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Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 2

Octob: 23: 25.
Winthrop, John

1630-10-23

Blank of one-half inch, measured vertically. 6

mr. Rossiter one of the Assistantes dyed.1

mr. Colburne (who was chosen deacon by the Congregation a weeke before) was invested by imposition of handes of the minister and elder.2

The Governor vpon consideration of the inconveniences which had growne in England, by drinkinge one to another, restrayned it at his owne 269table and wished others to doe the like, so as it grewe by little and little to dysvse. 3

6.

On October 19, 1630, at Boston, was held the important General Court, of which Winthrop makes no mention, at which the Charter was violated by the vote that the Governor and the Deputy-Governor should be chosen by the Assistants “from amongst themselves” and with them should have all power to make and execute laws. Appended to the record of this Court are the names of the one hundred and nine settlers who petitioned to be admitted as freemen. Eight men sat in this General Court: Winthrop, Dudley, Saltonstall, Ludlow, Endecott, Nowell, Pynchon, and Bradstreet.

1.

The account of the executors of Mr. Rossiter, showing how much money he had invested in the Massachusetts Bay Company, is in the Massachusetts Historical Society, Miscellaneous Papers, 1. (1628–1691), 2. See Proceedings , XLVII. 346–347. The account is in the handwriting of the Reverend John White and is part of a memorandum of money owed to him by certain persons in New England which the clergyman sent to William Pynchon for collection. The memorandum is undated but belongs to the year 1632.

2.

William Colburn, Colbrun, Coleborne, or what you will, was a signer of the Cambridge Agreement, and subsequently became a prominent citizen of Boston, and ruling elder of the First Church. His receipt for one share of stock in the Massachusetts Bay Company, signed by George Harwood, is in the Massachusetts Archives, C. 60. The only other receipt now known to exist is made out to William Pynchon and is the property of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

3.

Apparently the force of example was not so effective as Winthrop hoped, for at a General Court held on September 4, 1639, a strict law was passed against this “abominable practice of drinking healths” “vpon paine of xij d., to bee forfaited for every offence.” For the entertainment of strangers, it would seem, a respite of one week was allowed. Informers were given half the fine.

Although he was afraid at first to advise Winthrop against a law passed by the Court, Thomas Shepard wrote him, January 27, 1639/40: “1: This only I meruayle at that that should be condemnd as a sin simply in it selfe, and yet by order of court liberty giuen to men for some few dayes to commit that sin, as in case freends come fresh out of England, they may then drinke to them without being liable to punishment: 2: this also I doe humbly intreat that there may be no sin made of drinking in any case on one to another; for I am confident he that stands here will fall and be beat from his ground by his own arguments; as also that the consequences will be very sad and the thing provoking to god and man to make more sins then (as yet is seene) god himselfe hath made.” W. Au. 95; 4 Collections , VII. 270.

Tipped into the third manuscript volume of the Journal opposite the last entry, for 1649, is a paper, without date, containing the following note in Winthrop's handwriting:

“(1) Such a Lawe as tends to the suppressinge of a vaine Custome (quatenus it so doth) is a whollsome Lawe This Lawe doth so: ergo. the minor Is proued thus.

1: Euery emptye and ineffectuall representation of searious thinges is a waye of vanitye: but this Custome is such: for it is intended to holde forthe Love, and wishes of health, which are searious thinges, by drinkinge, which neither in the nature nor vse it is able to effect: for it is looked at as a meere Complement, and is not taken as an Argument of Love, which ought to be vnfeyned ergo.

2: To imploye the Creature out of its naturall vse without warrant of Authoritye, necessitye, or Conveniencie, is a waye of vanytye: but this Custome doth so: ergo. (2) Such a Lawe as frees a man from frequent and needlesse temptations to dissemble Loue etc. (quatenus it so doth) is a whollsome Lawe: but this doth so: ergo.”

See Winthrop Papers, I. 371–374, for proposed laws (1626 and 1628) for preventing drunkenness, in the handwriting of John Winthrop.

Octob: 29.
Winthrop, John

1630-10-29

The handmaid arived at Plimmouthe, havinge been 12: weekes at sea, and spent all her mastes, and of 28: Cowes she lost 10: she had about 60: passengers, who came all well: Jo: Grauntes master.1

mr. Goffe wrote to me that his shippinge this yeare had vtterly vndoone him.2

she brought out 28: heifers the first half of this sentence is cancelled, but brought but 17: aliue3

1.

In this ship, “into which he was ignominiously hoisted by a tackle, and from whose decks he saw the flames that destroyed his dwelling,” Thomas Morton was returned to England. For the circumstances of his expulsion and the charge of murder against him, see Bradford, History of Plymouth (1912), II. 73–77; W. C. Ford, on Grant, in Proceedings , XLIV. 255–257; and Albert Matthews, “The Naming of Hull, Massachusetts,” in New England Historical and Genealogical Register, LIX. 177–186, especially 185. See Winthrop's letter of November 29, 1630, page 319.

2.

See letter of John Humfrey to Isaac Johnson, December 23, 1630, page 337.

3.

See Dudley's “Letter to the Countess of Lincoln,” Young, Chronicles of Massachusetts, 320–321.

Nou: 11.
Winthrop, John

1630-11-11

The master came to Boston with Capt Standishe 1 and 2: gentlemen passingers, who came to plant here, but havinge no testimonies we would not receive them

1.

Miles Standish.

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