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==Biography==
==Biography==
Winthrop was born in [[Edwardstone]], [[Suffolk]], [[England]], the son of Adam Winthrop (1548–1623) and his wife, [[Anne Browne]]. Winthrop briefly attended [[Trinity College, Cambridge]], then studied [[law]] at [[Gray's Inn]], and in the 1620s became a lawyer at the [[Court of Wards]] in [[London]].
Winthrop was born in [[Edwardstone]], [[Suffolk]], [[England]], the son of Adam Winthrop (1548–1623) and his wife, [[Anne Browne]]. Winthrop briefly attended [[Trinity College, Cambridge]], then studied [[law]] at [[Gray's Inn]], and in the 1620s became a lawyer at the [[Court of Wards]] in [[London]].

Other Puritans who believed likewise obtained a royal charter for the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony|Massachusetts Bay Company]]. [[Charles I of England]] was apparently unaware that the colony was to be anything other than a commercial venture to America. However, on [[March 4]], [[1629]], Winthrop signed the [[Cambridge Agreement]] with his wealthier Puritan friends, essentially pledging that they would embark on the next voyage and found a new Puritan colony in [[New England]]. The colony's land was taken from Native Americans with Winthrop's excuse that the natives hadn't "subdued" the land and thus had no "civil right" to it.<ref> Howard Zinn ''A People's History of the United States.'' New York: Harper & Row Publishing. </ref>
Other Puritans who believed likewise obtained a [[royal charter]] for the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony|Massachusetts Bay Company]]. [[Charles I of England]] was apparently unaware that the colony was to be anything other than a commercial venture to America. However, on [[March 4]], [[1629]], Winthrop signed the [[Cambridge Agreement]] with his wealthier Puritan friends, essentially pledging that they would embark on the next voyage and found a new [[Puritan]] colony in [[New England]]. The colony's land was taken from Native Americans with Winthrop's excuse that the natives hadn't "subdued" the land and thus had no "civil right" to it.<ref> Howard Zinn ''A People's History of the United States.'' New York: Harper & Row Publishing. </ref>
[[Image:John Winthrop Home Site Charlestown.jpg|thumb|left|1629 site of Winthrop's first home in Massachusetts, "The Great House" in City Square Park in [[Charlestown, Massachusetts]] across the [[Charles River]] from Boston]]
[[Image:John Winthrop Home Site Charlestown.jpg|thumb|left|1629 site of Winthrop's first home in Massachusetts, "The Great House" in City Square Park in [[Charlestown, Massachusetts]] across the [[Charles River]] from [[Boston]].]]
[[Image:John Winthrop Home Site Boston.jpg|thumb|right|1630 Site of Winthrop's first home in Boston on State Street]]
[[Image:John Winthrop Home Site Boston.jpg|thumb|right|1630 Site of Winthrop's first home in Boston on State Street]]
[[Image:Winthrop Building Boston.jpg|thumb|right|[[Winthrop Building]], site of Winthrop's final mansion house in Boston]]
[[Image:Winthrop Building Boston.jpg|thumb|right|[[Winthrop Building]], site of Winthrop's final mansion house in Boston]]
Winthrop pledged £400 to the cause and set sail on the ship the [[Arbella]]<ref>The Peerage.com</ref>—named after the wife of Isaac Johnson, daughter of [[Earl of Lincoln#Earls of Lincoln, Ninth Creation (1572)|Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln]]. Winthrop befriended the younger Johnson (29&nbsp;years old at his death) in earlier days in England, spending many days at Isaac's family home. The first Englishman in the Boston area, Blackstone, was a childhood and best friend of Isaac; they attended seminary together. Winthrop on Isaac Johnson's death put in probate a sum of over £75,000. Isaac's brother Capt. James Johnson, on his arrival in 1635 was denied his title and right to Isaac's property. With the help of Dudley and others Winthrop kept this wealth in probate, and took fees, for over 30 years. Many documents were destroyed in a very mysterious manner. {{Fact|date=December 2008}} The documents were part of the "doomsday record" kept by the founders of Boston. Winthrop and others accused Johnson's wife of adultery and placed her on gallows with the rope on neck, only to let her go. Capt. James Johnson's only crime was to allow his wife to have Bible studies in his home with [[Anne Hutchinson]], "a good woman of the Christian faith" who along with the Lady Arbella came from Lincolnshire, England. {{Fact|date=December 2008}}
Winthrop pledged £400 to the cause and set sail on the ship the [[Arbella]]<ref>The Peerage.com</ref>—named after the wife of Isaac Johnson, daughter of [[Earl of Lincoln#Earls of Lincoln, Ninth Creation (1572)|Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln]].
Winthrop befriended the younger Johnson (29&nbsp;years old at his death) in earlier days in England, spending many days at Isaac's family home. The first Englishman in the Boston area, Blackstone, was a childhood and best friend of Isaac; they attended seminary together. Winthrop on Isaac Johnson's death put in probate a sum of over £75,000. Isaac's brother Capt. James Johnson, on his arrival in 1635 was denied his title and right to Isaac's property. With the help of Dudley and others Winthrop kept this wealth in probate, and took fees, for over 30 years. Many documents were destroyed in a very mysterious manner. {{Fact|date=December 2008}} The documents were part of the "doomsday record" kept by the founders of Boston. Winthrop and others accused Johnson's wife of adultery and placed her on gallows with the rope on neck, only to let her go. Capt. James Johnson's only crime was to allow his wife to have Bible studies in his home with [[Anne Hutchinson]], "a good woman of the Christian faith" who along with the Lady Arbella came from Lincolnshire, England. {{Fact|date=December 2008}}


Claims to inheritance were presented to the royal court in London by the father Abraham Johnson, a Sheriff of the Queen (Rutland, south of Nottingham). Isaac Johnson was buried with his wife the Lady Arbella of Lincolnshire on his land, now called King's Chapel, on Tremont Street, Boston. A reference is made to Isaac Johnson in the first chapter of the book ''The Scarlet Letter''.
Claims to inheritance were presented to the royal court in London by the father Abraham Johnson, a Sheriff of the Queen (Rutland, south of Nottingham). Isaac Johnson was buried with his wife the Lady Arbella of Lincolnshire on his land, now called King's Chapel, on Tremont Street, Boston. A reference is made to Isaac Johnson in the first chapter of the book ''The Scarlet Letter''.<ref>[http://student.education2020.com/activities/assessment.aspx?keystr=24140&order=02020450&stbl=1164524&assessment=17805623] - Education 2020, Georgia Standard Homeschool Console, question: "Which of the following Puritans had '''inherited land in the Middle Colonies''' after his father's death? This land had been given by King Charles II of England to repay his debts. ANSWER: D, John Winthrop. Accessed on August 11, 2009, 11:42 AM by a student, may require a username or password to view.</ref>


Winthrop endangered his servants for the purpose of running his enterprises and docks; "they had not clean water and many died before Winthrop was urged to move to Boston". {{Fact|date=December 2008}}
Winthrop endangered his servants for the purpose of running his enterprises and docks; "they had not clean water and many died before Winthrop was urged to move to Boston". {{Fact|date=December 2008}}
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John Winthrop had been elected governor of the colony prior to departure in 1628, and he was re-elected many times. As governor he was one of the least radical of the Puritans, trying to keep the number of executions for heresy to a minimum and working to prevent the implementation of more conservative practices such as veiling women, which many Puritans supported. {{Fact|date=December 2008}}
John Winthrop had been elected governor of the colony prior to departure in 1628, and he was re-elected many times. As governor he was one of the least radical of the Puritans, trying to keep the number of executions for heresy to a minimum and working to prevent the implementation of more conservative practices such as veiling women, which many Puritans supported. {{Fact|date=December 2008}}


Like his Puritan brethren, Winthrop strove to establish a Christian community that held uniform doctrinal beliefs. It was for this reason that in 1638 he presided over the heresy trial and banishing of [[Anne Hutchinson]] from the colony. During this trial Winthrop referred to Hutchinson as an "American [[Jezebel (Bible)|Jezebel]]."<ref>Francis J. Bremer, ''[http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=104232630 John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father]'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), p. [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=104232929 299].</ref> Winthrop also subscribed to the belief that the native peoples who lived in the hinterlands around the colony had been struck down by God, who sent disease among them because of their non-Christian beliefs: "But for the natives in these parts, God hath so pursued them, as for {{convert|300|mi|km}} space the greatest part of them are swept away by [[smallpox]] which still continues among them. So as God hath thereby cleared our title to this place, those who remain in these parts, being in all not 50, have put themselves under our protection."<ref>[http://rwor.org/a/firstvol/883/thank.htm The Myth of Thanksgiving].</ref>
Like his Puritan brethren, Winthrop strove to establish a Christian community that held uniform doctrinal beliefs. It was for this reason that in 1638 he presided over the [[heresy]] trial and banishing of [[Anne Hutchinson]] from the colony. During this trial Winthrop referred to Hutchinson as an "American [[Jezebel (Bible)|Jezebel]]."<ref>Francis J. Bremer, ''[http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=104232630 John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father]'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), p. [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=104232929 299].</ref> Winthrop also subscribed to the belief that the native peoples who lived in the [[Hinterland|hinterlands]] around the colony had been struck down by God, who sent disease among them because of their non-Christian beliefs: "But for the natives in these parts, God hath so pursued them, as for {{convert|300|mi|km}} space the greatest part of them are swept away by [[smallpox]] which still continues among them. So as God hath thereby cleared our title to this place, those who remain in these parts, being in all not 50, have put themselves under our protection."<ref>[http://rwor.org/a/firstvol/883/thank.htm The Myth of Thanksgiving].</ref> However, this was really due to the fact that the Native Americans lacked [[immunity]] to European dieseases which the settlers had long overcome.


John Winthrop was voted out of government in 1634, but re-elected in 1646. He disagreed with Roger Williams and banished him from the colony.
John Winthrop was voted out of government in 1634, but re-elected in 1646. He disagreed with [[Roger Williams]] and banished him from the colony.


Winthrop was a close friend of the English parliamentarian, [[Sir William Spring, 1st Baronet|Sir William Spring]].
Winthrop was a close friend of the English parliamentarian, [[Sir William Spring, 1st Baronet|Sir William Spring]].

Revision as of 15:52, 11 August 2009

John Winthrop
Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
In office
1630 – 1634
1637–1640
1642–1644
1646–1649
Preceded byJohn Endecott (1630)
Henry Vane (1637)
Richard Bellingham (1642)
Thomas Dudley (1646)
Succeeded byThomas Dudley (1634 & 1640)
John Endecott (1644 & 1649)
Personal details
BornJanuary 12, 1587 or 1588
Edwardstone, Suffolk, England
DiedMarch 26, 1649
Boston, Massachusetts
SpousesMary Worth

Thomasine Clopton

Magaret Tyndal
ProfessionLawyer, Governor

John Winthrop (12 January 1587/826 March 1649) led a group of English Puritans to the New World in 1630, and joined the Massachusetts Bay Company later that year, and then was elected their governor in October 1629. Between 1639 and 1648 he was voted out of governorship and re-elected a total of 12 times. Although Winthrop was a respected political figure, he was criticized for his obstinacy regarding the formation of a general assembly in 1634.

Biography

Winthrop was born in Edwardstone, Suffolk, England, the son of Adam Winthrop (1548–1623) and his wife, Anne Browne. Winthrop briefly attended Trinity College, Cambridge, then studied law at Gray's Inn, and in the 1620s became a lawyer at the Court of Wards in London.

Other Puritans who believed likewise obtained a royal charter for the Massachusetts Bay Company. Charles I of England was apparently unaware that the colony was to be anything other than a commercial venture to America. However, on March 4, 1629, Winthrop signed the Cambridge Agreement with his wealthier Puritan friends, essentially pledging that they would embark on the next voyage and found a new Puritan colony in New England. The colony's land was taken from Native Americans with Winthrop's excuse that the natives hadn't "subdued" the land and thus had no "civil right" to it.[1]

1629 site of Winthrop's first home in Massachusetts, "The Great House" in City Square Park in Charlestown, Massachusetts across the Charles River from Boston.
1630 Site of Winthrop's first home in Boston on State Street
Winthrop Building, site of Winthrop's final mansion house in Boston

Winthrop pledged £400 to the cause and set sail on the ship the Arbella[2]—named after the wife of Isaac Johnson, daughter of Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln.

Winthrop befriended the younger Johnson (29 years old at his death) in earlier days in England, spending many days at Isaac's family home. The first Englishman in the Boston area, Blackstone, was a childhood and best friend of Isaac; they attended seminary together. Winthrop on Isaac Johnson's death put in probate a sum of over £75,000. Isaac's brother Capt. James Johnson, on his arrival in 1635 was denied his title and right to Isaac's property. With the help of Dudley and others Winthrop kept this wealth in probate, and took fees, for over 30 years. Many documents were destroyed in a very mysterious manner. [citation needed] The documents were part of the "doomsday record" kept by the founders of Boston. Winthrop and others accused Johnson's wife of adultery and placed her on gallows with the rope on neck, only to let her go. Capt. James Johnson's only crime was to allow his wife to have Bible studies in his home with Anne Hutchinson, "a good woman of the Christian faith" who along with the Lady Arbella came from Lincolnshire, England. [citation needed]

Claims to inheritance were presented to the royal court in London by the father Abraham Johnson, a Sheriff of the Queen (Rutland, south of Nottingham). Isaac Johnson was buried with his wife the Lady Arbella of Lincolnshire on his land, now called King's Chapel, on Tremont Street, Boston. A reference is made to Isaac Johnson in the first chapter of the book The Scarlet Letter.[3]

Winthrop endangered his servants for the purpose of running his enterprises and docks; "they had not clean water and many died before Winthrop was urged to move to Boston". [citation needed]

Winthrop saw to the hanging of Mary Latham and James Britton in 1644, both found in adultery, but he also admitted to an encounter with an Indian woman at an abandoned settlement not far from his home. [citation needed] Many men searched for him all night only for him to be found not far from home with a very strange story to excuse himself with. [citation needed]

John Winthrop had been elected governor of the colony prior to departure in 1628, and he was re-elected many times. As governor he was one of the least radical of the Puritans, trying to keep the number of executions for heresy to a minimum and working to prevent the implementation of more conservative practices such as veiling women, which many Puritans supported. [citation needed]

Like his Puritan brethren, Winthrop strove to establish a Christian community that held uniform doctrinal beliefs. It was for this reason that in 1638 he presided over the heresy trial and banishing of Anne Hutchinson from the colony. During this trial Winthrop referred to Hutchinson as an "American Jezebel."[4] Winthrop also subscribed to the belief that the native peoples who lived in the hinterlands around the colony had been struck down by God, who sent disease among them because of their non-Christian beliefs: "But for the natives in these parts, God hath so pursued them, as for 300 miles (480 km) space the greatest part of them are swept away by smallpox which still continues among them. So as God hath thereby cleared our title to this place, those who remain in these parts, being in all not 50, have put themselves under our protection."[5] However, this was really due to the fact that the Native Americans lacked immunity to European dieseases which the settlers had long overcome.

John Winthrop was voted out of government in 1634, but re-elected in 1646. He disagreed with Roger Williams and banished him from the colony.

Winthrop was a close friend of the English parliamentarian, Sir William Spring.

Family

Winthrop's Tomb in King's Chapel Burying Ground

Winthrop married his first wife, Mary Forth, on 16 April 1605 at Great Stambridge, Essex, England. She bore him six children and died in June 1615. He married his second wife, Thomasine Clopton, on 6 December 1615 at Groton, Suffolk, England. She died on 8 December 1616. On 29 April 1618 at Great Maplestead, Essex, England Winthrop married his third wife, Margaret Tyndal, daughter of Sir John Tyndal and his wife Anna Egerton. Margaret Tyndall gave birth to six children in England before the family emigrated to New England (The Governor, three of his sons, and eight servants in 1630 on the Arbella, and his wife on the second voyage of the Lyon in 1631, leaving their small manor behind). One of their daughters died on the Lyon voyage. Two children were born to them in New England. Margaret died on 14 June 1647 in Boston, Massachusetts. Winthrop then married his fourth wife, Martha Rainsborough, widow of Thomas Coytmore and sister of the famous Levellers Thomas and William Rainborowe, sometime after 20 December 1647 and before the birth of their only child in 1648, he died of natural causes. His son, John Winthrop, the Younger, whose mother was Mary Forth, later became Governor of Connecticut.

Legacy

Winthrop is most famous for his "City upon a Hill" sermon (as it is known popularly, its real title being A Model of Christian Charity), in which he declared that the Puritan colonists emigrating to the New World were part of a special pact with God to create a holy community. This speech is often seen as a forerunner to the concept of American exceptionalism. The speech is also well known for arguing that the wealthy had a holy duty to look after the poor. Recent history has shown, however, that the speech was not given much attention at the time of its delivery. Rather than coining these concepts, Winthrop was merely repeating what were widely held Puritan beliefs in his day. The work was not actually published until the nineteenth century, although it was known and circulated in manuscript before that time. Winthrop did publish The Humble Request of His Majesties Loyal Subjects (London, 1630), which defended the emigrants’ physical separation from England and reaffirmed their loyalty to the Crown and Church of England. This work was republished by Joshua Scottow in the 1696 compilation MASSACHUSETTS: or The first Planters of New-England, The End and Manner of their coming thither, and Abode there: In several EPISTLES.

Modern American politicians, like Ronald Reagan, continue to cite Winthrop as a source of inspiration. However, those who praise Winthrop fail to note his strident anti-democratic political tendencies. Winthrop stated, for example, "If we should change from a mixed aristocracy to mere democracy, first we should have no warrant in scripture for it: for there was no such government in Israel ... A democracy is, amongst civil nations, accounted the meanest and worst of all forms of government. [To allow it would be] a manifest breach of the 5th Commandment."[6]

Winthrop was not governor at the outset of the Pequot war and bore only an indirect responsibility for its outcome. The decision to sell the survivors as slaves in the Bahamas was a societal response and not a personal choice.[citation needed]

The Town of Winthrop, Massachusetts, is named after him, as is Winthrop House at Harvard University, though the house is also named for the John Winthrop who briefly served as President of Harvard.

Winthrop is also briefly immortalized in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter in the chapter entitled "The Minister's Vigil."[7]

John Winthrop's descendants number thousands today, including current U.S. Senator from Massachusetts John Kerry.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Howard Zinn A People's History of the United States. New York: Harper & Row Publishing.
  2. ^ The Peerage.com
  3. ^ [1] - Education 2020, Georgia Standard Homeschool Console, question: "Which of the following Puritans had inherited land in the Middle Colonies after his father's death? This land had been given by King Charles II of England to repay his debts. ANSWER: D, John Winthrop. Accessed on August 11, 2009, 11:42 AM by a student, may require a username or password to view.
  4. ^ Francis J. Bremer, John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 299.
  5. ^ The Myth of Thanksgiving.
  6. ^ R.C. Winthrop, Life and Letters of John Winthrop (Boston, 1869), vol. ii, p. 430.
  7. ^ Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Portable Hawthorne. Ed. William C. Spengemann. New York: Penguin, 2005.
  8. ^ Vowell, Sarah. The Wordy Shipmates. Riverhead Books: New York, 2008. p. 224.

References

  • Bremer, Francis J. John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 299
  • Reich, Jerome R. Colonial America. 5th ed. Ed. Charlyce J. Owen and Edie Riker. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 2001.
  • Winthrop, R.C. Life and Letters of John Winthrop (Boston, 1869), vol. ii, p. 430.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
1630–1633
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
1637–1639
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
1642–1643
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
1646–1648
Succeeded by