fbpx
Wikipedia

List of colonial governors of Massachusetts

The territory of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, one of the fifty United States, was settled in the 17th century by several different English colonies. The territories claimed or administered by these colonies encompassed a much larger area than that of the modern state, and at times included areas that are now within the jurisdiction of other New England states or of the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Some colonial land claims extended all the way to the Pacific Ocean.

Map depicting lines of charters and grants for Massachusetts-related colonies and provinces

The first permanent settlement was the Plymouth Colony (1620), and the second major settlement was the Massachusetts Bay Colony at Salem in 1629. Settlements that failed or were merged into other colonies included the failed Popham Colony (1607) on the coast of Maine, and the Wessagusset Colony (1622–23) in Weymouth, Massachusetts, whose remnants were folded into the Plymouth Colony. The Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies coexisted until 1686, each electing its own governor annually. Governance of both colonies was dominated by a relatively small group of magistrates, some of whom governed for many years. The Dominion of New England was established in 1686 which covered the territory of those colonies, as well as that of New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. In 1688, it was further extended to include New York and East and West Jersey. The Dominion was extremely unpopular in the colonies, and it was disbanded when its royally appointed governor Sir Edmund Andros was arrested and sent back to England in the wake of the 1688 Glorious Revolution.

After Andros' arrest, each of the colonies reverted to its previous form of governance. King William III, however, reorganized the territory of the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies into the Province of Massachusetts Bay and appointed Sir William Phips as its royal governor in 1692. The Province of Massachusetts Bay was governed by appointed civilian governors until 1774, when Thomas Hutchinson was replaced by Lieutenant General Thomas Gage amid rising tensions between the Thirteen Colonies and the British Parliament. Gage was the province's last royal governor. He was effectively powerless beyond Boston, and was recalled after the June 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill. By then, the province was already being run de facto by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress; following the adoption of a state constitution in 1779, the newly formed Commonwealth of Massachusetts elected John Hancock as its first governor.

Popham Colony: 1607–1608 edit

The Popham Colony was founded on the coast of Phippsburg, Maine in 1607 as a colonization attempt by the Virginia Company of Plymouth. The colony lasted about one year before being abandoned. One of its principal backers was Sir John Popham; his nephew George Popham was the colony's governor for most of its brief existence.[1] George Popham died in the colony in 1608 and was replaced by Raleigh Gilbert. He and the remaining colonists abandoned it after word arrived that John Popham and Gilbert's older brother Sir John Gilbert had died.[2]

Governor Took office Left office
George Popham 1607 February 1608
Raleigh Gilbert February 1608 September 1608
Source: Grizzard and Smith, p. 189

Plymouth Colony: 1620–1686, 1689–1692 edit

The Plymouth Colony originated as a land grant issued by the London Virginia Company to a group of English separatist Puritans who had fled to Holland to avoid religious persecution. Their migration to the New World in 1620 aboard the Mayflower was funded by the Merchant Adventurers, who sent additional settlers to engage in profit-making activities in the colony.[3] The settlers had intended to establish a colony near the mouth of the Hudson River, within the bounds of the London Virginia Company's territory, but weather conditions on their arrival led them to establish it instead on the shores of Cape Cod Bay at Plymouth, Massachusetts.[4] The colonists acquired a land grant from the Plymouth Council for New England in 1621,[5] but its early governance took place under the terms of the Mayflower Compact, a document which the colonists drafted and signed aboard the Mayflower before they landed.[4] In 1630, the colony acquired a formal charter with authority to govern from the Plymouth Council, but it was unsuccessful in attempts to acquire a royal charter that would guarantee its territory against other claimants.[6]

The colony held annual elections for its offices.[7] Between 1620 and 1680, it was ruled by a governor who appointed a temporary replacement if he left the colony. In 1681, they began also electing a deputy governor who would serve in the governor's absence.[8] The leadership was dominated by William Bradford, who served more than 30 terms as governor.[5] The colony was incorporated into the Dominion of New England in 1686,[9] but the dominion was dissolved in 1689 and all the New England colonies temporarily reverted to their previous governmental structures. Plymouth finally received a royal charter in 1691, but it was not the one which they had sought for 70 years. Instead of protecting the colony's autonomy, the charter incorporated Plymouth into the Province of Massachusetts Bay, which took effect in 1692 with the arrival of royal governor Sir William Phips.[10][11]

 
Edward Winslow
 
Josiah Winslow
Governor Took office Left office Deputy governor
John Carver November 11, 1620 died April 15, 1621[12] The colony had no deputy governors until 1681; the governor named a pro tem governor when he was absent.
William Bradford May 1621 January 1, 1633
Edward Winslow January 1, 1633 March 27, 1634
Thomas Prence March 27, 1634 March 3, 1635
William Bradford March 3, 1635 March 1, 1636
Edward Winslow March 1, 1636 March 7, 1637
William Bradford March 7, 1637 June 5, 1638
Thomas Prence June 5, 1638 June 3, 1639
William Bradford June 3, 1639 June 5, 1644
Edward Winslow June 5, 1644 June 4, 1645
William Bradford June 4, 1645 died May 9, 1657[13]
Thomas Prence June 3, 1657 June 3, 1673
Josiah Winslow June 3, 1673 December 18, 1680
Thomas Hinckley December 18, 1680 1686 James Cudworth (1681–82)
William Bradford the Younger (1682–86)
Dominion of New England 1686 1689 Not applicable
Thomas Hinckley 1689 1692 William Bradford the Younger (1689–92)
Source unless otherwise cited: Gifford et al., p. 205; Capen, p. 53

Wessagusset Colony: 1622–1623 edit

The Wessagusset Colony (sometimes called the Weston Colony or Weymouth Colony) was a short-lived trading colony located in Weymouth, Massachusetts. It was settled in August 1622 by approximately 55 colonists who were ill-prepared for colonial life and lacking adequate provisions.[14] The colony was dissolved in late March 1623, and the surviving colonists either joined the Plymouth Colony or returned to England.[15]

Governor Took office Left office
Richard Greene April 1622 died c. October 1622
John Sanders c. October 1622 March 1623
Source: Adams and Nash, pp. 11, 14, 27

Governor-General of New England: 1623–1624 edit

In 1623, Robert Gorges was commissioned as Governor-General of New England by King Charles I to oversee Plymouth, Wessagusset, and future New England colonies.[16] Gorges established a small colony on the site of the recently failed Wessagusset Colony; his effort was abandoned after one year for financial reasons.[17][18] Some of his settlers remained in the area without formal governance, moving to occupy the Shawmut Peninsula (site of Boston, Massachusetts) among other places.[19]

Governor-General Took office Left office
Robert Gorges September 1623 1624
Source: Adams and Nash, pp. 29–31

Massachusetts Bay Colony: 1629–1686, 1689–1692 edit

The Massachusetts Bay Company was established in 1628 and was funded in part by investors in the failed Dorchester Company. In that year, the company elected Matthew Cradock as its governor and received a grant from the Plymouth Council for New England for land roughly between the Charles and Merrimack Rivers.[20] The company dispatched John Endecott and a small company of settlers to Massachusetts Bay not long after acquiring the grant.[21] In 1629, the company received a royal charter as a means to guarantee its grant against other claims, and elected Endecott as the first colonial governor, while Cradock continued to govern the company in London.[22] In August 1629, the shareholders reorganized the company so that the charter could be removed to the colony, merging corporate and colonial administration.[23] John Winthrop was elected governor in October, but did not formally take charge of the colony until he arrived in 1630.[24] Colonial officials (governor, deputy governor, and the council of assistants) were elected annually from then on by the freemen of the colony. The governorship was dominated by a small group of early settlers who sought to ensure that the vision of a Puritan settlement was maintained; Richard Bellingham, John Leverett, and Simon Bradstreet all served extended terms, in addition to Winthrop and Endecott, and Thomas Dudley served 4 1-year terms. All these men also served in positions of importance when they were not serving as governor.[25]

The colony's governance and religious attitudes came under greater scrutiny following the restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660, which led to the revocation of its charter in 1684.[26][27] King James II then established the Dominion of New England, an appointed regime which was strongly against the will of the American colonists.[28] It took effect in 1686 and lasted until 1689, when the Glorious Revolution toppled James, and colonists in Massachusetts immediately arrested the Dominion's governor Sir Edmund Andros.[29] The colony reverted to its previous rule on a provisional basis, because it then lacked any sort of legal charter.[30] In 1691, King William III merged the colonies of Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay along with the territory of Maine, the islands south of Cape Cod (including Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, and the Elizabeth Islands), and Nova Scotia (which included New Brunswick) to form the Province of Massachusetts Bay.[10] This new governmental structure took effect in 1692, with the arrival of the new royal governor Sir William Phips.[11]

Governor Took office Left office Deputy governor
Matthew Cradock 1628 October 20, 1629 Thomas Goffe
 
John Endecott
April 30, 1629 June 12, 1630[31] None
 
John Winthrop
October 20, 1629 May 14, 1634 John Humphrey (1629–30)
Thomas Dudley (1630–34)
Thomas Dudley May 14, 1634 May 6, 1635 Roger Ludlow
John Haynes May 6, 1635 May 25, 1636 Richard Bellingham
 
Sir Henry Vane the Younger
May 25, 1636 May 17, 1637 John Winthrop
 
John Winthrop
May 17, 1637 May 13, 1640 Thomas Dudley
Thomas Dudley May 13, 1640 June 2, 1641 Richard Bellingham
Richard Bellingham June 2, 1641 May 18, 1642 John Endecott
 
John Winthrop
May 18, 1642 May 29, 1644 John Endecott
 
John Endecott
May 29, 1644 May 14, 1645 John Winthrop
Thomas Dudley May 14, 1645 May 6, 1646 John Winthrop
 
John Winthrop
May 6, 1646 May 2, 1649 Thomas Dudley
 
John Endecott
May 2, 1649 May 22, 1650 Thomas Dudley
Thomas Dudley May 22, 1650 May 7, 1651 John Endecott[32]
 
John Endecott
May 7, 1651 May 3, 1654 Thomas Dudley
Richard Bellingham May 3, 1654 May 23, 1655 John Endecott
 
John Endecott
May 23, 1655 May 3, 1665 Richard Bellingham
Richard Bellingham May 3, 1665 December 12, 1672 Francis Willoughby (1665–71)
John Leverett (1671–72)
 
John Leverett
December 12, 1672
(acting until May 7, 1673)
May 28, 1679 Samuel Symonds (1673–78)
Simon Bradstreet (1678–79)
 
Simon Bradstreet
May 28, 1679 May 25, 1686[33] Thomas Danforth
Dominion of New England May 25, 1686[33] April 18, 1689[34] Not applicable
 
Simon Bradstreet
April 18, 1689[34] May 14, 1692[35] Thomas Danforth
Sources unless otherwise cited: Capen, pp. 53–54; Hart, p. 1:607

Dominion of New England: 1686–1689 edit

The Dominion of New England was established by King James II in order to bring the colonies of New England more firmly under united crown control, and to streamline the costs associated with colonial administration.[36] All of the New England colonies eventually came under its authority, as well as the provinces of New York, East Jersey, and West Jersey.[37] Sir Edmund Andros governed the Dominion for most of its brief existence, but he alienated New Englanders by forcing the Church of England into Puritan Boston and vacating land titles issued under the old charter.[38] After the Glorious Revolution of 1688 deposed James, Massachusetts political operatives arrested Andros and shipped him back to England.[39][40] All of the affected colonies reverted to their previous forms of rule, although Massachusetts did so without constitutional authority because its charter had been revoked.[41] William III and Mary II eventually issued new charters, but in the process they combined the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, and other territories into the Province of Massachusetts Bay.[10]

Plans to establish the dominion had started under King Charles II early in the 1680s. He initially selected Colonel Percy Kirke as the dominion's governor in 1684. Kirke's commission was approved by James, but was then withdrawn after Kirke's controversially harsh actions in putting down Monmouth's Rebellion in 1685. Joseph Dudley, son of Thomas Dudley, was given a commission as "President of the Council of New England" with limited powers as an interim measure before Andros' commission could be finalized.[42]

Governor Took office Left office Lieutenant Governor
 
Joseph Dudley
(as President of the Council of New England)
May 25, 1686[43] December 20, 1686[44] William Stoughton
(as Deputy President)[45]
 
Sir Edmund Andros
December 20, 1686[44] April 18, 1689[34] Francis Nicholson
(appointed April 1688)[46]

Province of Massachusetts Bay: 1692–1775 edit

The royal charter for the Province of Massachusetts Bay was issued in 1691. The territory that it encompassed included the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the Plymouth Colony, the territories of Maine and Nova Scotia (which then included New Brunswick), and the proprietary plantation holdings of Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard, and other islands off the southern coast of Cape Cod.[10] The government did not formally begin operating until royally appointed governor Sir William Phips arrived in 1692.[11] The province was governed by civilian governors until 1774, when Thomas Hutchinson was replaced by Lieutenant General Thomas Gage amid rising tensions between the Thirteen Colonies and the British Parliament.[47] Gage was the province's last royal governor. He was effectively powerless beyond Boston,[48][49] and was recalled after the June 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill.[50] By then, the province was already being run de facto by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, which continued to govern until 1780. The Massachusetts Constitution was adopted in 1779, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts elected John Hancock as its first governor.[51]

Under the terms of the royal charter, both the governor and lieutenant governor were appointed by the crown. The charter contained a provision that the governor's council would assume the duties of the governor should both governor and lieutenant governor be absent from the colony.[52] This occurred three times:

  1. Acting governor William Stoughton died in 1701, and the council governed until the arrival of Joseph Dudley.[53]
  2. Queen Anne died in 1714 and the commissions that she had issued expired six months later. Her successor King George I issued an order continuing all commissions, but this order did not reach Massachusetts before the six months expired. The council asserted its authority, claiming that the commissions had expired of Joseph Dudley and William Tailer, and the council ruled from February 4 until March 21, 1715 when the king's order arrived.[54]
  3. Acting governor Spencer Phips died in 1757, and the council governed until the arrival of Thomas Pownall.[53]
Governor Took office Left office Lieutenant Governor
 
Sir William Phips
May 16, 1692 November 17, 1694 William Stoughton
(May 16, 1692 –
died July 7, 1701)
 
William Stoughton
(acting)
December 4, 1694 May 26, 1699
 
Richard Coote, 1st Earl of Bellomont
May 26, 1699 July 17, 1700
 
William Stoughton
(acting)
July 22, 1700 died July 7, 1701
Governor's Council
(acting)
July 10, 1701 June 11, 1702 Vacant
 
Joseph Dudley
June 11, 1702 February 4, 1715 Thomas Povey
(June 11, 1702 –
left colony c. January 28, 1706)
Vacant
William Tailer
(October 4, 1711 –
February 4, 1715)
Governor's Council
(acting)
February 4, 1715 March 21, 1715 Vacant
 
Joseph Dudley
March 21, 1715 November 9, 1715 William Tailer
(March 21, 1715 –
October 5, 1716)
William Tailer
(acting)
November 9, 1715 October 5, 1716
 
Samuel Shute
October 5, 1716 left colony January 1, 1723 William Dummer
(October 5, 1716 –
June 11, 1730)
 
William Dummer
(acting)
January 2, 1723 July 19, 1728
 
William Burnet
July 19, 1728 died September 7, 1729
 
William Dummer
(acting)
September 10, 1729 June 11, 1730
William Tailer
(acting)
June 11, 1730 August 10, 1730 William Tailer
(June 11, 1730 –
died March 1, 1732)
 
Jonathan Belcher
August 10, 1730 August 14, 1741
Vacant
Spencer Phips
(August 8, 1732 –
died April 4, 1757)
 
William Shirley
August 14, 1741 September 11, 1749
Spencer Phips
(acting)
September 15, 1749 August 7, 1753
 
William Shirley
August 7, 1753 September 25, 1756
Spencer Phips
(acting)
September 25, 1756 died April 4, 1757
Governor's Council
(acting)
April 5, 1757 August 3, 1757 Vacant
 
Thomas Pownall
August 3, 1757 June 3, 1760 Thomas Hutchinson
(June 1, 1758 –
March 14, 1771)
 
Thomas Hutchinson
(acting)
June 3, 1760 August 2, 1760
 
Sir Francis Bernard, 1st Baronet
August 2, 1760 August 1, 1769
 
Thomas Hutchinson
(acting, August 2, 1769 –
March 14, 1771)
August 2, 1769 May 17, 1774
Andrew Oliver
(March 14, 1771 –
died March 3, 1774)
Vacant
 
The Hon. Thomas Gage
May 17, 1774 October 11, 1775[a]
Thomas Oliver
(August 8, 1774 –
March 17, 1776)[b]
Source unless otherwise cited: Massachusetts Royal Commissions, pp. xxxiii–xxxv

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This is the de facto end of Gage's tenure, when he departed Boston for the last time.[55]
  2. ^ This is the de facto end of Oliver's tenure, when he departed Boston for the last time.[56]
  1. ^ Grizzard and Smith, p. 189
  2. ^ Vaughan, p. 64
  3. ^ Hart, p. 1:67
  4. ^ a b Hart, p. 1:69
  5. ^ a b Hart, p. 1:72
  6. ^ Hart, p. 1:78
  7. ^ Hart, p. 1:83
  8. ^ Hart, p. 1:607
  9. ^ Hart, pp. 1:569–572
  10. ^ a b c d Barnes, pp. 267–269
  11. ^ a b c Capen, p. 54
  12. ^ Moore, p. 46
  13. ^ Moore, p. 79
  14. ^ Thomas, G.E. (March 1975). "Puritans, Indians, and the Concept of Race". New England Quarterly. 48 (1). The New England Quarterly, Inc.: 12. doi:10.2307/364910. JSTOR 364910.
  15. ^ Adams and Nash, pp. 25–29
  16. ^ Adams and Nash, pp. 29–30
  17. ^ Adams and Nash, pp. 30–31
  18. ^ Levermore, p. 603
  19. ^ Adams and Nash, pp. 31–34
  20. ^ Hart, pp. 1:96–99
  21. ^ Moore, pp. 240, 348
  22. ^ Moore, pp. 348–349
  23. ^ Hart, pp. 1:99–101
  24. ^ Moore, pp. 242,350
  25. ^ Hart, pp. 1:112, 1:607
  26. ^ Barnes, pp. 6–32
  27. ^ Hart, p. 1:566
  28. ^ Barnes, pp. 46–69
  29. ^ Hart, pp. 1:600–601
  30. ^ Hart, p. 1:602
  31. ^ Moore, p. 244
  32. ^ Capen (p. 54) incorrectly lists Dudley as deputy; it was in fact Endecott. Davis, p. 163
  33. ^ a b Moore, p. 393
  34. ^ a b c Moore, p. 385
  35. ^ Moore, p. 226
  36. ^ Barnes, pp. 29–30
  37. ^ Barnes, pp. 32–39
  38. ^ Barnes, pp. 128–130, 187–201
  39. ^ Barnes, pp. 234–250
  40. ^ Hart, pp. 1:602–603
  41. ^ Barnes, pp. 247–249
  42. ^ Barnes, pp. 45–49
  43. ^ Barnes, p. 54
  44. ^ a b Barnes, p. 69
  45. ^ Barnes, p. 55
  46. ^ Barnes, p. 72
  47. ^ Hart, pp. 2:514–523, 2:591
  48. ^ Hart, p. 2:562
  49. ^ French, p. 130
  50. ^ French, p. 355
  51. ^ Peters, pp. 16–18
  52. ^ Kimball, pp. 77, 193
  53. ^ a b Massachusetts Royal Commissions, p. xxxiv
  54. ^ Kimball, pp. 193–197
  55. ^ Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, p. 17:87
  56. ^ Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, p. 17:96

References edit

  • Adams, Charles; Nash, Gilbert (1905). Wessagusset and Weymouth. Weymouth, MA: Weymouth Historical Society. OCLC 1066255.
  • Barnes, Viola Florence (1960) [1923]. The Dominion of New England: A Study in British Colonial Policy. New York: Frederick Ungar. ISBN 978-0-8044-1065-6. OCLC 395292.
  • Capen, Nahum, ed. (1851). The Massachusetts State Record, Volume 5. Boston: James French. OCLC 1770853.
  • Davis, William Thomas (1895). Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Volume 1. Boston, MA: The Boston History Company. OCLC 15711603.
  • French, Allen (1911). The Siege of Boston. New York: McMillan. OCLC 3927532.
  • Gifford, Stephen Nye; Marden, George Augustus; McLaughlin, Edward A.; Clapp, E. Herbert; Robinson, William Stevens; Sleeper, George T.; Coolidge, Henry D.; Kimball, James W.; Stowe, William; Taylor, Charles Henry (1880). A Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston. OCLC 1251790.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Grizzard, Frank; Smith, D. Boyd (2007). Jamestown Colony: a Political, Social, and Cultural History. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC–CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-642-8. OCLC 123965653.
  • Hart, Albert Bushnell, ed. (1927). Commonwealth History of Massachusetts. New York: The States History Company. OCLC 1543273. A multi-volume history of Massachusetts, structured as a series of essays on many topics.
  • Kimball, Everett (1911). The Public Life of Joseph Dudley. New York: Longmans, Green. OCLC 1876620.
  • Levermore, Charles, ed. (1912). Forerunners and Competitors of the Pilgrims and Puritan, Volume 2. Brooklyn, NY: New England Society of Brooklyn. OCLC 1728802.
  • Massachusetts Royal Commissions, 1681–1774. Boston, MA: Colonial Society of Massachusetts. 1913. OCLC 1564125.
  • Moore, Jacob Bailey (1851). Lives of the Governors of New Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay. Boston: C. D. Strong. p. 273. OCLC 11362972.
  • Peters, Ronald M (1978). The Massachusetts Constitution of 1780: a Social Compact. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 978-0-87023-143-8. OCLC 3516166.
  • Vaughan, Alden (2007). Transatlantic Encounters: American Indians in Britain, 1500–1776. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86594-4. OCLC 243513137.
  • Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Volume 17. Boston, MA: Colonial Society of Massachusetts. 1915. p. 96. OCLC 1564125.

list, colonial, governors, massachusetts, territory, commonwealth, massachusetts, fifty, united, states, settled, 17th, century, several, different, english, colonies, territories, claimed, administered, these, colonies, encompassed, much, larger, area, than, . The territory of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts one of the fifty United States was settled in the 17th century by several different English colonies The territories claimed or administered by these colonies encompassed a much larger area than that of the modern state and at times included areas that are now within the jurisdiction of other New England states or of the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Some colonial land claims extended all the way to the Pacific Ocean Map depicting lines of charters and grants for Massachusetts related colonies and provinces The first permanent settlement was the Plymouth Colony 1620 and the second major settlement was the Massachusetts Bay Colony at Salem in 1629 Settlements that failed or were merged into other colonies included the failed Popham Colony 1607 on the coast of Maine and the Wessagusset Colony 1622 23 in Weymouth Massachusetts whose remnants were folded into the Plymouth Colony The Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies coexisted until 1686 each electing its own governor annually Governance of both colonies was dominated by a relatively small group of magistrates some of whom governed for many years The Dominion of New England was established in 1686 which covered the territory of those colonies as well as that of New Hampshire Connecticut and Rhode Island In 1688 it was further extended to include New York and East and West Jersey The Dominion was extremely unpopular in the colonies and it was disbanded when its royally appointed governor Sir Edmund Andros was arrested and sent back to England in the wake of the 1688 Glorious Revolution After Andros arrest each of the colonies reverted to its previous form of governance King William III however reorganized the territory of the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies into the Province of Massachusetts Bay and appointed Sir William Phips as its royal governor in 1692 The Province of Massachusetts Bay was governed by appointed civilian governors until 1774 when Thomas Hutchinson was replaced by Lieutenant General Thomas Gage amid rising tensions between the Thirteen Colonies and the British Parliament Gage was the province s last royal governor He was effectively powerless beyond Boston and was recalled after the June 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill By then the province was already being run de facto by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress following the adoption of a state constitution in 1779 the newly formed Commonwealth of Massachusetts elected John Hancock as its first governor Contents 1 Popham Colony 1607 1608 2 Plymouth Colony 1620 1686 1689 1692 3 Wessagusset Colony 1622 1623 4 Governor General of New England 1623 1624 5 Massachusetts Bay Colony 1629 1686 1689 1692 6 Dominion of New England 1686 1689 7 Province of Massachusetts Bay 1692 1775 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesPopham Colony 1607 1608 editMain article Popham Colony The Popham Colony was founded on the coast of Phippsburg Maine in 1607 as a colonization attempt by the Virginia Company of Plymouth The colony lasted about one year before being abandoned One of its principal backers was Sir John Popham his nephew George Popham was the colony s governor for most of its brief existence 1 George Popham died in the colony in 1608 and was replaced by Raleigh Gilbert He and the remaining colonists abandoned it after word arrived that John Popham and Gilbert s older brother Sir John Gilbert had died 2 Governor Took office Left office George Popham 1607 February 1608 Raleigh Gilbert February 1608 September 1608 Source Grizzard and Smith p 189Plymouth Colony 1620 1686 1689 1692 editMain article Plymouth Colony The Plymouth Colony originated as a land grant issued by the London Virginia Company to a group of English separatist Puritans who had fled to Holland to avoid religious persecution Their migration to the New World in 1620 aboard the Mayflower was funded by the Merchant Adventurers who sent additional settlers to engage in profit making activities in the colony 3 The settlers had intended to establish a colony near the mouth of the Hudson River within the bounds of the London Virginia Company s territory but weather conditions on their arrival led them to establish it instead on the shores of Cape Cod Bay at Plymouth Massachusetts 4 The colonists acquired a land grant from the Plymouth Council for New England in 1621 5 but its early governance took place under the terms of the Mayflower Compact a document which the colonists drafted and signed aboard the Mayflower before they landed 4 In 1630 the colony acquired a formal charter with authority to govern from the Plymouth Council but it was unsuccessful in attempts to acquire a royal charter that would guarantee its territory against other claimants 6 The colony held annual elections for its offices 7 Between 1620 and 1680 it was ruled by a governor who appointed a temporary replacement if he left the colony In 1681 they began also electing a deputy governor who would serve in the governor s absence 8 The leadership was dominated by William Bradford who served more than 30 terms as governor 5 The colony was incorporated into the Dominion of New England in 1686 9 but the dominion was dissolved in 1689 and all the New England colonies temporarily reverted to their previous governmental structures Plymouth finally received a royal charter in 1691 but it was not the one which they had sought for 70 years Instead of protecting the colony s autonomy the charter incorporated Plymouth into the Province of Massachusetts Bay which took effect in 1692 with the arrival of royal governor Sir William Phips 10 11 nbsp Edward Winslow nbsp Josiah Winslow Governor Took office Left office Deputy governor John Carver November 11 1620 died April 15 1621 12 The colony had no deputy governors until 1681 the governor named a pro tem governor when he was absent William Bradford May 1621 January 1 1633 Edward Winslow January 1 1633 March 27 1634 Thomas Prence March 27 1634 March 3 1635 William Bradford March 3 1635 March 1 1636 Edward Winslow March 1 1636 March 7 1637 William Bradford March 7 1637 June 5 1638 Thomas Prence June 5 1638 June 3 1639 William Bradford June 3 1639 June 5 1644 Edward Winslow June 5 1644 June 4 1645 William Bradford June 4 1645 died May 9 1657 13 Thomas Prence June 3 1657 June 3 1673 Josiah Winslow June 3 1673 December 18 1680 Thomas Hinckley December 18 1680 1686 James Cudworth 1681 82 William Bradford the Younger 1682 86 Dominion of New England 1686 1689 Not applicable Thomas Hinckley 1689 1692 William Bradford the Younger 1689 92 Source unless otherwise cited Gifford et al p 205 Capen p 53Wessagusset Colony 1622 1623 editMain article Wessagusset Colony The Wessagusset Colony sometimes called the Weston Colony or Weymouth Colony was a short lived trading colony located in Weymouth Massachusetts It was settled in August 1622 by approximately 55 colonists who were ill prepared for colonial life and lacking adequate provisions 14 The colony was dissolved in late March 1623 and the surviving colonists either joined the Plymouth Colony or returned to England 15 Governor Took office Left office Richard Greene April 1622 died c October 1622 John Sanders c October 1622 March 1623 Source Adams and Nash pp 11 14 27Governor General of New England 1623 1624 editIn 1623 Robert Gorges was commissioned as Governor General of New England by King Charles I to oversee Plymouth Wessagusset and future New England colonies 16 Gorges established a small colony on the site of the recently failed Wessagusset Colony his effort was abandoned after one year for financial reasons 17 18 Some of his settlers remained in the area without formal governance moving to occupy the Shawmut Peninsula site of Boston Massachusetts among other places 19 Governor General Took office Left office Robert Gorges September 1623 1624 Source Adams and Nash pp 29 31Massachusetts Bay Colony 1629 1686 1689 1692 editMain article Massachusetts Bay Colony The Massachusetts Bay Company was established in 1628 and was funded in part by investors in the failed Dorchester Company In that year the company elected Matthew Cradock as its governor and received a grant from the Plymouth Council for New England for land roughly between the Charles and Merrimack Rivers 20 The company dispatched John Endecott and a small company of settlers to Massachusetts Bay not long after acquiring the grant 21 In 1629 the company received a royal charter as a means to guarantee its grant against other claims and elected Endecott as the first colonial governor while Cradock continued to govern the company in London 22 In August 1629 the shareholders reorganized the company so that the charter could be removed to the colony merging corporate and colonial administration 23 John Winthrop was elected governor in October but did not formally take charge of the colony until he arrived in 1630 24 Colonial officials governor deputy governor and the council of assistants were elected annually from then on by the freemen of the colony The governorship was dominated by a small group of early settlers who sought to ensure that the vision of a Puritan settlement was maintained Richard Bellingham John Leverett and Simon Bradstreet all served extended terms in addition to Winthrop and Endecott and Thomas Dudley served 4 1 year terms All these men also served in positions of importance when they were not serving as governor 25 The colony s governance and religious attitudes came under greater scrutiny following the restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660 which led to the revocation of its charter in 1684 26 27 King James II then established the Dominion of New England an appointed regime which was strongly against the will of the American colonists 28 It took effect in 1686 and lasted until 1689 when the Glorious Revolution toppled James and colonists in Massachusetts immediately arrested the Dominion s governor Sir Edmund Andros 29 The colony reverted to its previous rule on a provisional basis because it then lacked any sort of legal charter 30 In 1691 King William III merged the colonies of Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay along with the territory of Maine the islands south of Cape Cod including Martha s Vineyard Nantucket and the Elizabeth Islands and Nova Scotia which included New Brunswick to form the Province of Massachusetts Bay 10 This new governmental structure took effect in 1692 with the arrival of the new royal governor Sir William Phips 11 Governor Took office Left office Deputy governor Matthew Cradock 1628 October 20 1629 Thomas Goffe nbsp John Endecott April 30 1629 June 12 1630 31 None nbsp John Winthrop October 20 1629 May 14 1634 John Humphrey 1629 30 Thomas Dudley 1630 34 Thomas Dudley May 14 1634 May 6 1635 Roger Ludlow John Haynes May 6 1635 May 25 1636 Richard Bellingham nbsp Sir Henry Vane the Younger May 25 1636 May 17 1637 John Winthrop nbsp John Winthrop May 17 1637 May 13 1640 Thomas Dudley Thomas Dudley May 13 1640 June 2 1641 Richard Bellingham Richard Bellingham June 2 1641 May 18 1642 John Endecott nbsp John Winthrop May 18 1642 May 29 1644 John Endecott nbsp John Endecott May 29 1644 May 14 1645 John Winthrop Thomas Dudley May 14 1645 May 6 1646 John Winthrop nbsp John Winthrop May 6 1646 May 2 1649 Thomas Dudley nbsp John Endecott May 2 1649 May 22 1650 Thomas Dudley Thomas Dudley May 22 1650 May 7 1651 John Endecott 32 nbsp John Endecott May 7 1651 May 3 1654 Thomas Dudley Richard Bellingham May 3 1654 May 23 1655 John Endecott nbsp John Endecott May 23 1655 May 3 1665 Richard Bellingham Richard Bellingham May 3 1665 December 12 1672 Francis Willoughby 1665 71 John Leverett 1671 72 nbsp John Leverett December 12 1672 acting until May 7 1673 May 28 1679 Samuel Symonds 1673 78 Simon Bradstreet 1678 79 nbsp Simon Bradstreet May 28 1679 May 25 1686 33 Thomas Danforth Dominion of New England May 25 1686 33 April 18 1689 34 Not applicable nbsp Simon Bradstreet April 18 1689 34 May 14 1692 35 Thomas Danforth Sources unless otherwise cited Capen pp 53 54 Hart p 1 607Dominion of New England 1686 1689 editMain article Dominion of New England The Dominion of New England was established by King James II in order to bring the colonies of New England more firmly under united crown control and to streamline the costs associated with colonial administration 36 All of the New England colonies eventually came under its authority as well as the provinces of New York East Jersey and West Jersey 37 Sir Edmund Andros governed the Dominion for most of its brief existence but he alienated New Englanders by forcing the Church of England into Puritan Boston and vacating land titles issued under the old charter 38 After the Glorious Revolution of 1688 deposed James Massachusetts political operatives arrested Andros and shipped him back to England 39 40 All of the affected colonies reverted to their previous forms of rule although Massachusetts did so without constitutional authority because its charter had been revoked 41 William III and Mary II eventually issued new charters but in the process they combined the Massachusetts Bay Colony Plymouth Colony and other territories into the Province of Massachusetts Bay 10 Plans to establish the dominion had started under King Charles II early in the 1680s He initially selected Colonel Percy Kirke as the dominion s governor in 1684 Kirke s commission was approved by James but was then withdrawn after Kirke s controversially harsh actions in putting down Monmouth s Rebellion in 1685 Joseph Dudley son of Thomas Dudley was given a commission as President of the Council of New England with limited powers as an interim measure before Andros commission could be finalized 42 Governor Took office Left office Lieutenant Governor nbsp Joseph Dudley as President of the Council of New England May 25 1686 43 December 20 1686 44 William Stoughton as Deputy President 45 nbsp Sir Edmund Andros December 20 1686 44 April 18 1689 34 Francis Nicholson appointed April 1688 46 Province of Massachusetts Bay 1692 1775 editMain article Province of Massachusetts Bay The royal charter for the Province of Massachusetts Bay was issued in 1691 The territory that it encompassed included the Massachusetts Bay Colony the Plymouth Colony the territories of Maine and Nova Scotia which then included New Brunswick and the proprietary plantation holdings of Nantucket Martha s Vineyard and other islands off the southern coast of Cape Cod 10 The government did not formally begin operating until royally appointed governor Sir William Phips arrived in 1692 11 The province was governed by civilian governors until 1774 when Thomas Hutchinson was replaced by Lieutenant General Thomas Gage amid rising tensions between the Thirteen Colonies and the British Parliament 47 Gage was the province s last royal governor He was effectively powerless beyond Boston 48 49 and was recalled after the June 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill 50 By then the province was already being run de facto by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress which continued to govern until 1780 The Massachusetts Constitution was adopted in 1779 and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts elected John Hancock as its first governor 51 Under the terms of the royal charter both the governor and lieutenant governor were appointed by the crown The charter contained a provision that the governor s council would assume the duties of the governor should both governor and lieutenant governor be absent from the colony 52 This occurred three times Acting governor William Stoughton died in 1701 and the council governed until the arrival of Joseph Dudley 53 Queen Anne died in 1714 and the commissions that she had issued expired six months later Her successor King George I issued an order continuing all commissions but this order did not reach Massachusetts before the six months expired The council asserted its authority claiming that the commissions had expired of Joseph Dudley and William Tailer and the council ruled from February 4 until March 21 1715 when the king s order arrived 54 Acting governor Spencer Phips died in 1757 and the council governed until the arrival of Thomas Pownall 53 Governor Took office Left office Lieutenant Governor nbsp Sir William Phips May 16 1692 November 17 1694 William Stoughton May 16 1692 died July 7 1701 nbsp William Stoughton acting December 4 1694 May 26 1699 nbsp Richard Coote 1st Earl of Bellomont May 26 1699 July 17 1700 nbsp William Stoughton acting July 22 1700 died July 7 1701 Governor s Council acting July 10 1701 June 11 1702 Vacant nbsp Joseph Dudley June 11 1702 February 4 1715 Thomas Povey June 11 1702 left colony c January 28 1706 Vacant William Tailer October 4 1711 February 4 1715 Governor s Council acting February 4 1715 March 21 1715 Vacant nbsp Joseph Dudley March 21 1715 November 9 1715 William Tailer March 21 1715 October 5 1716 William Tailer acting November 9 1715 October 5 1716 nbsp Samuel Shute October 5 1716 left colony January 1 1723 William Dummer October 5 1716 June 11 1730 nbsp William Dummer acting January 2 1723 July 19 1728 nbsp William Burnet July 19 1728 died September 7 1729 nbsp William Dummer acting September 10 1729 June 11 1730 William Tailer acting June 11 1730 August 10 1730 William Tailer June 11 1730 died March 1 1732 nbsp Jonathan Belcher August 10 1730 August 14 1741 Vacant Spencer Phips August 8 1732 died April 4 1757 nbsp William Shirley August 14 1741 September 11 1749 Spencer Phips acting September 15 1749 August 7 1753 nbsp William Shirley August 7 1753 September 25 1756 Spencer Phips acting September 25 1756 died April 4 1757 Governor s Council acting April 5 1757 August 3 1757 Vacant nbsp Thomas Pownall August 3 1757 June 3 1760 Thomas Hutchinson June 1 1758 March 14 1771 nbsp Thomas Hutchinson acting June 3 1760 August 2 1760 nbsp Sir Francis Bernard 1st Baronet August 2 1760 August 1 1769 nbsp Thomas Hutchinson acting August 2 1769 March 14 1771 August 2 1769 May 17 1774 Andrew Oliver March 14 1771 died March 3 1774 Vacant nbsp The Hon Thomas Gage May 17 1774 October 11 1775 a Thomas Oliver August 8 1774 March 17 1776 b Source unless otherwise cited Massachusetts Royal Commissions pp xxxiii xxxvSee also editList of colonial governors of New Hampshire List of colonial governors of Maine List of lieutenant governors of Nova Scotia List of governors of Acadia List of members of the colonial Massachusetts House of RepresentativesNotes edit This is the de facto end of Gage s tenure when he departed Boston for the last time 55 This is the de facto end of Oliver s tenure when he departed Boston for the last time 56 Grizzard and Smith p 189 Vaughan p 64 Hart p 1 67 a b Hart p 1 69 a b Hart p 1 72 Hart p 1 78 Hart p 1 83 Hart p 1 607 Hart pp 1 569 572 a b c d Barnes pp 267 269 a b c Capen p 54 Moore p 46 Moore p 79 Thomas G E March 1975 Puritans Indians and the Concept of Race New England Quarterly 48 1 The New England Quarterly Inc 12 doi 10 2307 364910 JSTOR 364910 Adams and Nash pp 25 29 Adams and Nash pp 29 30 Adams and Nash pp 30 31 Levermore p 603 Adams and Nash pp 31 34 Hart pp 1 96 99 Moore pp 240 348 Moore pp 348 349 Hart pp 1 99 101 Moore pp 242 350 Hart pp 1 112 1 607 Barnes pp 6 32 Hart p 1 566 Barnes pp 46 69 Hart pp 1 600 601 Hart p 1 602 Moore p 244 Capen p 54 incorrectly lists Dudley as deputy it was in fact Endecott Davis p 163 a b Moore p 393 a b c Moore p 385 Moore p 226 Barnes pp 29 30 Barnes pp 32 39 Barnes pp 128 130 187 201 Barnes pp 234 250 Hart pp 1 602 603 Barnes pp 247 249 Barnes pp 45 49 Barnes p 54 a b Barnes p 69 Barnes p 55 Barnes p 72 Hart pp 2 514 523 2 591 Hart p 2 562 French p 130 French p 355 Peters pp 16 18 Kimball pp 77 193 a b Massachusetts Royal Commissions p xxxiv Kimball pp 193 197 Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts p 17 87 Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts p 17 96References editAdams Charles Nash Gilbert 1905 Wessagusset and Weymouth Weymouth MA Weymouth Historical Society OCLC 1066255 Barnes Viola Florence 1960 1923 The Dominion of New England A Study in British Colonial Policy New York Frederick Ungar ISBN 978 0 8044 1065 6 OCLC 395292 Capen Nahum ed 1851 The Massachusetts State Record Volume 5 Boston James French OCLC 1770853 Davis William Thomas 1895 Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Volume 1 Boston MA The Boston History Company OCLC 15711603 French Allen 1911 The Siege of Boston New York McMillan OCLC 3927532 Gifford Stephen Nye Marden George Augustus McLaughlin Edward A Clapp E Herbert Robinson William Stevens Sleeper George T Coolidge Henry D Kimball James W Stowe William Taylor Charles Henry 1880 A Manual for the Use of the General Court Boston OCLC 1251790 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Grizzard Frank Smith D Boyd 2007 Jamestown Colony a Political Social and Cultural History Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 642 8 OCLC 123965653 Hart Albert Bushnell ed 1927 Commonwealth History of Massachusetts New York The States History Company OCLC 1543273 A multi volume history of Massachusetts structured as a series of essays on many topics Kimball Everett 1911 The Public Life of Joseph Dudley New York Longmans Green OCLC 1876620 Levermore Charles ed 1912 Forerunners and Competitors of the Pilgrims and Puritan Volume 2 Brooklyn NY New England Society of Brooklyn OCLC 1728802 Massachusetts Royal Commissions 1681 1774 Boston MA Colonial Society of Massachusetts 1913 OCLC 1564125 Moore Jacob Bailey 1851 Lives of the Governors of New Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Boston C D Strong p 273 OCLC 11362972 Peters Ronald M 1978 The Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 a Social Compact Amherst MA University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 978 0 87023 143 8 OCLC 3516166 Vaughan Alden 2007 Transatlantic Encounters American Indians in Britain 1500 1776 Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86594 4 OCLC 243513137 Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts Volume 17 Boston MA Colonial Society of Massachusetts 1915 p 96 OCLC 1564125 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of colonial governors of Massachusetts amp oldid 1187179024 Massachusetts Bay Colony 1629 1686 1689 1692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.