History of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, 1622-1918, vol 1, Part 4

Author: Cook, Louis A. (Louis Atwood), 1847-1918, ed
Publication date: 1918
Publisher: New York; Chicago, The S.J. Clarke publishing company
Number of Pages: 644


USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > History of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, 1622-1918, vol 1 > Part 4


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HISTORY OF NORFOLK COUNTY


to purchase the title of any Indians who might claim rights of inheritance to any of the lands included in the grant, thereby maintaining friendly relations with the natives and refuting all charges of confiscating their hunting grounds.


The first purchase of Norfolk County land was made soon after the Town of Dedham was incorporated (possibly before the act of incorporation was passed), from the sachems who claimed the country west of the Neponset River and south and east of the Charles River. The tract included the present Town of Dedham and some of the adjacent towns, though it does not appear that any deed or treaty relating to this purchase was ever made a matter of record. The Indian title to Medfield and some of the adjacent territory was purchased of Chickatabot.


Says Worthington : "In 1660 two agents are appointed to treat with the saga- mores who owned Wollomonopoag, now Wrentham. In 1662 Richard Ellis and Timothy Dwight, the agents appointed for that purpose, made a report that they had made a treaty with Philip the sagamore, for lands six miles square, or as much as six miles square, at Wollomonopoag, and exhibited his deed thereof, under hand and seal. Six days after this report is made, the town ratify the treaty and assess their common rights to the amount of twenty-four pounds ten shillings, for the purpose of paying King Philip the stipulated price for his deed."


In the fall of 1669 Philip notified the Dedham authorities that he still owned certain lands in the vicinity of Wollomonopoag, and offered to sell them to the white people. The Dedham selectmen appointed a commission of five persons, at the head of which was Timothy Dwight, to treat with him for the lands, "provided he can show that he has any rights to the same, and provided he will secure the town against future claims of other sachems." It is extremely doubt- ful whether Philip really had any more right to the lands in that section of the county than any other Indian. But his experience of nine years before taught him that the white inhabitants were willing to pay, and, realizing that it was only a question of time when they would come into possession at any rate, he took advantage of the situation to get as much money as he could. On November 15, 1669, the town ordered an assessment of seventeen pounds eight shillings to pay for this second purchase of Philip.


In the meantime, July 4, 1665, the Indians Wampatuck, Ahahden and Squmuck, sons of Chickatabot, deeded certain lands in what are now the towns of Cohasset and Hingham to Capt. Joshua Hubbard and Ensign John Thaxter, for the white inhabitants, thus confirming the act of their father in permitting the white people to occupy the land, though it is not certain that Chickatabot sold the land outright.


On August 5, 1665, Wampatuck, alias Josias, sagamore of Massachusetts, son of Chickatabot, with the consent of his wise men, viz .: "Squamog, his brother Daniel, old Nahatun, William Mananiomott, Job Nassott, Manuntago and William Nahatun," sold to the white settlers "all of the east of the lands within the bounds of Braintrey being bounded on the sea side with the northeast, and with the Dorchester line on the northwest, and by the Waymouth line on the southeast and with the Dorchester line on the southwest."


The white men who negotiated this purchase were Samuel Basse, Thomas Faxon, Francis Eliot, William Needham, William Savill, Henry Neale, Richard Thayer and Christopher Webb. The consideration was twenty-one pounds and


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ten shillings. For many years this deed, properly framed, hung in the town house of old Braintree.


On April 14, 1680, a deed was executed by William Nahaton, alias Quaanan, and his brothers Peter Natoogus and Benjamin Nahaton, and their sisters Tah- keesuisk Nahaton and Hannah Nahaton, alias Jammewwosh, "living in Punka- pogg, near Blue Hill in the bounds of Dorchester, to any lands lying in the Town of Dedham." This deed especially describes a "parcel or tract of land as it lieth towards the northerly side of Dedham, by the Great Falls of the Charles River, to the Natick saw mill brook," etc., to which land the Indians relinquished "all right, title and whole interest." This purchase was brought about by Timothy Dwight, Richard Ellice and Thomas Battelle, commissioners appointed to nego- tiate the treaty and receive the title to the land.


John Magus, a minor sachem living at Natick Village, and his wife, Sara Magus, executed a deed on April 18, 1681, to Daniel Fisher, Thomas Fuller, Richard Ellice and Nathaniel Bullard, commissioners appointed by the Dedham authorities, embracing "the whole parcel or tract of land as it lieth in Dedham bounds," etc. The tract thus conveyed was known as Magus Hill and included the present towns of Natick and Needham and that part of Dedham known as Dedham Island. The consideration was five pounds in money and Indian corn to the value of three pounds.


The territory now included in the Town of Brookline was first obtained of Chickatabot in 1630. On March 19, 1685, his grandson, Charles Josias, alias Josias Wampatuck, and his councilors, by and with the advice and consent of his guardians, William Stoughton and Joseph Dudley, made a deed to Elisha Cooke, Elisha Hutchinson, Samuel Shrimpton, John Joyliffe, Simon Lynde, John Saffin, Edward Wyllys, Daniel Turel, Sr., Henry Allen, John Faireweather, Timothy Prout, Sr., and Theophilus Ffrary, "in behalf of the rest of the Proprietated Inhabitants of the Town of Boston and Precincts thereof," confirming the act of his grandfather fifty-five years before. The consideration mentioned in the deed was a "Valuable Summe of Money," payment of which is acknowledged.


On April 18, 1685, this same "Josias, alias Josias Wampatuck, son and heir of the late sachem of the Indians inhabiting the Massachusetts, in New England, and grandson of Chickatabot, the former grand sachem," made a deed confirming the sale of land included in the town of Dedham by his grandfather fifty years before. The deed was approved by William Stoughton and Joseph Dudley, guardians for Josias, who received four pounds and ten shillings as a considera- tion. Some of these ancient deeds are now in the collections of the Dedham Historical Society.


CHAPTER IV


THE FIRST SETTLEMENTS


RELIGIOUS CONDITIONS IN ENGLAND AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY -- THE PILGRIMS AND PURITANS-IMMIGRATION TO AMERICA-GREAT PATENT FOR NEW ENGLAND-THE MAYFLOWER-THE COMPACT-THE WESTON COLONY-ROBERT GORGES-THE DORCHESTER COMPANY-THE MASSACHUSETTS COMPANY-TRANSFER OF THE CHARTER-SETTLEMENTS IN 1630.


Upon the death of Queen Elizabeth, James I ascended the English throne. At that time there were four religious organizations in existence in England. First, the Church of England, which had the sanction and support of the British Government and its King : Second, the Separatists (later known as the Pilgrims), who refused to affiliate in any way with the Church of England, or to acknowl- edge the authority of the state church; Third, the Puritans, or Nonconformists, who differed from the Anglican Church only in their disregard of certain ritual- istic rites and observances ; and Fourth, the Roman Catholics, who in some parts of the country formed the prevailing religious power. The religious situation in England at the close of the Sixteenth Century wielded an important influence upon the early settlement of North America.


Twice before becoming king-in 1581 and again in 1590-James I had openly professed a sincere belief in the teachings of John Knox and the Puri- tans. On April 3, 1603, when about to leave Scotland for his coronation, he gave thanks publicly in the kirk, declaring that "As God has promoted me to greater power, it is my duty to establish religion and take away corruption in both England and Scotland." This public and apparently fearless public utterance gave great encouragement to the Puritans. But they soon learned that James was not sincere. In his address to Parliament in 1604, he pronounced the Puritans to be "a sect insufferable in a well governed commonwealth." Three-fourths of the members of the House of Commons sympathized with the Puritans, and they were not slow in showing by their actions that the insolence of the king had awakened the indignation of the Nonconformists. The attitude of the House of Commons led James to say in a letter written about this time: "I would rather live like a hermit than be a king over such a people as the pack of Puritans are that overrule the lower house." His motto seemed to be "No bishop, no king." In July, 1604, he issued a proclamation in which he declared that he wanted only "one doctrine, one discipline, one religion, in substance and in ceremony," and ordered "all curates and lecturers to conform strictly to the rubrics of the prayer book, on pain of deprivation."


Not long after this proclamation was promulgated, James confidently asserted that he would make all dissenters conform to the ceremonies of the Church of


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England, or he would harry them out of the country. And that was exactly what happened. Large numbers of the Separatists refused to conform and left their native land to find refuge in Holland. It was at this time that they took the name of Pilgrims. For several years a congregation of the Pilgrims was located at Leyden, under the pastoral guidance of Rev. John Robinson, who has been spoken of as "the most learned, polished and modest spirit that ever separated from the Church of England."


IMMIGRATION TO AMERICA


In February, 1619, the Pilgrims in Holland sent agents to England to obtain a patent to land in America. After considerable delay a patent was issued in the name of John Wincob. The original document has been lost and, so far as known, there are no copies in existence. It is believed that it covered certain terri- tory that now lies within the State of New York. As soon as the patent had been obtained, the Pilgrims began making their preparations for emigrating, but more than a year elapsed before the first company was ready. The delay in completing their preparations caused radical changes in their original plans for planting a colony in the New World. Another agency in altering their plans was the


GREAT PATENT FOR NEW ENGLAND


On July 23, 1620, Sir Thomas Coventry was ordered to prepare a new patent for the Plymouth Company for the king's royal signature. The result was the "Great Patent for New England," signed by King James and conveying to forty of his subjects "all that part of North America extending from the fortieth to the forty-eigth degree of north latitude, and between these parallels from the Atlantic to the Pacific."


The company of forty, which included some of the most wealthy and power- ful of England's nobility, was known as "The Council established at Plymouth, in the County of Devon, for the Planting, Ruling, Ordering and Governing New England in America." The Great Patent did not pass the seals until Novem- ber 3, 1620.


THE MAYFLOWER


While the Great Patent was pending, those of the Pilgrims who had decided to try their fortunes in America made everything ready for their departure. The "Speedwell" of 60 tons was chartered in Holland, and the "Mayflower" of 180 tons was chartered in England for the voyage. The two vessels started on August 13, 1620, but the Speedwell sprang a leak and was forced to put in at Dartmouth for repairs, the Mayflower waiting until her sister ship could be put in condition. After a few days another start was made, but again the Speedwell began to leak and the two ships put in at Plymouth, where on August 21st the Speedwell was condemned as unseaworthy. On September 6, 1620, the May- flower, with 101 persons on board, left Plymouth and on November 9th the immigrants sighted the cliffs of Cape Cod.


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THE COMPACT


Before effecting a landing and choosing a site for their settlement, the men on board assembled in the cabin of the Mayflower and drew up the following agreement or compact :


"In the name of God, Amen. We whose names are under written, the loyal subjects of our dread sovereign, King James, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c., having undertaken, for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian faith, and the honor of our King and country, a voyage to plant the first colony in the northern parts of Virginia, do, by these presents, solemnly and mutually, in the presence of God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together unto a civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation and furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by virtue hereof to enact, constitute and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions and offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the colony ; unto which we promise all due submission and obedience.


"In witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names, at Cape Cod, the IIth of November, in the year of the reign of our sovereign lord, King James, of England, France and Ireland, the 18th, and of Scotland the 54th, A. D. 1620."


This compact was signed by every man on board and for ten years it was the only constitution or organic law of the Plymouth colony. On the day that it was signed a party of fifteen men, well armed, was set ashore at Long Point to explore the coast and select a location for the proposed plantation. This was followed by several similar exploring parties until December 11, 1620, when they landed at Plymouth. A fort and storehouse were built and land was allotted to the several families. The white man had at last gained a permanent footing in New England.


THE WESTON COLONY


In July, 1622, Thomas Weston, a merchant of London, sent out two ships- the "Charity" of 100 tons and the "Swan" of 30 tons, with fifty or sixty men, to establish a colony. The following month the ships arrived at Plymouth, where a majority of the men lived at the expense of the Pilgrims while the Swan went along the coast to seek a suitable location for a settlement. The men were not of a type to win the confidence and respect of the Pilgrims. A few of them were honest, but most of them were "rude and profane fellows," and none was fitted by training or experience to develop a new country.


After a few weeks the Swan returned to Plymouth and reported in favor of a place called Wessagusset (also written Wessaguscus), about twenty-five miles north of Plymouth, in what is now the Town of Weymouth, Norfolk County. In October, after buildings had been erected for the use of those who remained as colonists, the Charity returned to England, leaving a supply of provisions sufficient to last the colony through the winter. But they were without a com- petent leader, inexperienced in the work of building up a settlement in a wilder- ness, with no settled habits of industry, and the supply of provisions was soon


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exhausted, after which they applied to their neighbors at Plymouth for assistance. Finding the people of Plymouth almost as destitute as they were themselves, they proposed to the Pilgrims to furnish the Swan to visit some of the Indian villages along the coast and procure a supply of corn. Governor Bradford, with a few men and the friendly Indian, Squanto, took the vessel and went to a place called Monamoycke (now Chatham), where he obtained eight hogsheads of corn and some beans.


Past experience had taught the men of Wessagusset nothing, it seems, for they soon wasted their share of the corn and beans. Some of them worked for the Indians to get food, some stole from the natives, and a few actually died of starvation. In their idleness they incurred the displeasure of Wituwamat, a minor chief of the Massachusett Indians, who threatened to destroy the colony. They appealed to the Pilgrims for protection and Miles Standish-the only man in New England with previous military experience-was sent on March 23, 1623, with a few men, to settle the difficulty. The Indians also flocked to Wessagusset and for a little while trouble seemed imminent. Inviting Wituwamat, Pecksuot and two other Indian leaders into a room, ostensibly for a parley, the door was closed upon a signal from Standish and the Indians were assaulted. Three of them were killed in the room and the other one was taken out and hanged. The death of their leaders demoralized the Indians, who fled, and Standish returned to Plymouth. A few of Weston's men went with him and the others went on board the Swan and sailed away.


ROBERT GORGES


In December, 1622, Robert Gorges received from the Plymouth Council a grant of land in Massachusetts, with "all shores and coasts for ten English miles in a straight line toward the northeast." In other words, his grant lay north of the Pilgrims' colony and extended along the coast for ten miles. Robert was the youngest son of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, and soon after receiving the above mentioned grant he was appointed lieutenant-general of the country.


In the latter part of August, or early in September, 1623, Robert Gorges, accompanied by Rev. William Morrell and a number of colonists, some of whom brought their families, arrived in Massachusetts Bay. After selecting his ten miles of coast line, to which his grant gave him title, he established his colony at Wessagusset, where Weston had attempted to plant a settlement the year before. This was the second permanent colony to be established in Massachu- setts. It was located within the present limits of Norfolk County, and a more detailed history of it is given in the chapter on the Town of Weymouth.


THE DORCHESTER COMPANY


Early in 1623 a patent was obtained by Robert Cushman and Edward Wins- low, "for themselves and associates," to a tract of land on Cape Ann where a fishing station was established. A little later the Dorchester Company was organized and a plantation opened, which for the first year was under the man- agement of John Tilly and Thomas Gardner. They were succeeded by Robert Conant, who in 1626 removed the plantation to Naumkeag (now Salem), hoping


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"that in following times it might prove a receptacle for such as, upon account of religious views, would be willing to begin a foreign plantation in this part of the world."


After the removal of the colony to Naumkeag, the Dorchester Company was dissolved, and Rev. John White, who has been called "the father of the colony at Cape Ann," undertook to get a new patent to lands bordering upon Massachu- setts Bay. In the meantime King James had died and was succeeded in March, 1625, by his son, Charles I, who followed his royal father in political and re- ligious matters. Through Mr. White's influence, a number of London merchants subscribed for stock in the enterprise, and, when a sufficient amount of stock had been subscribed to make a good showing, application was made for a patent.


THE MASSACHUSETTS COMPANY


On March 19, 1628, a patent was granted to Sir Henry Rosewell, Sir John Young, Thomas Southcote, John Humphrey. John Endicott and Simon Whet- comb as the Massachusetts Company, embracing "that part of New England lying between three miles to the north of the Merrimac and three miles to the south of the Charles River, and of every part thereof in the Massachusetts Bay; and in the length between the described breadth, from the Atlantic Ocean to the South Sea."


One of the first acts of the new company was to select John Endicott, "a Puritan of the sternest mould," to conduct a party of emigrants to the Conant settlement at Naumkeag "to carry on the plantation of the Dorchester agents and to make way for the settlement of another colony in the Massachusetts." Endicott and his family, with about forty or fifty colonists, embarked at Wey- mouth, England, on the good ship "Abigail" in the latter part of June, 1628, and on the 6th of September arrived safely at Naumkeag.


In May, 1629, they sent three ships-the "Talbot," 300 tons, Capt. Thomas Beecher ; the "George Bonaventure," 300 tons, Capt. Thomas Coxe; and the "Lion's Whelp," 120 tons, master not known, with about two hundred planters to join the colony under Endicott. They arrived at Naumkeag late in June, bringing the news that they were soon to be followed by three other ships bring- ing additional colonists. John Endicott was elected governor, and a council of thirteen, of which the governor was one, was chosen to control the affairs of the colony. In June, 1629, a second colony was established under the auspices of the Massachusetts Company at Charlestown.


TRANSFER OF THE CIIARTER


Up to this time the company and the colony had been separate, the former in England making rules and regulations for the latter in America. Among the Puritans was a deep-seated idea that those who left England and came to Amer- ica should be given the privilege to establish such government as they desired- "to form a new state, as fully to all intents and purposes, as if they had been in a state of nature and were making their first entrance into cizilized society."


They therefore sought to have the charter transferred to America and finally succeeded, the transfer being made on August 28, 1629. Prior to the transfer,


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Matthew Cradock had been governor of the company and John Endicott of the colony. By the transfer of the charter the company and the colony were blended under one governor. John Winthrop was the "first governor chosen by the freemen of the colony within its limits under the charter after its transfer."


AT THE CLOSE OF 1630


During the year 1630 seventeen ships, carrying about fifteen hundred persons, arrived from the mother country. By the close of that year, just a decade after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, at least a dozen settlements had been estab- lished in Massachusetts, to wit: Plymouth, Wessagusset (now Weymouth), Watertown, Mount Wollaston, Mattapan (now Dorchester), Salem, Lynn, New Town (now Cambridge), Charlestown, Noddle's Island (now East Boston), Roxbury and Shawmut (now Boston). Some of these settlements were situated within the present borders of Norfolk County, and their history is given in con- nection with that of the town in which they are located.


CHAPTER V


PIONEER LIFE AND CUSTOMS


CONDITIONS NOW AND THEN-THE FIRST HOUSES-HEAT AND LIGHT-FURNITURE AND UTENSILS -- FOOD AND CLOTHING-MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES OF PIONEER LIFE.


In these early years of the Twentieth Century the citizen of Norfolk is in the full enjoyment of the fruits of modern invention and progress. If he desires to visit another part of the county he can step into his automobile and glide along over an improved highway almost with the speed of the wind. Should he not be the fortunate possessor of an automobile, the network of electric railways is at his service, and for a trifling sum the trolley car will carry him to Boston or any of the suburban towns. In the event a longer journey is contemplated, he can take a seat in a railway coach, palatial in its appointments, and be whirled across the continent behind a powerful steam locomotive, eating his meals and sleeping comfortably at night on the train. He enters his house after dark, turns a switch, and the whole place is flooded with electric light. The telephone enables him to converse with his friends or transact his business without leaving his office or his residence. He turns a faucet and receives a supply of pure, whole- some water in any quantity desired. A boy brings the daily newspaper to his door. His children attend school in a stately edifice, heated by steam during the winter seasons and equipped with all the modern apparatus for imparting in- struction. On Sunday he worships in a church with cushioned pews and car- peted floor, and listens to the jubilant tones of a pipe organ that in many instances cost thousands of dollars.


But does he ever pause to think of the slow and tedious process by which all these comforts were developed for him to enjoy? The Puritan forefathers, when they first came to this region, found none of these things. Instead they found a wilderness, inhabited only by wild beasts and savage Indians-the primeval forest untouched by the ax, the soil unbroken by the plowshare. Into this wild and desolate country they came as exiles, with little capital besides their industry and determination, and began the work of building up a community whose foundations should be laid deep and secure in the principles of everlasting justice.


THE FIRST HOUSES


The first problem that confronted the pioneers was to provide shelter for themselves and their families. The first dwellings were log cabins, such as the settlers themselves could construct without the aid of the trained carpenter,


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bricklayer or plasterer. The roofs of these cabins were covered with thatch, and in many instances the only floor was "mother earth." In some of the better cabins there was a floor of puncheons-that is, slabs of timber split as nearly the same thickness as possible, the upper surface being smoothed with an adz after the floor was laid.




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