Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 4
1640-11-03
your letter to James Cole I haue deliuered but haue noe hope of getting Any money of him: he saith he did Owe you 62li but three munthes since Wm. Paddy gaue him Order to pay 30li of it to Daniell Cole of Duxbery, part wherof he hath Alredy payed. for the 32li he saith he hath hope to get you to spare him yet A yeare longer he saith he hath payd for goods had of Luxford by Mr. Paddyes Appoyntment neare 100li soe that if Mr. Paddy should seeme to you that hee would giue mee satisfaxtion hee is worthy blame, for he never spake word to mee tending to such an End worth receuing An Answer from mee: I thought fit to certefy you herof having soe fit An Oportunity as this bearor by whome I desyre to heare from you if your Occasions will permit Soe resting your loving Frend
W. 4. 109; 5
Collections
, I. 311. For Browne, see 5
Collections
, I. 311n.
1640-11-14
As conserning the old mr. Waltham there are 5 women of hingham that if they be called out they can speake of his lacivious cariage. the 1 is the wife of Andrew Lane, who when she was a mayd she wanting a payre of shooes she heard that mr. Waltham had a payre and she coming to the house he was with out the dore and she asked him if he had any shooes, he sayd he had and so he went in and she went in after him now the house was remote from other houses and it had 2 romes in it and he went into the roome wher his bed was and would have her to com in but she was loath but he told her that else she could not see the shooes and so with much adoe she went in and when she came in he showed her a payre of mans shoes. then she told him those would not serve her and so turned about to go from him out of the roome but he caught hold of her and told her that he would kisse her and he held her close to him with his left hand and kissed her and when he had so done he did grope her all about her body with his other hand and she being much affrayd did not know what to doe beleving that he would offer her abuse: and she could not call to any then by the providence of god ther did a man come in while he was so doing to her and then he let her goe. 298the 2 next are the wifes the one of Thomas Lincolne the goate keeper, the other of Goodman farrow: which were at his house together to buy biskett and some other things now he was so audacious that he sett hands in both of them and did grope ther bodyes likwise in a very lacivious manner and would not give them the things that they came for but would have them to lye ther all night, and would have had goodman Lincolne his wife to have promised him when she would come to him agayne. the other was the wife of William Buclan she was sent by her husband to buy tobacco of him, and when she came he likwise sett hands in her but whatt his words were to him
W. 1. 139. For Waltham, see 5
Collections
, I. 311n.
Probably Welthian, the wife of Thomas Richards of Weymouth, partner of Waltham in the mill there. On other occasions she referred unflatteringly to Waltham as “a cozener and a cheater” and as one that “never feared God nor never will.” Lechford's Notebook, 321, 373.