Kellscraft
Studio |
Wallpaper
Images |
Nekrassoff |
Web
Text-ures© |
Guide
to |
---|
IN my student days colonial
history never interested me. I did not then understand why but I am now
perfectly certain that it was because
persons and
events were
discussed, in
most of the books set before me, only as their careers touched New
England and
hence in so fragmentary a way as to make them appear mere puppets with
tiresome
dates attached. The treatment usually accorded Sir Harry Vane offers an
excellent example of what I mean. He flashed before us, in the history
books,
as a brilliant, handsome youth who espoused the cause of Mrs.
Hutchinson, — and
then disappeared for ever
from view. Because
his wonderful career in England was deemed to have nothing to do with
the
subsequent history of Massachusetts we were deprived of the
great privilege it
would have been to make his inspiring life-story a part of our mental
equipment!
If this volume errs in the other extreme by talking over-much of Vane
and of La
Tour after their connection with Boston has ceased the fault may be
attributed
to a reaction from my own defective education.
The truth is that it is
biography rather than history which really allures me; history seems to
me
worse than useless unless it illustrates the times of which it
writes as those
times affected the lives of its men and women. A book like this has no
justification, to my mind, save as it makes us understand just a little
better
the part New England, in the person of its chief town, has
played in the
mighty drama of nations made up of thinking, feeling men and women.
Up to the time of the
Revolution, of course, Boston was the biggest place in all the colonies
as well
as the chief settlement of Massachusetts. This numerical
preeminence needs to
be borne in mind if we would understand many acts on both sides of the
ocean.
To understand the America of to-day, too, we must needs know the Boston
of the
fathers. So only can we be sure that the excrescences of modern
government are
no essential part of that Christian state of which Winthrop dreamed and
for
which Vane was glad to die.
The books consulted in the
preparation of this work have been many and, for the most part, are
named in
the text. But sweeping credit is here due to the invaluable "Memorial
History of Boston" and to the "Boston Antiquities" of
Samuel
Drake. I have to thank also Mr. Irwin C. Cromack of the engineering
department,
City of Boston, for kindly aid given and the editor of the Canadian
Magazine
for permission to incorporate in the chapter "How Winthrop Treated With
the La Tours" my article on the "Fight Between La Tour and
D'Aulnay" contributed to his magazine last year.
"ST. BOTOLPH'S
Town! Far over leagues of land And leagues of sea looks forth its noble tower, And far around the chiming bells are heard: So may that sacred name forever stand A landmark and a symbol of the power That lies concentred in a single word." — LONGFELLOW.
|
"THE
distinctive
characteristic of the
settlement of the English colonists in America is the
introduction of the
civilization of Europe into a wilderness
without bringing with it the
political
institutions of Europe. The arts, sciences, and literature of
England came
over with the settlers.... But the monarchy did not come, nor the
aristocracy,
nor the church as an estate of the realm. Political
institutions were to be
framed anew such as should be adapted to the state of things." — DANIEL
WEBSTER.
|
"THE spirit of that age was sure
to manifest itself in
narrow cramping measures and in ugly acts of persecution; but
it is, none the less, to the fortunate alliance of that fervid
religious
enthusiasm with the love of self-government
that our modern freedom owes its existence." — JOHN FISKE.
|
"THOU, too,
sail
on O
ship of State! Sail on, O Union, strong and great! Humanity with all its fears, With all the hopes of future years Is hanging breathless on thy fate!" —
LONGFELLOW.
|
LIST
OF ILLUSTRATIONS
DOROTHY QUINCY, FROM A PORTRAIT BY COPLEY CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH OLD HOUSE IN MEDFORD, BUILT BY GOVERNOR CRADOCK GOVERNOR JOHN WINTHROP ST. BOTOLPH'S CHURCH, BOSTON, ENGLAND JOHN COTTON'S VICARAGE REV. JOHN COTTON COTTON CHAPEL, ST. BOTOLPH'S, BOSTON, ENGLAND SIR HARRY VANE, FROM AN OLD MINIATURE JOHN ENDICOTT OLIVER CROMWELL SIR HARRY VANE'S HOUSE, STILL STANDING IN HAMPSTEAD, LONDON FORT LA TOUR (OR ST. JEAN), ST. JOHN, NEW BRUNSWICK, FROM A DRAWING BY LOUIS A. HOLMAN ROGER WILLIAMS THE WELLS-ADAMS HOUSE, ON SALEM STREET, WHERE THE BAPTISTS HELD SECRET MEETINGS SIR RICHARD SALTONSTALL GOVERNOR SIMON BRADSTREET INCREASE MATHER HOUSE OF COTTON MATHER, WHICH STOOD AT WHAT IS NOW 298 HANOVER STREET SIR EDMUND ANDROS THE PRATT HOUSE, CHELSEA SIR WILLIAM PHIPS COTTON MATHER WILLIAM STOUGHTON COVER AND TITLE-PAGE OF JOHN HARVARD'S BOOK MASSACHUSETTS HALL, HARVARD UNIVERSITY, BUILT DURING THE PRESIDENCY OF JOHN LEVERETT GOVERNOR JOSEPH DUDLEY MAP OF BOSTON IN 1722 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN THE OLD FEATHER STORE FRANKLIN'S BIRTHPLACE SAMUEL SEWALL THE DEANE WINTHROP HOUSE, WINTHROP GOVERNOR BELLINGHAM'S HOUSE, CHELSEA GREEN DRAGON TAVERN THE PROVINCE HOUSE THE ORIGINAL KING'S CHAPEL AND THE KING'S CHAPEL OF TO-DAY GOVERNOR WILLIAM BURNET THE MATHER TOMB IN THE COPP'S HILL BURYING GROUND GOVERNOR WILLIAM SHIRLEY SIR HARRY FRANKLAND GOVERNOR SHIRLEY'S HOUSE, ROXBURY THE CLARKE HOUSE, PURCHASED BY SIR HARRY FRANKLAND GOVERNOR POWNALL SIR FRANCIS BERNARD JAMES OTIS THE OLD STATE HOUSE PETER FANEUIL'S HOUSE SAMUEL ADAMS |