Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 1
1627-01-15
my duty remembred to your selfe my mother and Grandmother with my love to my brothers and the rest of our freindes. The occation of my sending thus hastily is this, that wheras Mr. Lattimer one of the Atturnies of the Court of Wardes is yesterday dead so as now that place is void my vncle Downing willed me to give you speedy notice of it and desire you to come vp with all speed you can to London for the m
The Bearer hath promised to be with you by tomorrow at night. I agreed with him for 5 s. for the whole iournie whereof I have given him 2 already but if he performeth his promise I pray give him 5 or 6 more for it wilbe cheaper then I could have had any other
Since the writing of my letter my vncle Downing himselfe hath writte
we are all well save little George3 who hath hadd one sore fitt of an ague
I think there is noe great hast of sending vp my Cozen Jeames4 so he be from Ipswich therfore I thinke it would be good to keepe him at Groton still this cold wether.
W. 1. 19;
L. and L.
, I. 214–215; 5
Collections
, VIII. 3–4.
Haste was particularly important, because the next term, Hilary, began on January 22.
Afterwards Sir George Downing. See John Beresford, The Godfather of Downing Street (London, 1925).
James Downing, the son of Emmanuel Downing by his first wife, Anne Ware, and named after his grandfather, Sir James Ware of Dublin. He came to New England in 1640. Muskett, 99.