Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 2
1630-03-02
I must confesse thou hast ouercome me with thy exceedinge greate loue, and those abundant expressions of it in thy sweet lettres, which sauour of more then an ordinary spirit of loue and pietye: blessed be the Lord our God that giues strength and comfort to thee, to vndergoe this great tryall, which, I must confesse, would be too heauye for thee if the Lord did not put vnder his hande in so gratious a measure. let this experience of his faithfullnesse to thee in this first tryall, be a grounde to establish thy heart to belleue and expect his helpe in all that maye followe. It grieueth me much, that I want tyme and freedome of minde to discourse with thee (my faithfull yoakfellowe) in those thinges which thy sweet lettres offer me so plentifull occasion for: I beseech the Lorde I may haue libertye to supplye it, ere I departe, for I cannot thus leaue thee: our 2: boyes and Ja
W. 7 A. 38; Savage (1825), I. 365–366; (1853), I. 439;
L. and L.
, I. 382–383; Twichell, Puritan Love-Letters
, 142–143.
Son of Emmanuel Downing by his first wife, Anne Ware, daughter of Sir James Ware of Dublin. See 5
Collections
, I. 18, 21, 28–29, 203.
Elizabeth (Fones) Winthrop, wife of Henry Winthrop, whose child, Martha Johanna, was baptized May 9, 1630. Less than two months later Henry Winthrop was drowned at Salem, his widow and daughter coming over to New England, in 1631, with the Governor's wife, Margaret Winthrop. Elizabeth Winthrop subsequently married Robert Feke, of Watertown, from whom she was separated after their removal to Greenwich, Connecticut, then Dutch territory. Later she became the wife of Feke's agent, William Hallett, who was deputy from Flushing, in 1664, and apparently a person of some importance on Long Island. Martha Johanna Winthrop married Thomas Lyon, of Stamford, Connecticut, by whom she had a daughter, Mary Lyon. See 2
Proceedings
, VI. 2–20.
Genesis, xlix. 25.