Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Boston—The Shining City on the Hill and the Puritan Ideal

A highly idealized view of Gov. Winthrop being greeted by William Blackstone and local natives from the Founders' Memorial on Boston Common near the site of Blackstone's farmstead.
           
Note:  Yesterday I profiled Ann Bradstreet, the first published poet from the English New World.  Today, by serendipitous coincidence of the calendar, I tell the story of  found and early years of the capital of the Puritan culture from which she sprang—Boston.
They used to call it, without a trace of irony, the Hub of the Universe.  But it was still a wilderness when the City of Boston was established on September 18, 1630.
The dissenting Separatists we call Pilgrims had founded their struggling colony at Plymouth just ten years earlier.  Since then a thin scattering of settlements had been established along the harsh shores. 
One of those settlements was Charlestown, located on a small peninsula between the Charles and Mystic Rivers on the northern shores of a narrow passage leading to a fine natural harbor.  Thomas and Jane Walford were the first English settlers of Mishawaum in 1625.  The area became part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which was given a charter in 1628. 
Walford, who prospered trading furs with native tribes, welcomed newcomers dispatched by Massachusetts Bay Governor John Endicott led by William, Richard, and Ralph Sprague.  Together they laid out and established Charlestown.  For his troubles the loyal Anglican Walford would be banished from the colony within three years by ruling Puritans.
To the south the Shawmut Peninsula, connected to the mainland by a narrow isthmus, became the home of a lone settler, William Blackstone (sometimes rendered Blaxton.)  He was a dissenting Anglican priest who had traveled to the new world in 1623 as part of the abortive Robert Gorges expedition.  When that group returned to England in 1625, Blackstone established a farm at the base of what would become Beacon Hill which was watered by a fine sweet water spring.  His house stood on what is today Boston Common.  In 1628 the Puritan settlers in Charlestown bought some of his land for possible future settlement.
The same year the Puritan settlements gathered together and signed the Cambridge Agreement establishing Massachusetts Bay as a self-governing colony answerable only to the King under a new Royal Charter.  John Winthrop became Royal Governor.  In practice the colony would become a virtual theocracy dominated by Puritan clergy.  
The Puritans, unlike the Pilgrim separatists, theoretically only wanted to reform or “purify” the official Anglican Church stripping it of all vestiges of Catholic ritual mystery following the tenants of John Calvin.  Although seeking religious freedom for themselves, they were determined to keep their settlements free of any other religious practice. 
Winthrop described the dream of building a New Jerusalem, the City on the Hill based on moral rectitude that would become a beacon of hope to the world.  Thus for good and ill the seeds of American exceptionalism were laid.
Sent back to England to recruit more settlers, Winthrop returned in the summer of 1630 with the first of several ships, known as the Winthrop Fleet carrying more than 700 Puritan settlers—Anne Bradstreet among them—along with plenty of livestock, farm and household equipment.  They first landed at Salem, but the struggling village there did not have adequate food supplies.  The Bay Colony Capital of Charlestown, where tides pushed brackish saltwater far up the two rivers, was critically short of water.
Blackstone offered to share his spring water on the Shawmut Peninsula.  Two small settlements were founded, Trimountaine and Shawmut. Winthrop quickly decided to make this the center of the new colony.  On September 9 Triountaine officially changed its name to Boston, followed by Shawmut on September 16.  The following day Winthrop announced the founding of the City of Boston encompassing both settlements and most of the peninsula.
For his courtesy, Blackstone was “generously” given 50 acres of his own land and was told he was a member of the quickly established First Church of Boston.  But the original settler soon ran afoul of Puritan law because of suspicion that as an ordained Anglican he was plotting to establish an orthodox church.  A court ordered his house burnt. 
In 1635 Blackstone sold his land back to the colony and moved 35 miles south to a bluff overlooking the Pawtuck River, which eventually would be renamed for him.  That made him the first English settler in what became Rhode Island predating Roger Williams by a year.  Despite different theologies he shared Williams’s vision of religious tolerance and the two men cooperated.  Blackstone went on to become New England’s pioneering Anglican clergyman.
When Winthrop sailed from England with his fleet, he was accompanied by one very rich man, a long time friend, Isaac Johnson.  Johnson was the son of the 5th Earl of Lincoln and was worth an astonishing £75,000.  Johnson died on the voyage and his widow soon after landing.  Winthrop entered the estate into probate and kept it there for 30 years with shrewd legal maneuvering, getting rich from fees as the executor. 
When Johnson’s brother arrived in Boston in 1635 to claim the estate, Winthrop saw that he was denied.  None the less the brother stayed in Boston to press his claim.  Winthrop had his wife arrested on a charge of adultery and sentenced to death.  She literally had a rope around her neck before the governor relented. The brother got the message and quit his claim allowing Winthrop to continue to milk the estate.
I tell that story to illustrate that although wrapping itself up in moral righteousness, there was also an open and frank drive to accumulate wealth that became incorporated in Puritan philosophy.  The settlers were also, like Winthrop and the Johnsons, drawn on the whole from a much higher stratum of society than other colonists.  They were highly literate and included several professionals—clergy, lawyers, and physicians. 
They quickly establish a court system and relied on it to both settle disputes and to impose tight control over the daily life of the people.  Few places on earth found every detail of daily life so prescribed by law as Massachusetts Bay, from set prices on almost everything to appointed hours for meals, sleep, and prayer.  Any of hundreds of violations could land the malefactor in court and subject to fine—or the stocks.  The simplest disputes among neighbors quickly turned into law suits and counter law suits.
The Puritan emphasis on reading the Bible and literacy demanded education.  Boston Latin became the first school in the colonies in 1635 and Harvard College was established to churn out more ministers and lawyers the following year.
While most colonial settlements were essentially agricultural villages or fishing ports, Boston soon was using the advantages of its fine deep water harbor sheltered from the fierce storms of the Atlantic to become a trading hub.   Within a generation its ships were trading with the world and the growing city was relying on a network of villages across Boston Neck to provide food stuffs.
When King Philip's War with native tribes erupted in 1665, Boston’s easily defensible position became the fall back for the whole region as tribes scoured the countryside.
Of course as a bustling port, the population soon grew to include many non-Puritans.  By the dawn of the 18th Century the city was becoming more cosmopolitan and less of a day to day theocracy. 
Still, the values of Puritanism made Boston easily the most prosperous city in the growing British Empire with the highest rates of literacy and per-capita income and the largest city in the Colonies by the 1760’s.  And it made it ripe for rebellion when time honored privileges of self-governance where challenged by the Crown. 
By the early 19th Century Puritanism would shed Calvinism and emerge like a butterfly from a cocoon transformed into something quite different—a whole new form of liberal Christianity called Unitarianism.  And in the first half of that new century literate Boston would cradle an astonishing literary and philosophic renaissance that would help transform a nation. But those, of course, other stories.

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