from a dealer, about 1850, by Mr. John E. Thayer, of Boston. From his widow, later Mrs. R. C. Winthrop, it came to Miss Adele G. Thayer, their daughter. She left it to the present owner, John E. Thayer, Esq., of Lancaster. The portrait was painted by Smibert, about 1735, and has the characteristic crease in the coat from the shoulder to a point below the arm. The canvas is 30 x 24% inches in size. The eyes are brown, the complexion ruddy, and the velvet coat is golden brown. The engraving in Drake's "History and Antiquities of Boston," 1856, page 158, made by Smith, and the one in Thompson's "History of Boston, England," 1856, page 412, engraved by Flowers, are from this painting, but both engravings have bands. Perhaps the engravers thought that the pleasant subject of the portrait would not pass muster as a clergyman if he retained his layman's neck-cloth, hence the bands. The origin of the Cotton tradition is unknown, but the face has a surprising resemblance to, Pelham's engraved portrait of Cotton Mather. 561 Professor Chester N. Greenough writes on May 21, 1917 : "I have studied certain aspects of the life and work of John Cotton, but I have not yet had time to look into the matter of his portraits beyond seeing that it is a difficult problem, on which some one must do a lot of work before we can be certain of the authenticity of the Thayer portrait and the one with the bands." 562 Called THE REV. JOHN COTTON of Boston 1585-1652 (563) Darnall, Colonel. Mrs. E. C. Daingerfield, at her death, left a group of portraits to the Peabody Institute, of Baltimore. These paintings once hung in Poplar Hall, at Poplar Hill, Prince George County, Maryland, erected about 1735. Before that date they were probably at the Wood Yard House. The memorandum, which accompanied the bequest, and described them as they hung on the walls, is said to be in Mrs. Daingerfield's handwriting, and is reprinted from a copy made by L. H. Dielman, Esq., to which are now added annotations based on photographs obtained from Mr. Dielman, but not reproduced here because the ascrip tions are so uncertain. Portraits in the Hall 1. "First proprietor who built the Wood Yard House, Philip Darnall of London, in wig " Note. — Philip Darnall, of London, did not come to America, as far as we know — assuming that he is Philip, the father of Colonel Henry, who died in 171 1. Colonel Henry Darnall is said to have "built the Wood Yard House," Prince George County, 1665-1675, and the portrait reproduced in this book probably represents him. The costume, wig, etc., meet his period very well. Moreover, other portraits of Darnalls in the group appear to show children of Colonel Henry, and it would seem more natural to have parents and children portrayed than grandparents and their grandchildren. This Colonel Darnall is a stout man, with long wig, stock, coat sleeve with large buttonhole, inner sleeve, wrist ruff, and right hand with second finger touching the third. The portrait is in an oval, with raised triangles near the corners of the frame. The "campaign wig" and stock are of the period of 1 680-1 720. See the well-known portrait of Robert Boyle, who died in 1691. The reproduction is from a photograph by Mr. Frederick F. Frittita. 565 2. "his wife by his side." Note. — A lady of about fifty, with hair brushed back from the forehead, a plain dress with ruffles attached to the edge of the low- neck waist, a dark shawl over the right forearm and over the left shoulder — all in an oval — may be the (second ?) wife of Number i. 3 . " Boy in buff and red — Henry Darnall [ Jr . J , his son, who was conspicuous in the early history of his state." Note. — A boy of about twelve, full length, with a bow in his left hand, gardens and palaces beyond. A Negro at his right offers a dead bird. Evidently Henry Darnall, Jr., of the Wood Yard House, and later of Poplar Hill. He married Ann Diggs. The lobe of his ear is attached to his cheek. 4. "He [his son, Henry, 3d] married Miss Talbot, niece and ward of the Duke of Shrewsbury. Her portrait is opposite her husband." [ ?]. Note. — The artist is said to be Charles Bridges, who flourished in 1735- 5. "Next to Henry Darnall is his sister, who, I think, married Charles Carroll, of Carrollton." Note. — The pretty girl of about fifteen, with hair curling across her forehead and on her neck, a short pearl necklace, and jeweled pins on her breast and on her sleeve, is perhaps Mrs. Mary Carroll, at the time of her wedding in 1693. Possibly, however, this is Mrs. Diggs (Number 8). The frame is like that of Number 1 — oval and with corners. The lobe of her ear joins her cheek, as in Num ber 3. Both facts seem to indicate that she is a Darnall, not a Talbot. 6. "The boy in blue is Arthur Darnall, who was drowned in crossing the ocean on his return from St. [Omer's]." Note. — This is the boy of about fourteen, shown full length, with his left hand on a sword and right outstretched, a dog looking up at him. His coat is open and has large pockets and buttonholes. 566 Probably COLONEL HENRY DARNALL Who died in 1711 (567) 7- "The lady at the head of steps is Lady Reter; [she was] also [a] Miss Talbot, a sister to Mrs. Henry Darnall." Note. — Who was Reter? The family of Peter was more promi nent in Maryland than that of Reter. The artist is said to be Charles Bridges. 8. "The portrait by side of Arthur Darnall was Miss Darnall, who married Mr. Diggs." Note. — Elizabeth, Colonel Henry's daughter, married Edward Diggs, and died in 1705. Mrs. Diggs is perhaps the child of about ten, full length, with her right hand on the same dog that appears in the portrait of Arthur Darnall, a balustrade behind her bearing a garden vase filled with flowers, and a formal garden in the back ground. The lobe of her ear is attached to her cheek. See Number 5. Colonel Henry Darnall, a deputy governor of Mary land, lived for some years at the Wood Yard House, in Prince George County, and later at Portland Manor, in Anne Arundel County, which he inherited in 1684 from his brother, Colonel John Darnall. The Wood Yard House, with its weather vane on the roof and wainscotted rooms, was called the finest mansion in the colony. Colonel Darnall died in 171 1, having had by his first wife Mary ( 1 ) a son, Philip, of Portland Manor ; and by Mary or a second wife, Eleanor, (2) a son, Arthur, who was drowned on his return from the college at St. Omer; (3) a son, Henry, born in 1682, who sold the Wood Yard House in 1728 ; he and his descendants continued to live for several generations at a near-by estate called Poplar Hill; (4) a daughter, Mary, born in 1678, and married to Charles Carroll, the immigrant (grandfather of the signer of the Declaration of Independence); (5) a second daughter, 569 Ann, born in 1680, and married to Clement Hill; (6) a third daughter, Elizabeth, married to Edward Diggs. This is the family portrayed in the portraits. Colonel Henry and his brother, Colonel John, were the sons of Philip Darnall, a London barrister, whose brother Ralph, of Gray's Inn, was the father of Sir John Darnall, and grandfather of another Sir John, famous in their day as King's Serjeants. Members of the family were prominent in County Hereford. 570 Eliot, Rev. John, i 604-1 690. Apostle to the Indians. So called. An inscription at the left upper corner of the canvas reads : John Elliot. The Apostle of the Indians Nascit. 1604: Obit 1690,. This inscription (which may be modern), and part of the background, showing old St. Paul's Cathedral and the Thames, do not appear in the reproduction here given. The use of St. Paul's in the picture suggests some connec tion of the sitter with London. Eliot is not known to have been in any way connected with the city. The original painting was owned in 1897 by Mrs. Wil liam Whiting, of Roxbury, Massachusetts. Mr. William Whiting "found this picture, in 1851, in the shop of a London dealer, who could give no evidence as to its source" (Fiske's "The Beginnings of New England," 1898). It is now owned by the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and is a well-painted portrait of a strong personality. A comparison of this picture and that of Edward Wins low, by Robert Walker, suggests that this may be by the same artist. 57i Called THE REV. JOHN ELIOT Apostle to the Indians i 604-1 690 (573) Hoffman, Martin, born about 1625. So called. The portrait is "from a miniature painted in Holland," and owned by Hoffman Philip, Esq. It is reproduced in the "Genealogy of the Hoffman Family," published by Dodd, Mead & Company in 1 899, and appears here by per mission of J. Van Ness Philip, Esq., of Talavera, New York. To one familiar with the costume and face of the period of 1 625-1 700, this portrait seems to be too late. 575 Called MARTIN HOFFMAN Born about 1625 ( 5771) Mather, Rev. Nathaniel, 163 1-1697. Son of Richard. The picture at theAmerican Antiquarian Society, Worces ter, inscribed "Vivere est Cogitare," is said by Dr. John Appleton to represent, perhaps, Nathaniel Mather, who sat for his portrait in 1682, and sent it to New England (Proceedings Massachusetts Historical Society, September, 1867, page 46). This is sometimes referred to as a por trait of the Rev. Samuel Mather, 1 626-1 671, son of Richard, but no portrait of Samuel was done in his life time, according to a statement by Cotton Mather. A de scription of Nathaniel tallies fairly well with this portrait. For biographical notices of both men see J. L. Sibley's "Harvard Graduates." The canvas is 24^ inches wide by 29//2 inches high, the complexion light, and the eyes probably blue. The reproduction is from a photograph by Mr. M. N. Conger, of Worcester. 579 Perhaps THE REV. NATHANIEL MATHER 1631-1697 Called the Rev. Samuel Mather ( 58i : Patteshall, Martha, 1651/2-1713. Wife of Richard Patteshall. The portrait of "Mrs. Patteshall and her child" was owned for many years by the Thomas family, of Plymouth, and about the year 1870 it was given to Miss Hannah E. Stevenson, a relative. It is now owned by Mrs. Greely Stevenson Curtis, of Boston. The Patteshalls came of a good family in England, and were prominent in Boston and in the frontier life at Pema- quid during the seventeenth century. We cannot with certainty identify the Mrs. Patteshall of the portrait, but a study of the pedigree indicates that she probably was Martha, daughter of Richard Wooddy, soap boiler, of Plymouth, where she was born, 24 January, 165 1/2. Wooddy soon moved to Boston, and Martha became the second wife of Richard Patteshall, about 1672. Her hus band was much of the time at Casco Bay and Pemaquid, engaged in pioneering, fishing, and trading. He was a justice of the peace for the country between the Kennebec and the St. Croix Rivers, about the period of 1682, and was finally killed by Indians in 1689. Mrs. Patteshall seemed to her contemporaries very much of a lady, but Jasper Danckaerts, the Labadist missionary, spent the night of June 23, 1680, at her home, and having been kept awake until morning, had a poor opinion of her as a housekeeper ! She died in April, 17 13, at the age of sixty-one. Her son Robert became a merchant, with a house on Purchase Street in Boston.The portrait is certainly of the decade of 1 670-1 680, and is very similar in costume and technique to those of Mrs. Elizabeth (Paddy) Wensley, of Plymouth, Mrs. Samuel Shrimpton and Major Thomas Savage, of Boston, 583 Captain George Curwin, of Salem, and Miss Rebecca Rawson. An artist of some ability must have been in Boston at the time, or must have made several voyages across the ocean, unless we are to believe that a consider able number of Boston women visited England. If this portrait represents Mrs. Martha Patteshall, it does not come within the scope of this book. 584 Probably MRS. MARTHA PATTESHALL 1651/2-1713 (585] Shippen, Edward, i 639-1 712. First mayor of Philadel phia. So called. An original painting is owned by Mrs. Roland S. Morris, of Philadelphia. A copy in oil is in the Mayor's Room, City Hall, Philadelphia. It is reproduced in "The Morris Family of Philadel phia," by R. C. Moon, 1909. "I may as well frankly state that I am uncertain as to the authenticity of the Shippen portrait." — Letter from Ernest Spofford, Esq., November 30, 19 17. In "The English Ancestors of the Shippen Family and Edward Shippen of Philadelphia," by Thomas Willing Balch, Philadelphia, 1904, I find no reference to this portrait. 587 Called EDWARD SHIPPEN 1639-1712 (5»9) Standish, Captain Myles, 15 87-1 65 6. So called. A painting bearing the name M. Standish was found in Philadelphia, and bought by Captain A. M. Harrison, of Plymouth. It is inscribed at the upper left of the canvas iEtatis Suae 38 A° 1625 and at the upper right M. Standish. The reproduction is from a photograph by Curtis and Cameron, Boston, used by their permission. The photo graph seems to suggest that the inscription may be a later addition. "I do not know of any genuine portrait of Myles Standish." — Letter of Mr. A. S. Burbank, bookseller, Plymouth, 17 May, 1917. The wife of Captain Harrison was a sister of Francis H. Russell, Esq., of Brookline, Massachusetts, formerly of Plymouth. When Mrs. Russell first saw the portrait in Captain Harrison's house, she exclaimed, "What Stan dish is that?" Mrs. Harrison replied, "Why do you think it is a Standish?" Mrs. Russell said, "Because it looks very much like Winslow Standish, the tin peddler who has an antique shop by the water side." Mrs. Harrison then explained that the portrait was supposed to represent Myles Standish. The best history of the so-called portrait of Myles Stan dish is to be found in a long letter written by Captain Harrison, 10 September, 1877, and printed in the Proceed ings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, October, 1 877, page 324. The chief paragraphs are these : "The story as to the manner in which the picture came into my possession is briefly this : On my return from Washington, early in 591 April last, on passing a picture store on School Street, in Boston, nearly opposite the City Hall, I glanced in the window, and, among a number of very inferior pictures offered for sale, I saw the one in question, in a shabby and comparatively modern frame. In the corner was a slip of writing paper marked, 'Portrait of Captain Standish, aged 38.' I was attracted by the evident age of the paint ing, and out of curiosity went into the store, with no intention whatever of purchasing it. A young man was in attendance. I asked him what Captain Standish it was a portrait of. He said he did not know, and was evidently ignorant that such a person as the Puritan commander had ever existed. "At my request, he took the picture out of the window case and allowed me to examine it, which I did carefully. The only letters visible were those in the left-hand corner, 'j3Ltatis Sum. 38,' and underneath the date, 'A° 1625.' I asked the attendant where he obtained it. He said a gentleman named Gilbert had put. it there on sale, and that this same gentleman had also brought some other valuable old paintings, which had been sold. I then told the man, after ascertaining its price, that, if it were an authentic portrait of Captain Myles Standish, it was invaluable ; but that, if it could not be authenticated, it was merely interesting as an old painting of fair merit; and that I would take the picture at his price, provided he would obtain and send to me at Plymouth an autograph certificate from Mr. Gilbert, stating how it had come to him, and if the certificate were tolerably satisfactory, I would remit the value of the picture. "About a week after reaching home, I received the following certificate from the owner : "Boston, April 23, 1877. "This certifies that this portrait of Myles Standish was purchased for such, at Germantown, Philadelphia, shortly before the war of 1812, of a branch of the Chew family, by Roger Gilbert, who was born at Portsmouth, Virginia, and lived in Philadelphia at the time. He was also in the war of 1812. .. T _ James Gilbert, Grandnephew." "I sent for the picture, and on removing the frame found the name 'M. Standish' underneath, in the right-hand upper corner. 592 Called MYLES STANDISH 1587-1656 (593) "A gentleman well versed in painting thinks the artist was Cornelius Janssen, who was of Flemish parents, born in London, and died in Flanders, and who painted almost exclusively on wood. I think he was born about 1 590, and was in his prime when Standish visited London as commissioner, in 1625." The portrait is reproduced in the "Memorial History of Boston" (Boston, 1880), Volume 1, page 65, with this comment by Justin Winsor : "The canvas stands in need of complete identification as a likeness . . . but until positively disproven, it must have a certain interest." The officers of the Pilgrim Society, Plymouth, to whom the portrait was submitted some years ago, were not ready to pronounce it authentic. Arthur Lord, Esq., president of the Society, tells me that the late William T. Davis, his torian of Plymouth, saw the picture when Captain Harrison brought it to the town. It then had no date inscription. The Captain asked Mr. Davis in what year Standish was in England, "for," said Harrison, "the picture must have been painted abroad." Mr. Davis answered, "In 1625." The next time that Mr. Davis saw the portrait, it bore the date as given. 595 Many books relating to Colonial history and costume reproduce the portraits of two members of the Van Rens selaer family. The older man in a flowered coat is almost always said to be Jeremias Van Rensselaer, director of Rensselaerswyck, who was born abroad, and died in 1 674. The younger man is sometimes referred to as Jan Baptist Van Rensselaer, another director, who died in 1678. A student of costume would soon discover that the first Van Rensselaers who bore these names did not live at a period when the wigs and coats depicted in the paintings were in use. The portraits are so familiar to all students of history, however, that they are included here in order that a word of caution may be registered. The two early Van Rensselaer portraits have one pecul iarity in common, the bob wig. In Randle Holme's "Acad emy of Armour" (Chester, 1688), page 463, are these words, "A Campaign Wig hath Knots or Bobs (or a Dildo on each side) with a curled forehead, as Numb. 118, a Travelling Wig." This type of wig was in use from about 1685 to perhaps 1730. In 1692, Captain Caesar Carter, of New York, had a bob wig which was called "old." Johannes Schuyler1 was portrayed in a bob wig, and since the canvas includes his wife, to whom he was married in 1695, the portrait must follow that date; and judging from the maturity of his face, it was done probably about 1 7 1 o or 1 7 1 5. If we omit the first Jeremias and Jan Baptist (who were immigrants) from further consideration, we have several possible solu tions from among later members of the family born in America. 1 Reproduced in "Albany Chronicles" as number 10. The canvas was long ago cut from top to bottom, eliminating a table in the center of the picture, to make the canvas smaller. 596fl In order to make a thoroughly satisfactory study of the problem, which is beset with difficulties, it would be neces sary to reproduce for comparison the first ten portraits which appear in "The Van Rensselaers of the Manor of Rensselaerswyck," published in 1888 by Hattie Barber and May Van Rensselaer.1 This seems to be beyond the province of the present work. 'Mn. Nathaniel Thayer, of Boston, owns one of the fifty copies printed, and has permitted the volume to be used in a study of the portraits. 596b eiw< CO COZ W « Z<> H