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NOWADAYS embarking from old
England for the new seems no great matter. But in that spring of 1630
when
Winthrop's little fleet sailed from Cowes travelling was quite a
different
proposition. For it was certain that the voyage would be very long and
usually
it was dangerous also. On this particular occasion it took seventy-six
days and
was attended by all those "perils of the deep" against which some of
us still have the good sense to pray. Winthrop's vessel was called the
Arbella
in compliment to Lady Arbella Johnson, who was one of its passengers,
and among
the other ships which brought over this Company of some eight hundred
souls was
the Mayflower, consecrated in every New England heart as the carrier, a
decade
earlier, of the Pilgrims of Plymouth. During the voyage Governor
Winthrop
wrote the simple beginnings of what is known as his "History of New
England," a journal from which we glean the most that we know of the
early
days of the colonists. Being rather impatient, however, just as its
compiler
probably was, actually to land in the New World we will quote here only
that
paragraph which describes the end of the voyage: "Saturday 12.
About four
in the morning we were near our port. We shot off two pieces of
ordnance and
sent our skiff to Mr. Peirce his ship.... Afterwards Mr. Peirce came
aboard us,
and returned to fetch Mr. Endecott, who came to us about two of the
clock and
with him Mr. Skelton and Captain Levett. We that were of the assistants
and
some other gentlemen and some of the women and our captain
returned with them
to Nahumkeck, where we supped with a good venison pasty and good beer,
and at
night we returned to 'our ship but some of the women stayed behind. In
the mean
time most of our people went on shore upon the land of Cape Ann, which
lay very
near us and gathered store of fine strawberries."
The initial landing, this
makes clear, was not at Boston at all but at Salem where Endicott's
band had
already settled. Things were not very rosy in this colony just then,
however,
as we see from the following passage in Dudley's letter to the
Countess of
Lincoln: "We found the colony in a sad and unexpected condition,
about
eighty of them being dead the winter before, and many of those
alive weak and
sick; all the corn and bread amongst them all hardly sufficient to feed
them
for a fortnight, insomuch that the remainder of a hundred and eighty
servants
we had the two years before sent over, coming to us for victuals to
sustain
them, we found ourselves wholly unable to feed them by reason that the
provisions shipped for them were taken out of the ship they were put
in; and
they who were trusted to ship them in another failed us and left them
behind
whereupon necessity forced us, to our extreme loss, to give them all
liberty,
who had cost us about £16 or £20 a person furnishing and
sending over."
So, far from being able to take in more people, Salem had to relinquish
almost
two hundred of those already there! Small wonder that Dudley comments
dryly,
"Salem, where we landed, pleased us not."
Accordingly, Winthrop and
his friends moved farther south along the coast until they came to the
spot now
dear to our country as the town which shelters Bunker Hill
Monument. Here they
established their settlement. And here, on the thirtieth of July, 1630,
Winthrop,
Dudley, Johnson and the pastor John Wilson adopted and signed a simple
church
covenant which was the foundation of the independent churches of
New England.
Before leaving England this band of colonists had made it clear that
they were
not "Separatists from the Church of England" though they admitted
that they could but separate themselves from the corruptions in it in
order
that they might practise the positive part of Church reformation and
propagate
the Gospel in America. We must remember this in order to justify the
stand
taken by Winthrop, a little later, in dealing with Roger Williams. But
it is
necessary also to bear clearly in mind the fact of this established
church at
Charlestown. To set up a state in which there should be no established
church
was as far from the minds of these men as to set up a state in which
there
should be no established government. None the less they esteemed it
their
honour, as Winthrop expressly said, "to call the church of England
our
dear mother."
By August the little company
was apparently settled for good in Charlestown, for the first
Court of
Assistants had now been held and recommendations as to "how the
minister
should be maintained" adopted. As a further step towards permanency
Governor Winthrop, as we are told in the town-records, "ordered his
house
to be cut and framed there."
Then sickness came upon
them, the Lady Arbella and her husband being among the first to pass
away in
the land from which they had hoped so much. Of the lady Cotton Mather
has said
quaintly that "she took New England in her way to Heaven." She was
only one of the many who died. Johnson in his "Wonder Working
Providence" records that "in almost every family lamentation,
mourning and woe were heard, and no fresh food to be had to cherish
them. It
would assuredly have moved the most lockt up affections to tears, had
they past
from one hut to another, and beheld the piteous case these people were
in; and
that which added to their present distress was the want of fresh water.
For,
although the place did afford plenty, yet for present they could find
but one
spring, and that not to be come at, but when the tide was down."
Enter, thereupon, Mr.
William Blackstone, as the saviour of the enterprise! Blackstone was
one of
those who had come over with Sir Robert Gorges and had remained in
spite of
untoward conditions. On Shawmut (afterwards Boston) he possessed
large
holdings by virtue of a title Winthrop and his men later acquired by
purchase.
Now, therefore, "he came and acquainted the Governor of an excellent
Spring there; withal inviting him and soliciting him thither. Whereupon
after
the death. of Air. Johnson and divers others, the Governor, with Mr.
Wilson,
and the greatest part of the church removed thither; whither also the
frame of
the Governor's house, in preparation at this town, was also (to
the discontent
of some) carried; where people began to build there houses against
winter; and
this place was called Boston." Thus does the record incorporated in
Frothingham's "History of Charlestown" tell the tale of Boston's
actual birth. There are those who maintain that the story of our city's
growth
could very effectively be told by a series of historical tableaux;
for the
initial number on the program they name with excellent judgment the
picture of
Blackstone, the gentle recluse, exhibiting to John Winthrop the
"excellent
spring" of his own domain.
This act of Blackstone's was
the more praiseworthy because he was a "solitary" by nature and
frankly disliked men even remotely of Puritan stripe. He was at this
time about
thirty-five and had dwelt in his lonely but on the west slope of what
is now
Beacon Hill, not far from Beacon and Spruce streets, for about five
years,
spending his quiet days in trade with the savages and in the
cultivation of his
garden. Just why he had left England is not more clear than just why he
later
left Boston. But when he died in Rhode Island (May 26, 1675) he left
behind him
"10 paper books" in which it is believed he may have told the story
of his mysterious life. These were unfortunately destroyed by
the Indians
when they burned his house, however, and all that we further know of
him is
that he returned to Boston, after he had ceased to be an inhabitant of
the
place, and married the widow of John Stephenson, who lived on Milk
street, on
the site of the building in which Franklin was born.
In regard to a name for the
new settlement there seems to have been absolute unanimity. By common
consent
it was called after the old-world city, St. Botolph's town, or
Boston, of
Lincolnshire, England, from which the Lady Arbella Johnson and her
husband had
come and in whose noble parish church John Cotton was still preaching.
The
order of the Court of Assistants, — Governor Winthrop
presiding, — "That Trimontaine shall be called Boston" was passed on the 17th of September,
1630, thus giving the death blow to Carlyle's picturesque statement in
his book
on Cromwell concerning Cotton's share in the matter: " Rev. John Cotton
is
a man still held in some remembrance among our New England
friends. He had
been minister of Boston in Lincolnshire; carried the name across the
ocean with
him; fixed it upon a new small home he found there, which Las become a
large
one since, — the big busy capital of Massachusetts, —
Boston so called. John
Cotton, his mark, very curiously stamped on the face of this planet;
likely to
continue for some time." This is superb writing, of course, but
exceedingly
lame history. Cotton did not come to the new world until nearly four
years
after this settlement was named Boston.
St. Boltoph's Church, Boston, England
But, since it is a fact that
the St. Botolph's town, in which Cotton was still living, exercised a
profound
influence upon that to which he presently came let us turn aside and
make a little
pilgrimage there. Hawthorne did this during one of his trips abroad and
he
printed the result in the Atlantic Monthly of January. 1862. We cannot
do
better, I think, than to follow as he leads: "In mid-afternoon we
be-held
the tall tower of Saint Botolph's Church (three hundred feet high, the
same
elevation as the tallest tower of Lincoln Cathedral) looming in the
distance.
At about half-past four we reached Boston (which name has been
shortened, in
the course of ages, by the quick and slovenly English pronunciation,
from
Botolph's town) and were taken by a cab to the Peacock, in the
market-place. It
was the best hotel in town, though a poor one enough; and we were shown
into a
small stifled parlor, dingy, musty, and scented with stale tobacco
smoke, —
tobacco smoke two days old, for the waiter assured us that the
room had not
more recently been fumigated. An exceedingly grim waiter he was, too,
apparently a genuine descendant of the old Puritans of this English
Boston.
"In my first ramble
about the town, chance led me to the riverside, at that quarter where
the port
is situated.... Down the river I saw a brig, approaching rapidly under
sail.
The whole scene made an odd impression of bustle and sluggishness and
decay,
and a remnant of wholesome life; and I could not but contrast it with
the
mighty and populous activity of our own Boston, which was once the
feeble
infant of this old English town; — the latter, perhaps, almost
stationary ever
since that day, as if the birth of such an offspring had taken away its
own
principle of growth. I thought of Long Wharf and Faneuil Hall, and
Washington
street and the Great Elm and the State House, and exulted lustily,
— but yet
began to feel at home in this good old town, for its very name's sake,
as I
never had before felt in England."
The next day Hawthorne
visited "a vacant spot of ground where old John Cotton's vicarage
had
stood till a very short time since. According to our friend's
description it
was a humble habitation, of the cottage order, built of brick, with a
thatched
roof. In the right-hand aisle of the church there is an ancient chapel,
which
at the time of our visit was in process of restoration, and was to be
dedicated
to Cotton, whom these English people consider as the founder of our
American Boston....
The interior of St. Botolph's is very fine and satisfactory, as stately
almost
as a cathedral, and has been repaired — as far as repairs were
necessary — in a
chaste and noble style.... When we came away the tower of St. Botolph's
looked
benignantly down; and I fancied that it was bidding me farewell, as it
did Mr.
Cotton, two or three hundred years ago, and telling me to describe its
venerable height and the town beneath it, to the people of the American
city,
who are partly akin, if not to the living inhabitants of old Boston,
yet to
some of the dust that lies in its churchyard."
It is of this tower with its
beacon and its bells that we hear in Jean Ingelow's touching poem,
"High
Tide On the Coast of Lincolnshire." St. Botolph, the pious Saxon
monk of
the seventh century, who is believed to have founded the town, received
his
name, indeed, — Bot-holp, i.e. Boat-help, — from his
service to sailors; and
the high tower was originally designed to be a guide to those out
at sea, six
miles down the river. An account of the town written in 1541 tells the
whole
story in one terse paragraph: "Botolphstowne standeth on ye river of
Lindis. The steeple of the church 'being quadrata Turris' and a
lanthorn on it,
is both very high & faire and a mark bothe by sea and land for all
ye
quarters thereaboute."
Perhaps it was remembrance
of what the beacon in St. Botolph's tower had meant to the people of
Lincolnshire which caused the Court of Assistants, assembled in new
Boston, to
pass the following resolution March 4, 1634: "It is ordered that there
shalbe forth with a beacon sett on the Centry hill at Boston to give
notice to
the Country of any danger, and that there shalbe a ward of one pson
kept there
from the first of April to the last of September; and that upon the
discovery
of any danger the beacon shalbe fired, an allarum given, as also
messengers
presently sent by that town where the danger is discov'red to all other
townes
within this jurisdiction."
Hawthorne hints, too, that
it is to the influence of the old St. Botolph's town that the
winding streets
of our modern city may be attributed. "Its crooked streets and
narrow
lanes reminded me much of Hanover street, Ann street, and other
portions of our
American Boston. It is not unreasonable to suppose that the local
habits and
recollections of the first settlers may have had some influence on the
physical
character of the streets and houses in the New England metropolis; at
any rate
here is a similar intricacy of bewildering lanes and a number of old
peaked and
projecting-storied dwellings, such as I used to see there in my
boyish days.
It is singular what a home feeling and sense of kindred I derived from
this
hereditary connection and fancied physiognomical resemblance
between the old
town and its well-grown daughter."
Somewhat less romantic but
still appealing is the explanation of our crooked streets
volunteered by
Bynner. "The first houses [of the colonial period] were necessarily of
the
rudest description and they seem to have been scattered hither or
thither
according to individual need or fancy. The early streets, too, obedient
to the
same law of convenience, naturally followed the curves of the
hills, winding
around their bases by the shortest routes and crossing their slopes at
the
easiest angles. To the pioneer upon the western prairie it is
comparatively
easy to lay out his prospective city in squares and streets of
unvarying size
and shape, and oftentimes be it said, of wearying sameness; to the
colonist of
1630 upon this rugged promontory of New England it was a different
matter.
Without the power of leisure to surmount the natural obstacles of his
new home,
he was contented to adapt himself to them.
"Thus the narrow
winding streets, with their curious twists and turns, the crooked
alleys and short-cuts
by which he drove his cows to pasture up among the blueberry bushes of
Beacon
Hill, or carried his grist to the windmill over upon Copp's
steeps, or went to
draw his water at the spring-gate, or took his sober Sunday way to the
first
rude little church, — these paths and highways, worn by his feet
and
established for His convenience, remain after two centuries and a half
substantially unchanged, endeared to his posterity by priceless
associations.
And so the town, growing at first after no plan and with no thought of
proportion,
but as directed and shaped by the actual needs of the inhabitants,
became a not
unfitting exponent of their lives, — the rough outward garb, as
it were, of
their hardy young civilization."
Truth, however, demands the
statement that our forefathers made brave efforts to compel a
ship-shape city.
In 1635 it was ordered: "That from this day there shall noe house at
all
be built in this towne neere unto any of the streetes or laynes therein
but
with the advise and consent of the overseers... for the more comely and
commodious ordering of them." At a subsequent meeting in the same month
John Gallop was summarily told to improve the alignment of the
"payles at
his yard's end." Very likely he fought off the order, however; and very
likely dozens of others did the same, regulating their homes in the
fashion
attributed to those settlers of Marblehead who are said to have
remarked, each
to the other, "I'm a'goin' to set here; you can set where you're a mind
to." Apparently just that had happened in the old St. Botolph's town;
not
improbably that was what also happened in the new.