April 7 1630: Puritans Leave for
Massachusetts
....in 1630, the last well-wishers stepped off the ship
Arbella and returned
to shore. More than a week after the vessel first
set out, the winds were
finally favorable. The ship weighed anchor and
sailed for New England.
Governor John Winthrop and approximately 300
English Puritans were on board.
They were leaving their homes in
England to settle in a fledgling colony -
Massachusetts Bay - on the
other side of the Atlantic. There they would work
"to do more service
to the Lord." Governor Winthrop shepherded the Puritans
through 12
years of enormous hardship. Under his leadership, Massachusetts
Bay
became the most populous English colony and Boston the largest city
in
North America.
John Winthrop and the Puritans who
followed him across the Atlantic in 1630
were not the first English
colonists in Massachusetts. In 1626 a small group
of Englishmen had
abandoned a short-lived settlement on Cape Ann and moved
south to an
area they called Naumkeag, after the Native American people who
had
farmed there.
Two years later, they renamed Naumkeag "Salem,"
which means peaceful in
Hebrew. They chose John Endecott governor of
the new settlement, which was
formed to provide a place where those who
did not conform to Church of
England doctrine could worship in peace.
(Unlike the Pilgrims in Plymouth
Colony, who chose to separate from the
Church of England, the Puritans
wished to remain within its
fold.)
The following year, a charter from Charles I made it
official that, as far
as the King of England was concerned, "the
Governor and Company of
Massachusetts Bay in New England" had rights to
a large area of land
stretching from three miles south of the Charles
River to three miles north
of the Merrimack.
Under this
charter, the Massachusetts Bay Colony enjoyed a remarkable degree
of
independence; the governor was to be "chosen out of the freemen of
the
saide Company," rather than appointed in England under the watchful
eye of
the king. Hoping to secure these advantages, Puritans in England
bought
control of the company and selected 41-year-old John Winthrop to
replace
Endecott as governor.
The son of a well-respected
lawyer, John Winthrop had attended Trinity
College Cambridge for two
years. He at one time seriously considered
becoming a minister but
established a lucrative law practice instead. He
remained deeply
religious, and like other English Puritans, desired to
reform the
Church of England. When he concluded that reform was not
possible
he chose to make the long journey to the New
World.
By early 1630, a fleet of 12 ships was ready to take
roughly 1,000 people to
New England. The largest vessel, the 350-ton
Arabella, carried passengers,
many heads of cattle, and provisions. Bad
weather delayed the ship's
departure several times; after several false
starts, on April 10, 1630 the
Arabella sailed into the open waters of
the Atlantic.
It is not known exactly where or when John
Winthrop delivered his famous
Model of Christian Charity" speech, but
the intended audience was clearly
his fellow emigrants. "It is by
mutual consent [that we] seek out a place of
cohabitation and
consortship under a due form of government both civil
and
ecclesiastical. In such cases as this, the care of the public must
oversway
all private respects. . . . "he told them. We go "to improve
our lives, to
do more service to the Lord. . . . We have entered a
covenant with [God] for
this work." He continued: "For we must consider
that we shall be as a city
upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon
us."
Winthrop's ship reached Salem on June 12th; two days
later, the passengers
stepped ashore as the ship's captain fired a
five-gun salute. The rest of
the fleet arrived in the next few weeks.
It was the beginning of what became
known as the Great Migration
(1630-1642), during which thousands of English
families immigrated to
Massachusetts.
After only a few weeks in Salem, Winthrop and
his followers moved to the
north side of the Charles River to what they
called Charles Town. However,
because of the scarcity of fresh water
there, in September they crossed the
river again, this time
establishing a new town, which they named Boston.
Life in
early Boston was brutal. In a September letter to his wife,
Winthrop
wrote of "much mortality, sickness, and trouble." Before the
first year was
out, 200 of the settlers had died. Yet Winthop never
gave up hope, "putting
his hand to any ordinary labor," and trusting in
God. He served as governor
of the struggling colony for more than a
decade and was active in government
until his death in 1649, almost
exactly 19 years to the day after his ship
sailed out of English
waters.
The Massachusetts Bay Charter remained in place until
Charles II revoked it
in 1684. In 1691, a new charter folded Plymouth
Colony into a royal colony -
the Province of Massachusetts - with a
governor appointed by the Crown.
Sources
History of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume 1,
1626-1630, by Sidney Perley (Salem 1924).
John Winthrop:
America's Forgotten Founding Father, by Francis J. Bremer(Oxford
University Press, 2003).
Transcribed & Submitted by
Fawn