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John Dixwell

John Dixwell, alias James Davids, c. 1607 to 18 March 1689, was an English lawyer, republican politician and regicide. Born in Warwickshire, during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms he held various administrative positions in Kent on behalf of Parliament, and approved the Execution of Charles I in January 1649. Under the Commonwealth, he served as Governor of Dover Castle, and was a member of the English Council of State.

John Dixwell, alias James Davids
Center Church on the Green, New Haven, Connecticut; its cemetery includes Dixwell's monument
Member of Parliament
for Dover
In office
Long Parliament August 1646 to April 1653 (dissolved); reseated May 1659, dissolved March 1660
 – Third Protectorate Parliament January to April 1659
Member of Parliament
for Kent
In office
1654–1658
Governor of Dover Castle
In office
January 1652 – May 1660
English Council of State
In office
November 1651 to October 1652
 – May to December 1659
Personal details
Bornc. 1607
Chilvers Coton, Warwickshire
Died18 March 1689
New Haven, Connecticut
Resting placeCenter Church on the Green
NationalityEnglish
Spouse(s)(1) Joanna Ling (November 1673)
(2) Bathsheba Howe (1677–his death)
Children(2) Mary; John; Elizabeth
Alma materLincoln's Inn
Military service
AllegianceParliamentarian
RankColonel
UnitKent Trained Bands
Battles/wars

Aware that he faced likely prosecution as a regicide, Dixwell fled to Germany shortly before the May 1660 Stuart Restoration, and was condemned to death by Parliament. He later made his way to New Haven, Connecticut, where he lived quietly under the name of James Davids, untroubled by the authorities, who thought him dead. He died in 1689.

Personal details

John Dixwell was born c. 1607, younger son of Edward Dixwell (1575–1617), and his wife Mary Hawksworth (1580–1627). He had an elder brother Mark (?–1644), who was killed serving under the Parliamentarian general William Waller.[1]

After moving to New England, in November 1673 he married Joanna Ling, who died shortly afterwards. Bathsheba Howe (1648–1729) became his second wife in 1677, and they had three children; Mary (1679–1727), John (1681–1725), and Elizabeth (died young).[2]

First and Second English Civil Wars

 
Broome Park, rebuilt at great expense between 1635 and 1638 by Dixwell's guardian, Sir Basil Dixwell[3]

After their father died in 1617, Dixwell and his brother seem to have been raised by their childless and wealthy relative, Sir Basil Dixwell (1585–1642), a former High Sheriff of Kent who lived near Folkestone. In the late 1630s, he moved to Broome Park, which was inherited by Mark Dixwell when Sir Basil died in 1642.[3] John Dixwell began legal training at Lincoln's Inn in 1631, and qualified as a lawyer in 1638.[1]

When the First English Civil War began in August 1642, Kent was quickly secured for Parliament, although there were significant pockets of Royalist support.[4] In July 1643, the Royalists assembled some 4,000 men at Sevenoaks, which had to be suppressed by Parliamentarian troops led by Richard Browne.[5] Its proximity to London and key ports like Dover, Deal and Sandwich meant control of the county was an important strategic objective for both sides.[6]

 
 
Rochester
 
Maidstone
 
London
 
Sevenoaks
 
Sandwich
 
Broome Park
 
Dover
 
Canterbury
 
Folkestone
 
Deal
class=notpageimage|
Kent; key locations in article

John Dixwell played a prominent role in the local Parliamentary administration, serving on the County Committee which collected taxes and controlled the courts.[1] His older brother Mark was a colonel in the Kent Trained Bands until his death in early 1644, when John was appointed guardian of his children and took up residence in Broome Park. He succeeded Mark as colonel of the local militia, and in August 1646 was elected MP for Dover in the Long Parliament, replacing Sir Edward Boys.[7]

The First Civil War ended when Charles I surrendered in June 1646, but victory was succeeded by a series of disputes over the post-war political settlement between the New Model Army and the majority of MPs.[8] In this contest, Dixwell appears to have sympathised with the army and religious Independents in Parliament.[a] In December 1647, protests in Canterbury against alterations to the Book of Common Prayer escalated into a pro-Royalist revolt, which was eventually put down by the County Committee.[10]

When the Second English Civil War began in early 1648, Kentish Royalists occupied towns including Maidstone and Dover. By August, the rising had been suppressed, but many Independents like Dixwell now believed only the removal of Charles I would end the fighting. In December 1648, Pride's Purge excluded all MPs who opposed putting him on trial, and Dixwell was one of those who retained their seats in what became known as the "Rump Parliament". He sat on the court set up for the trial, and approved the Execution of Charles I in January 1649.[1]

The Interregnum

 
Dover Castle; Dixwell was Governor from 1652 to 1660

Dixwell was made a member of the English Council of State in November 1651, then confirmed as Governor of Dover Castle in January 1652. However, his closest political allies were republicans like Edmund Ludlow and Henry Vane, who opposed Cromwell's dissolution of the Rump Parliament in April 1653, and establishment of The Protectorate. Unlike Ludlow, Dixwell did not openly oppose the regime, and was elected MP for Kent in 1654 and 1656, then for Dover once again in 1659.[1]

However, in the political crisis that followed the death of Oliver Cromwell in September 1658, and the resignation of his successor Richard Cromwell in April 1659, Dixwell sided with those who wanted to re-assert civilian control over the army, and restore the Commonwealth. When the Rump Parliament was re-installed in May 1659, he resumed his seat as MP for Dover, was confirmed as Governor of Dover Castle, and appointed to the Council of State. Along with Vane and Oliver St John, he was one of three councillors who refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the Protectorate.[11]

By spring 1660, it was clear efforts to maintain the Commonwealth had failed, and a Stuart Restoration was imminent. In May, Charles II issued the Declaration of Breda, which offered a general pardon for all "crimes" committed since 1640, with the notable exception of the regicides.[12] In June, Dixwell was one of ten regicides whose lives were guaranteed in return for their surrender, but decided not to rely upon this commitment.[13] To protect his estates from confiscation, he sold part of Broome Park to his Royalist neighbour Sir Thomas Peyton, while his nephew Basill Dixwell married one of Peyton's daughters.[14] [b] After requesting a delay due to illness, he escaped into exile, [13] and on 11 June 1660, Parliament passed an Act of Attainder, which condemned twenty-three regicides to death, including Dixwell.[15]

Exile, later life, and death

 
City hall, Hanau; a well-known refuge for religious and political dissidents, Dixwell lived in the town during the first years of his exile
 
Coat of Arms of John Dixwell

Along with other exiles, Dixwell initially settled in the German town of Hanau, a well-known refuge for political and religious dissidents.[16] With Royalist agents actively seeking to kidnap or assassinate those regicides still at large, several decided Hanau was too exposed. At some point, Dixwell moved to Switzerland, before sailing for New England in early 1665. He spent the next two years in Hadley, Massachusetts, where he briefly shared lodgings with two other regicides, William Goffe and Edward Whalley.[17]

Unlike his two companions, who were known to be in New England, no warrants were issued for Dixwell, since the authorities had been unable to trace him and assumed he had died. He settled in New Haven, Connecticut in 1670, using the name "James Davids" and pretending to be a retired merchant.[17] He remained committed to his republican views, writing ‘the Lord will appear for his people...and there will be those in power again who will relieve the injured and oppressed’.[18] Although some of his neighbours suspected Dixwell was a fugitive,[19] he lived quietly with his wife and children, and only revealed his true name just before he died on 18 March 1689.[20]

Legacy

Dixwell was laid to rest in the Old Burying Ground behind the Center Church on New Haven Green. The original monument is still visible, with a larger one added later.[21] Various towns in New England have streets commemorating Dixwell, Whalley and Goffe, including Hadley and New Haven.[22]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Puritan" was a general term used for those who wanted to "purify" the Church of England of so-called "Catholic" practices. They covered many different shades of religious and political beliefs, and some supported the Royalists. By 1646, Puritans who backed Parliament had divided into two broad factions; Presbyterians, who wanted a national church and highly-regulated liturgy similar to the Church of Scotland, and Independents like Oliver Cromwell who rejected any state religion, and advocated tolerance of belief for all non-Catholics.[9] At a time when "true religion" and "good government" were often assumed to be the same thing, these differences mattered
  2. ^ Dixwell's astuteness meant the property remained in his family until 1911

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Peacey 2004.
  2. ^ Major 2013, p. 169.
  3. ^ a b Lefevre & Thrush 2010.
  4. ^ Braddick 2008, p. 130.
  5. ^ Lindley 2004.
  6. ^ Wedgwood 1958, p. 281.
  7. ^ Major 2013, p. 167.
  8. ^ Gentles 2002, pp. 144–150.
  9. ^ Hutton 2021, p. 136.
  10. ^ Braddick 2008, pp. 531–532.
  11. ^ Mayers 2004, p. 57.
  12. ^ Royle 2004, p. 756.
  13. ^ a b Spencer 2015, p. 118.
  14. ^ Handley 2002.
  15. ^ Jordan & Walsh 2012, p. 207.
  16. ^ Spencer 2015, p. 207.
  17. ^ a b Jordan & Walsh 2012, p. 309.
  18. ^ Spencer 2014.
  19. ^ Stiles 1794, p. 27.
  20. ^ Jordan & Walsh 2012, p. 310.
  21. ^ Heinz 1976, p. 15.
  22. ^ "Goffe St". Google Maps. Retrieved 17 January 2023.

Sources

  • Braddick, Michael (2008). God's Fury, England's Fire; A New History of the English Civil Wars (2009 ed.). Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0141008974.
  • Gentles, Ian (2002). Kenyon, John; Ohlmeyer, Jane (eds.). The Civil Wars in England in The Civil Wars; a Military History of England, Scotland and Ireland 1638-1660. OUP. ISBN 978-0192802781.
  • Handley, Stuart (2002). DIXWELL, Sir Basill, 2nd Bt. (1665-1750), of Broome, Barham, Kent in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1690–1715. Boydell and Brewer. ISBN 978-1107002258. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  • Heinz, Bernard (1976). Center Church On-the-Green. First Church of Christ.
  • Hutton, Ronald (2021). The Making of Oliver Cromwell. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300257458.
  • Jordan, Don; Walsh, Michael (2012). The King's Revenge; Charles II and the greatest manhunt in British history. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-1408703274.
  • Lefevre, Peter; Thrush, Andrew (2010). "DIXWELL, Basil (1585-1642), of Terlingham, Folkestone, Kent; formerly of Canterbury, Kent; later of Broome Park, Barham, Kent". The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604–1629. CUP. ISBN 978-1107002258. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  • Lindley, Keith (2004). "Browne, Sir Richard, first baronet (c. 1602–1669)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/3692. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Major, Dr Philip (2013). ""The good old cause for which I suffer": The Life of a Regicide in Exile". Literatures of Exile in the English Revolution and its Aftermath, 1640-1690. Ashgate Publishing. pp. 167–180. ISBN 978-1-4094-7614-6.
  • Mayers, Ruth (2004). 1659: The Crisis of the Commonwealth. Royal Historical Society. ISBN 978-0861932689.
  • Peacey, J.T. (2004). "Dixwell, John [James Davids] (c.1607–1689)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7710. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Royle, Trevor (2004). Civil War: the Wars of the Three Kingdoms 1638-1660 (2006 ed.). Abacus. ISBN 978-0349115641.
  • Spencer, Charles (2014). "The Regicides in America". History Today. 64 (10). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  • Spencer, Charles (2015). Killers of the King: The Men Who Dared to Execute Charles I. Bloomsbury Paperbacks. ISBN 978-1408851777.
  • Stiles, Ezra (1794). History of Three of the Judges of Charles I, Whalley, Goffe, Dixwell. Elisha Babcock, Hartford.
  • Wedgwood, CV (1958). The King's War, 1641-1647 (2001 ed.). Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0141390727.

john, dixwell, dixwell, redirects, here, other, uses, dixwell, disambiguation, alias, james, davids, 1607, march, 1689, english, lawyer, republican, politician, regicide, born, warwickshire, during, wars, three, kingdoms, held, various, administrative, positio. Dixwell redirects here For other uses see Dixwell disambiguation John Dixwell alias James Davids c 1607 to 18 March 1689 was an English lawyer republican politician and regicide Born in Warwickshire during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms he held various administrative positions in Kent on behalf of Parliament and approved the Execution of Charles I in January 1649 Under the Commonwealth he served as Governor of Dover Castle and was a member of the English Council of State John Dixwell alias James DavidsCenter Church on the Green New Haven Connecticut its cemetery includes Dixwell s monumentMember of Parliamentfor DoverIn office Long Parliament August 1646 to April 1653 dissolved reseated May 1659 dissolved March 1660 Third Protectorate Parliament January to April 1659Member of Parliamentfor KentIn office 1654 1658Governor of Dover CastleIn office January 1652 May 1660English Council of StateIn office November 1651 to October 1652 May to December 1659Personal detailsBornc 1607Chilvers Coton WarwickshireDied18 March 1689New Haven ConnecticutResting placeCenter Church on the GreenNationalityEnglishSpouse s 1 Joanna Ling November 1673 2 Bathsheba Howe 1677 his death Children 2 Mary John ElizabethAlma materLincoln s InnMilitary serviceAllegianceParliamentarianRankColonelUnitKent Trained BandsBattles warsWars of the Three KingdomsAware that he faced likely prosecution as a regicide Dixwell fled to Germany shortly before the May 1660 Stuart Restoration and was condemned to death by Parliament He later made his way to New Haven Connecticut where he lived quietly under the name of James Davids untroubled by the authorities who thought him dead He died in 1689 Contents 1 Personal details 2 First and Second English Civil Wars 3 The Interregnum 4 Exile later life and death 5 Legacy 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 SourcesPersonal details EditJohn Dixwell was born c 1607 younger son of Edward Dixwell 1575 1617 and his wife Mary Hawksworth 1580 1627 He had an elder brother Mark 1644 who was killed serving under the Parliamentarian general William Waller 1 After moving to New England in November 1673 he married Joanna Ling who died shortly afterwards Bathsheba Howe 1648 1729 became his second wife in 1677 and they had three children Mary 1679 1727 John 1681 1725 and Elizabeth died young 2 First and Second English Civil Wars Edit Broome Park rebuilt at great expense between 1635 and 1638 by Dixwell s guardian Sir Basil Dixwell 3 After their father died in 1617 Dixwell and his brother seem to have been raised by their childless and wealthy relative Sir Basil Dixwell 1585 1642 a former High Sheriff of Kent who lived near Folkestone In the late 1630s he moved to Broome Park which was inherited by Mark Dixwell when Sir Basil died in 1642 3 John Dixwell began legal training at Lincoln s Inn in 1631 and qualified as a lawyer in 1638 1 When the First English Civil War began in August 1642 Kent was quickly secured for Parliament although there were significant pockets of Royalist support 4 In July 1643 the Royalists assembled some 4 000 men at Sevenoaks which had to be suppressed by Parliamentarian troops led by Richard Browne 5 Its proximity to London and key ports like Dover Deal and Sandwich meant control of the county was an important strategic objective for both sides 6 Rochester Maidstone London Sevenoaks Sandwich Broome Park Dover Canterbury Folkestone Dealclass notpageimage Kent key locations in article John Dixwell played a prominent role in the local Parliamentary administration serving on the County Committee which collected taxes and controlled the courts 1 His older brother Mark was a colonel in the Kent Trained Bands until his death in early 1644 when John was appointed guardian of his children and took up residence in Broome Park He succeeded Mark as colonel of the local militia and in August 1646 was elected MP for Dover in the Long Parliament replacing Sir Edward Boys 7 The First Civil War ended when Charles I surrendered in June 1646 but victory was succeeded by a series of disputes over the post war political settlement between the New Model Army and the majority of MPs 8 In this contest Dixwell appears to have sympathised with the army and religious Independents in Parliament a In December 1647 protests in Canterbury against alterations to the Book of Common Prayer escalated into a pro Royalist revolt which was eventually put down by the County Committee 10 When the Second English Civil War began in early 1648 Kentish Royalists occupied towns including Maidstone and Dover By August the rising had been suppressed but many Independents like Dixwell now believed only the removal of Charles I would end the fighting In December 1648 Pride s Purge excluded all MPs who opposed putting him on trial and Dixwell was one of those who retained their seats in what became known as the Rump Parliament He sat on the court set up for the trial and approved the Execution of Charles I in January 1649 1 The Interregnum Edit Dover Castle Dixwell was Governor from 1652 to 1660Dixwell was made a member of the English Council of State in November 1651 then confirmed as Governor of Dover Castle in January 1652 However his closest political allies were republicans like Edmund Ludlow and Henry Vane who opposed Cromwell s dissolution of the Rump Parliament in April 1653 and establishment of The Protectorate Unlike Ludlow Dixwell did not openly oppose the regime and was elected MP for Kent in 1654 and 1656 then for Dover once again in 1659 1 However in the political crisis that followed the death of Oliver Cromwell in September 1658 and the resignation of his successor Richard Cromwell in April 1659 Dixwell sided with those who wanted to re assert civilian control over the army and restore the Commonwealth When the Rump Parliament was re installed in May 1659 he resumed his seat as MP for Dover was confirmed as Governor of Dover Castle and appointed to the Council of State Along with Vane and Oliver St John he was one of three councillors who refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the Protectorate 11 By spring 1660 it was clear efforts to maintain the Commonwealth had failed and a Stuart Restoration was imminent In May Charles II issued the Declaration of Breda which offered a general pardon for all crimes committed since 1640 with the notable exception of the regicides 12 In June Dixwell was one of ten regicides whose lives were guaranteed in return for their surrender but decided not to rely upon this commitment 13 To protect his estates from confiscation he sold part of Broome Park to his Royalist neighbour Sir Thomas Peyton while his nephew Basill Dixwell married one of Peyton s daughters 14 b After requesting a delay due to illness he escaped into exile 13 and on 11 June 1660 Parliament passed an Act of Attainder which condemned twenty three regicides to death including Dixwell 15 Exile later life and death Edit City hall Hanau a well known refuge for religious and political dissidents Dixwell lived in the town during the first years of his exile Coat of Arms of John DixwellAlong with other exiles Dixwell initially settled in the German town of Hanau a well known refuge for political and religious dissidents 16 With Royalist agents actively seeking to kidnap or assassinate those regicides still at large several decided Hanau was too exposed At some point Dixwell moved to Switzerland before sailing for New England in early 1665 He spent the next two years in Hadley Massachusetts where he briefly shared lodgings with two other regicides William Goffe and Edward Whalley 17 Unlike his two companions who were known to be in New England no warrants were issued for Dixwell since the authorities had been unable to trace him and assumed he had died He settled in New Haven Connecticut in 1670 using the name James Davids and pretending to be a retired merchant 17 He remained committed to his republican views writing the Lord will appear for his people and there will be those in power again who will relieve the injured and oppressed 18 Although some of his neighbours suspected Dixwell was a fugitive 19 he lived quietly with his wife and children and only revealed his true name just before he died on 18 March 1689 20 Legacy EditDixwell was laid to rest in the Old Burying Ground behind the Center Church on New Haven Green The original monument is still visible with a larger one added later 21 Various towns in New England have streets commemorating Dixwell Whalley and Goffe including Hadley and New Haven 22 Footnotes Edit Puritan was a general term used for those who wanted to purify the Church of England of so called Catholic practices They covered many different shades of religious and political beliefs and some supported the Royalists By 1646 Puritans who backed Parliament had divided into two broad factions Presbyterians who wanted a national church and highly regulated liturgy similar to the Church of Scotland and Independents like Oliver Cromwell who rejected any state religion and advocated tolerance of belief for all non Catholics 9 At a time when true religion and good government were often assumed to be the same thing these differences mattered Dixwell s astuteness meant the property remained in his family until 1911References Edit a b c d e Peacey 2004 Major 2013 p 169 a b Lefevre amp Thrush 2010 Braddick 2008 p 130 Lindley 2004 Wedgwood 1958 p 281 Major 2013 p 167 Gentles 2002 pp 144 150 Hutton 2021 p 136 Braddick 2008 pp 531 532 Mayers 2004 p 57 Royle 2004 p 756 a b Spencer 2015 p 118 Handley 2002 Jordan amp Walsh 2012 p 207 Spencer 2015 p 207 a b Jordan amp Walsh 2012 p 309 Spencer 2014 Stiles 1794 p 27 Jordan amp Walsh 2012 p 310 Heinz 1976 p 15 Goffe St Google Maps Retrieved 17 January 2023 Sources EditBraddick Michael 2008 God s Fury England s Fire A New History of the English Civil Wars 2009 ed Penguin Books ISBN 978 0141008974 Gentles Ian 2002 Kenyon John Ohlmeyer Jane eds The Civil Wars in England inThe Civil Wars a Military History of England Scotland and Ireland 1638 1660 OUP ISBN 978 0192802781 Handley Stuart 2002 DIXWELL Sir Basill 2nd Bt 1665 1750 of Broome Barham Kent inThe History of Parliament the House of Commons 1690 1715 Boydell and Brewer ISBN 978 1107002258 Retrieved 10 February 2023 Heinz Bernard 1976 Center Church On the Green First Church of Christ Hutton Ronald 2021 The Making of Oliver Cromwell Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300257458 Jordan Don Walsh Michael 2012 The King s Revenge Charles II and the greatest manhunt in British history Little Brown ISBN 978 1408703274 Lefevre Peter Thrush Andrew 2010 DIXWELL Basil 1585 1642 of Terlingham Folkestone Kent formerly of Canterbury Kent later of Broome Park Barham Kent The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 CUP ISBN 978 1107002258 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Lindley Keith 2004 Browne Sir Richard first baronet c 1602 1669 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3692 Subscription or UK public library membership required Major Dr Philip 2013 The good old cause for which I suffer The Life of a Regicide in Exile Literatures of Exile in the English Revolution and its Aftermath 1640 1690 Ashgate Publishing pp 167 180 ISBN 978 1 4094 7614 6 Mayers Ruth 2004 1659 The Crisis of the Commonwealth Royal Historical Society ISBN 978 0861932689 Peacey J T 2004 Dixwell John James Davids c 1607 1689 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 7710 Subscription or UK public library membership required Royle Trevor 2004 Civil War the Wars of the Three Kingdoms 1638 1660 2006 ed Abacus ISBN 978 0349115641 Spencer Charles 2014 The Regicides in America History Today 64 10 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Spencer Charles 2015 Killers of the King The Men Who Dared to Execute Charles I Bloomsbury Paperbacks ISBN 978 1408851777 Stiles Ezra 1794 History of Three of the Judges of Charles I Whalley Goffe Dixwell Elisha Babcock Hartford Wedgwood CV 1958 The King s War 1641 1647 2001 ed Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0141390727 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Dixwell amp oldid 1164562426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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