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John Wheelwright

John Wheelwright (c. 1592–1679) was a Puritan clergyman in England and America, noted for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter, New Hampshire. Born in Lincolnshire, England, he graduated from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Ordained in 1619, he became the vicar of Bilsby, Lincolnshire, until he was removed for simony.


John Wheelwright
Reverend John Wheelwright, c. 1677
Bornc. 1592
Died15 November 1679
Resting placeColonial Burying Ground, Salisbury
EducationSidney Sussex College, Cambridge, B.A. 1614/5; M.A. 1618
OccupationClergyman
Spouse(s)(1) Mary Storre
(2) Mary Hutchinson
Children(1st wife): John, Thomas, William, Susannah;
(2nd wife): Katherine, Mary, Elizabeth, Mary, Samuel, Rebecca, Hannah, Sarah[1]
ParentRobert Wheelwright
Signature

Leaving for New England in 1636, he was welcomed in Boston, where his brother-in-law's wife, Anne Hutchinson, was beginning to attract negative attention for her religious outspokenness. Soon he and Hutchinson accused the majority of the colony's ministers and magistrates of espousing a "covenant of works". As this controversy reached a peak, Hutchinson and Wheelwright were banished from the colony. Wheelwright went north with a group of followers during the harsh winter of 1637–1638, and in April 1638 established the town of Exeter in what would become the Province of New Hampshire. Wheelwright's stay in Exeter lasted only a few years, because Massachusetts activated an earlier claim on the lands there, forcing the banished Wheelwright to leave. He went further east, to Wells, Maine, where he was living when his order of banishment was retracted. He returned to Massachusetts to preach at Hampton (later part of the Province of New Hampshire), where in 1654 his parishioners helped him get the complete vindication that he sought from the Massachusetts Court for the events of 17 years earlier.

In 1655 Wheelwright moved back to England with his family, and preached near his home in Lincolnshire. While in England he was entertained by two of his powerful friends, Oliver Cromwell, who had become Lord Protector, and Sir Henry Vane, who occupied key positions in the government. Following Cromwell's death, the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660 and Vane's execution, Wheelwright returned to New England to become the minister in Salisbury, Massachusetts, where he spent the remainder of his life. He was characterized as being contentious and unbending, but also forgiving, energetic and courageous. His sincere piety was never called into question, even by those whose opinions differed greatly from his.

Early life

John Wheelwright, born about 1592, was the son of Robert Wheelwright of Cumberworth and Saleby in Lincolnshire, England.[2] When his father died in 1612, Wheelwright administered the estate, and was also the heir to some property in Lincolnshire.[3] His grandfather, also named John Wheelwright, died in 1611 at Mumby.[4]

In 1611, Wheelwright entered Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, as a sizar, receiving his B.A. in 1614/5 and his M.A. in 1618.[2] At Cambridge University, Wheelwright had noteworthy athletic abilities, and the American Puritan, Cotton Mather (born 1663), wrote, "when Wheelwright was a young spark at the University he was noted for more than an ordinary stroke at wrestling".[3] A college friend of Wheelwright was Oliver Cromwell.[3]

 
Holy Trinity Church, Bilsby, where Wheelwright was vicar

Wheelwright was ordained a deacon on 19 December 1619, and the following day was ordained a priest in the Church of England.[2] On 8 November 1621 he married Mary Storre, the daughter of Thomas Storre, who was the vicar of Bilsby.[1][2] In April 1623, following the death of his father-in-law, Wheelwright was instituted as the vicar of Bilsby.[2][5] His first wife died in 1629, and was buried in Bilsby on 18 May of that year.[1] He soon thereafter married Mary Hutchinson, a daughter of Edward Hutchinson of Alford, and a sister of William Hutchinson, whose wife was Anne Hutchinson.[2]

After nearly ten years as vicar, Wheelwright was suspended in 1633 following his attempt to sell his Bilsby ministry back to its patron to get funds to travel to New England. Instead of procuring the necessary funds, he was convicted of simony (selling church offices), and removed from office.[6] After his removal from Bilsby he was likely in Laceby in June 1633 where his daughter Elizabeth was baptized.[7] He then preached at Belleau, Lincolnshire,[2] but was soon silenced by the Church authorities for his Puritan opinions.[citation needed] Wheelwright left England in 1636 with his second wife, her mother Susanna Hutchinson, and his five living children.[1]

Massachusetts

Wheelwright arrived in Boston in the Massachusetts Bay Colony on 26 May 1636, and was admitted to the Boston church on 12 June 1636, with his wife, Mary, and her mother, Susanna Hutchinson.[2][7] During the year of his arrival, several of the Puritan ministers of Massachusetts had taken notice of the religious gatherings that his relative by marriage, Anne Hutchinson, had been holding at her house, and they also began having questions about the preaching of John Cotton whose Boston parishioners seemed to them to be harboring some theologically unsound opinions.[8] Wheelwright was a strong advocate of Cotton's theology, as was Hutchinson, but their views differed from those of the majority of the colony's ministers, and they soon became embroiled in a major clash over this issue.[9][10]

Theological views

After his arrival in New England, Wheelwright preached primarily to the Boston settlers who owned land at Mount Wollaston, still considered a part of Boston, but located about ten miles south of the Boston meetinghouse. Within months, someone had alerted magistrate John Winthrop, a lay person in the Boston church, that Wheelwright was harboring familist and antinomian doctrines.[11] Familism, the theology of the Family of Love, involved one's perfect union with God under the Holy Spirit, coupled with freedom from both sin, and the responsibility for it.[12] Antinomianism, or being freed from moral law under the covenant of grace, was a form of familism.[13] Most of the New England Puritan ministers were adamantly opposed to these theological doctrines, seeing them as the cause of the violent and bloody ravages of the anabaptists in Germany during the Münster Rebellion of the 1530s.[12] When confronted with accusations of familism, Wheelwright denied preaching such a doctrine. While Winthrop and many of the colony's ministers may have viewed Wheelwright as a familist, Cotton saw him as an orthodox minister.[14]

Antinomian Controversy

As early as spring 1636 the minister of Newtown (later renamed Cambridge), Thomas Shepard, began a correspondence with Boston minister John Cotton, and in his letters Shepard notified Cotton of his concern about Cotton's theology, and of some strange opinions circulating among the members of the Boston church. Cotton, who advocated that God's free grace was the only path to salvation, differed from all of the colony's other ministers, who felt that sanctification (works) was a necessary ingredient to salvation.[15] When Wheelwright arrived in the colony, he became a firm ally of Cotton in these theological differences. Opinions that were first shared in private correspondence soon began to find their way into Shepard's sermons to his Newtown congregation.[16] This "pulpit aggression" did not go unnoticed by Wheelwright, and soon his own sermons began taking a critical view of the "covenant of works" being preached by Shepard.[17]

 
Anne Hutchinson, related to Wheelwright by marriage, was one of the first to be blamed for the colony's difficulties during the Antinomian Controversy.

Theological tension was mounting in the colony, but it wasn't until October 1636 when it became noticeable enough for Winthrop to record an entry in his journal. On or shortly after 21 October 1636 he noted the rising disunity, but instead of pointing fingers at one of the godly ministers, he instead put the blame on Wheelwright's sister-in-law, writing, "One Mrs. Hutchinson, a member of the church at Boston, a woman of a ready wit and a bold spirit, brought over with her two dangerous errors: 1. That the person of the Holy Ghost dwells in a justified person. 2. That no sanctification can help to evidence to us our justification".[18]

Late in October the colony's ministers confronted the question of religious opinions directly and had a "conference in private" with Cotton, Hutchinson, and Wheelwright.[19] The outcome of this meeting was favorable, and the parties were in agreement. Cotton, whose theology rested on a covenant of grace, gave satisfaction to the other ministers that sanctification (a covenant of works) did help in finding grace in the eyes of God, and Wheelwright agreed as well.[19] However, the effects of the conference were short-lived, because a majority of the members of the Boston church, Cotton's parishioners, held the free grace ideas strongly, and they wanted Wheelwright to become the church's second pastor behind Cotton. The church already had another pastor, Reverend John Wilson, who was unsympathetic to the free grace advocates. Wilson was a friend of Winthrop, who was a layman in the church, and it was Winthrop who took advantage of a rule requiring unanimity in a church vote to thwart Wheelwright's appointment.[19] Though Winthrop "thought reverendly" of Wheelwright's talents and piety, he felt that he was "apt to raise doubtful disputations [and] he could not consent to choose him to that place".[20] This was Winthrop's way of suggesting that Wheelwright maintained familist doctrines.[14]

In December 1636 the ministers met once again, but this meeting did not produce agreement, and Cotton warned about the question of sanctification becoming essentially a covenant of works.[21] When questioned directly, Hutchinson accused the other ministers of preaching works and not grace, but did this only in private.[21] These theological differences had begun to take their toll in the political aspects of the colony, and the Massachusetts governor, Henry Vane, who was a strong free grace advocate, announced his resignation to a special session of the deputies.[21] While citing urgent matters back in England as being his reason for stepping down, when prodded, he broke down, blurting out his concern that God's judgment would "come upon us for these differences and dissensions".[21] The members of the Boston church successfully induced Vane to withdraw his resignation, while the General Court began to debate who was responsible for the colony's troubles.[21] The General Court, like the remainder of the colony, was deeply divided, and called for a general fast to take place on 19 January in hopes that such repentance would restore peace.[21]

Fast-day sermon

During the appointed day of fasting on 19 January 1637, John Cotton preached in the morning, focusing his sermon on the need for pacification and reconciliation.[17] Wheelwright then spoke in the afternoon, and while in the eyes of a lay person his sermon may have appeared benign and non-threatening, to the Puritan clergy it was "censurable and incited mischief".[20] Historian Michael Winship more pointedly called it a "bitterly uncharitable sermon" and the "most notorious Boston contribution to the escalation of pulpit rhetoric".[17] There was no immediate reaction to the sermon, other than Winthrop noting in his journal that "the ministers were now disputing the doctrinal issues in their pulpits".[22] He also noted that Cotton alone was of one party against the other ministers, not even thinking of Wheelwright as being a player in the developing controversy.[22]

As word of Wheelwright's sermon circulated, however, Winthrop was made more aware of its incendiary character, and he then wrote that Wheelwright "inveighed against all that walked in a covenant of works," and concerning those who preached works, he "called them antichrists, and stirred up the people against them with much bitterness and vehemency".[21] The free grace advocates, on the other hand, were encouraged by the sermon, and intensified their crusade against the "legalists" among the clergy. During church services and lectures they publicly asked the ministers about their doctrines which disagreed with their own beliefs,[21] and Henry Vane in particular became active in challenging the doctrines of the colony's divines.[23]

March trial

During the next two months the other ministers made several doctrinal charges against Wheelwright, noting not only his fast-day sermon, but also his sermons at Mount Wollaston.[24] When the General Court next met on 9 March, Wheelwright was called upon to answer for his fast-day sermon.[25] There were 12 magistrates and 33 deputies sitting on the court at the time, and of the magistrates, Henry Vane, William Coddington and Richard Dummer were strong Wheelwright partisans. Four of the other magistrates, John Humphrey, Simon Bradstreet, Richard Bellingham, and John Winthrop, Jr. were all known for their tolerance of religious diversity compared with their fellow magistrates.[26] It was the deputies who led the case against Wheelwright, and the charge they brought against him was "preaching on the Fast Day a Heretical and Seditious sermon, tending to mutiny and disturbance".[26] After more charges and countercharges, Wheelwright presented a transcript of his fast-day sermon to the court, and was then dismissed for the day. Following his departure, his supporters presented the court with a petition signed by more than forty people challenging the court's right to try a case of conscience before it was heard by the church. The petition was rejected.[27]

 
Governor Henry Vane strongly supported Wheelwright during the colony's difficulties from 1636 to 1637.

The next morning Wheelwright was given a private session with the court at which time he asked who his accusers were. The court's answer was that his sermon was the accuser.[27] That afternoon, the court was opened to the general public, and the colony's ministers were also present.[28] One of the lines of attack used against Wheelwright was identifying his doctrine, and that of Cotton, as being "False Doctrine" because of its difference from that of all of the other New England ministers. Cotton's angry response to this was, "Brother Wheelwright's Doctrine was according to God," letting the court know that by going after Wheelwright they were going after him as well, and this essentially ended that line of attack.[28] After some additional ineffective prosecutorial attempts, the court hit on the idea of asking the colony's ministers if they felt they were attacked by Wheelwright's sermon. Following an evening to discuss this among themselves, the ministers returned to the court the next day. With Cotton dissenting, the other ministers said that they did "walk in" and teach what Wheelwright called a covenant of works, and therefore they were the Antichrists alluded to in the sermon.[29]

To their credit, the ministers presented Wheelwright with a means to gracefully back down from the ordeal, and this greatly impressed Winthrop, who noted their "humanity and respect".[30] Wheelwright was intransigent, however, and not interested in any reconciliation, so the court continued with its course. Coddington later noted that "the priests got two of the magistrates on their side, and so got the major part with them".[30] With the deputies then casting their votes, Wheelwright was declared guilty of "contempt & sedition" for having "purposely set himself to kindle and increase" bitterness within the colony.[25][30] Though sentencing was deferred to the next court, the controversy now became a political issue.[31]

Wheelwright's conviction did not pass without a fight, and his friends protested formally. Governor Vane and some of the magistrates and deputies who did not concur with the ruling wanted their dissenting opinion entered into the court record, but the court refused. They then tendered a protest which was also rejected.[32][33] For this reason a remonstrance was prepared, penned by William Aspinwall, but the initial version was so belligerent that further edits had to be made to tone down the rhetoric. Even the final version veered dangerously away from being deferential, suggesting that the court was "meddling against the prophets of God" thus inviting the Lord's retribution.[34] However, the resentment over Wheelwright's conviction was so high that over 60 men signed the document. Those who signed were not of little consequence either; most of them were freemen, a large number of them held office or were among the colony's wealthier inhabitants, and most had been in the colony more than three years.[34] This petition became the pretext for severe penalties later inflicted upon the signatories.[33]

May 1637 election

As the political aspects of the controversy intensified, Governor Vane was unable to prevent the Court from holding its next session in Newtown, where the orthodox party of most of the magistrates and ministers stood a better chance of winning if the elections were held away from Boston.[25] During election day, 17 May 1637, Governor Vane wanted to read a petition in defense of Wheelwright, but Winthrop and his party insisted the elections take place first, and then the petition be heard.[25] Following clamor and debate, the majority of freemen, wanting the election to take place, went with Winthrop to one side of the Newtown common and elected him governor in place of Vane. After this, additional measures were taken against the free grace advocates, and in the election of magistrates, those who supported Wheelwright were left out.[35] In addition, the Court passed a law that no "strangers" could be received within the colony for longer than three weeks without the Court's permission. Winthrop declared this law as being necessary to prevent new immigrants from being added to the number of his "free grace" opponents.[35]

Order of banishment

When the court met again in August 1637, Wheelwright was informed that if he would retract his obnoxious opinions "he might expect favor". To this he responded that if he were guilty of sedition, he ought to be put to death, and if the court intended to sentence him, he should appeal to the king. No further action was taken, and his sentencing was again deferred.[36]

 
John Winthrop was the governor and presiding judge when Wheelwright was banished from the Massachusetts colony.

The next session of the General Court began on 2 November 1637 at the meeting house on Spring Street in Newtown.[37] Wheelwright biographer Charles Bell wrote that the purpose of the meeting was to "rid the colony of the sectaries who would not be dragooned into the abandonment of their convictions".[38] One of the first orders of business on that Monday was to deal with Wheelwright, whose case had been long deferred by Winthrop in hopes that he might finally see the error of his ways.[39] When asked if he was ready to confess his offenses, Wheelwright responded that "he was not guilty, that he had preached nothing but the truth of Christ, and he was not responsible for the application they [the other ministers] made of it".[39][40] Winthrop painted a picture of a peaceful colony before Wheelwright's arrival, and how after his fast-day sermon Boston men refused to join the Pequot War effort, Pastor Wilson was often slighted, and controversy arose in town meetings.[41] The court urged him to leave the colony voluntarily, but this he would not do, seeing such a move as being an admission of guilt.[42] Wheelwright was steadfast in his demeanor, but was not sentenced as the court adjourned for the evening.[41] On Tuesday, after further argument in the case, the court declared him guilty and read the sentence:

Mr. John Wheelwright being formerly convicted of contempt and sedition, and now justifying himselfe and his former practise, being to the disturbance of the civill peace, hee is by the Court disfranchized and banished.[40]

— Massachusetts General Court, 3 November 1637

Wheelwright was initially given until March to leave the colony, but when ordered not to preach during the interim, he refused, and was then given two weeks to depart the jurisdiction.[43][44] When asked to give security for his peaceful departure, he declined, but later realized the futility of defiance after spending a night in custody. When directed not to preach during his two weeks of preparation, he again refused, and this time the court determined that such an injunction was not worth pursuing.[45]

Exeter, Wells, and Hampton

Exeter

Following the events of the Antinomian Controversy, some families went north with Wheelwright into the Province of New Hampshire, and others went south with the Hutchinsons to Aquidneck Island. With some loyal friends, Wheelwright removed to the Piscataqua region about 50 miles (80 km) north of Boston and spent the severe winter of 1637 to 1638 at Squamscott.[5] Following the winter, he purchased the rights of the Indian sagamore of Wehanownouit and his son, and founded the town of Exeter, New Hampshire on 3 April 1638. His wife, children, and mother-in-law left Mount Wollaston to reach the embryo settlement at about this time.[46] About 20 married men were there by spring 1638, about half of whom had ties with Wheelwright back in Lincolnshire, England.[47] Almost immediately a house of worship was built with Wheelwright as the pastor. The need of a government soon became apparent, and in 1640 a combination (governing agreement) was drawn up by Wheelwright and signed by himself, the members of the church, and other area inhabitants.[48] By contrast to the turmoils that infected the settlement at Aquidneck, Wheelwright's Exeter community began smoothly.[47]

Wells

Wheelwright's stay in Exeter was short-lived, however, as the Bay Colony planted a settlement at Hampton, which included Wheelwright's purchase in its jurisdiction, and this put the banished Wheelwright in Massachusetts territory. He then began looking for a new place to settle, and two of his partners from the 1638 purchase, Samuel Hutchinson and Nicholas Needham, began prospecting the region to the northeast. On 24 September 1641 they obtained a license from Thomas Gorges, the deputy governor of Maine, for a property that became Wells, Maine.[49]

Wheelwright purchased 400 acres (1.6 km2) of land on the Ogunquit River and almost immediately built a sawmill and a house for his large family. His mother-in-law, Susanna Hutchinson, accompanied the family, and died there not long afterward.[49] A considerable number of his Exeter parishioners accompanied him to Wells so a church was built at once, and he was its pastor. The people he left behind in Exeter continued to hold Wheelwright in the highest regard, and were slow to give up their hope that he might return to them.[50]

Lifting of banishment

Wheelwright probably felt that he could make peace with Massachusetts without undue difficulty. In September 1642, while still in Exeter, an application for reconciliation was made on his behalf, to which the Bay Colony replied that he would be given safe conduct to return to Boston and petition the court. While he does not appear to have acted in that regard, Massachusetts was interested in mending fences, and without solicitation they again invited him to the General Court to be held on 10 May 1643.[51] This prompted him to communicate with some of the ministers there, and they were so pleased with his demeanor that they likely coached him on how to frame a letter to the General Court. He wrote this letter on 10 September, and it reached Boston on 4 October 1643. The court was heavily inclined to retract the order of banishment, and again he was offered safe conduct to present his case to the court. John Winthrop had even sent a personal letter to him, to which he responded.[52] In this letter Wheelwright, who may have come across as being too submissive in his first letter, now rested his claim for acquittal on justice, rather than mercy.[53] He was not willing to desert his principles, though he "made a manly concession of his error, to bring about reconciliation and peace, as was eminently becoming his sacred calling".[54] Upon receipt of Wheelwright's second letter, Winthrop recommended that he appear in court in person, but this he was not willing to do. The matter then rested until 29 May 1644 when the legislature acted without Wheelwright's physical presence, and made the following pronouncement:

that Mr. Wheelwright (upon piticular, solenme and serious acknowledgmt & concession by letter, of his evill carriages & of ye Ct's justice upon him for them) hath his banishmt taken of, & is received in as a member of this commonwealth.[54]

— Massachusetts General Court, 29 May 1644

The added italics show that the Court perverted the honest intent of his letters, and extended to him their grace based on an admission he never made.[54]

Mercurius Americanus

While this correspondence was taking place, another issue arose when, in early 1644, A Short Story of the Rise, reign and ruin of the Antinomians, Familists & Libertines that infected the Churches of New England... was published in London. The author of the work was never stated, though the Reverend Thomas Weld provided the introduction and preface. Scholars through the years have almost unanimously attributed the authorship of this work to John Winthrop, and Cotton said as much in a book he published in 1648.[55][56] It was hardly a balanced account of events, and Wheelwright's biographer Charles Bell wrote that "it may be characterized as a very bitter and partisan production, even for that day".[55]

Wheelwright received intelligence concerning this publication at about the time he received the letter lifting his banishment with its unwarranted assumptions. He was deeply stung by the tenor of this work, coming at a time when he was making serious inroads into putting the events of the controversy behind him with the help and encouragement of some influential magistrates and ministers in the Bay Colony.[57] He did not want his friends and relatives in England to get their impressions of his time in New England from this unfair account of those who had opposed him.[57] To defend his character, Wheelwright obtained the assistance of some friends to help him publish a response to Short Story. In 1645, Mercurius Americanus was published in London under the name of John Wheelwright, Jr., presumably his son, who was in England attending Jesus College, Cambridge at the time.[58] Bell says of this work, "in tone and temper, it is incontestably superior to the Short Story, and, while devoted especially to the vindication of its author's doctrinal views, agreeably to the school of polemics then in vogue, it contains some key retorts upon his detractors, and indicates a mind trained to logical acuteness, and imbued with the learning of the times".[57]

Hampton

After more than five years at Wells, Wheelwright received an invitation from the church and town of Hampton, then under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, to join the Reverend Timothy Dalton as a pastor of the church there. Without apparent hesitation he went there in the spring of 1647 and entered into a written agreement with a committee of the church and town.[59] He was installed as the minister on 12 April 1647 by some accounts,[2][7] or 24 June 1647 by another.[60] The job afforded the 55-year-old Wheelwright with a larger salary than the parish at Wells did, an important consideration given the large size of his family. No longer in a frontier setting, he was now within reach of professional brethren and laymen of culture and social refinement, more aligned with his educational background.[60]

Vindication by the court

While the town acknowledged his service with gifts of land and remuneration, their greatest gift came in a different form—a vindication from the Massachusetts General Court. The Short Story, prefaced by Reverend Weld, was largely accepted in England, and had been endorsed by the prominent Scottish divine, Reverend Samuel Rutherford. Wheelwright had probably long felt that some reparation was due for the attitudes conveyed in both the Short Story and in his release from banishment, and his Hampton townsmen were likely well aware of this.[61] On 1 May 1654 they drafted a petition to the legislature, and on 3 May the General Court made the following declaration: that they were

not willing to recall those uncomfortable differences that formerly passed betwixt this Court and Mr. Wheelwright, concerning matters of religion or practise, nor do they know what Mr. Rutherford or Mr Wells [Weld] hath charged him with, yet they judg meete to certifie that Mr. Wheelwright hath long since given such satisfaction both to the Court & elders generally as that he is now, & so for many years hath bin, an officer in ye church at Hampton wthin [sic] o[u]r jurisdiction, & yt w[i]thout offence to any so far as we know & as we are informed, he hath been a useful & psitable [sic] instrument of doinge much good in that church.[5][62]

— Massachusetts General Court, 3 May 1654

Self-published vindication

While his vindication from the Massachusetts court allowed Wheelwright to mend his relationships with his brethren in New England, he still felt stung by the accusations of the authors of the Short Story, and of Samuel Rutherford in his 1648 work, A Survey of the Spiritual Antichrist ... , and he was intent in clearing his name with people back in England.[63] In 1658 Edward Cole of London published Wheelwright's A Brief and Plain Apology, whose lengthy subtitle read "Wherein he doth vindicate himself, From al those Errors, Heresies, and Flagitious Crimes, layed to his charge by Mr. Thomas Weld, in his short story, And further Fastened upon him by Mr. Samuel Rutherford in his Survey of Antinomianisme".[64]

Wheelwright's purpose in publishing this work was so that his innocence and the unfairness of his trial be recognized, and that "his views on the process by which the saved acquired grace be accepted as correct, even orthodox".[65] He chose to emphasize seven theological issues which he divided into three "propositions," and four "theses". The three propositions consisted of the substance of Wheelwright's doctrine, which provided the basis for his fast-day sermon.[66] Following the propositions, but before the theses, are nine pages of text recounting the events and personalities of the Antinomian Controversy. Here Wheelwright says that justice was not served, and that he was accused of the political crimes of sedition and contempt, when the real reason for his banishment was doctrinal differences with the other ministers.[67] He goes on to accuse his prosecutors of engaging in "underhanded dealings," and working in secret. He had learned of these dealings through a magistrate friend (possibly William Coddington) who secretly transcribed some of these proceedings and gave them to him.[68] In this section Cotton's defense of Wheelwright is included: "I do conceive and profess that our Brother Wheelwright's Doctrine is according to God ..." (these words published by Cotton in his 1648 Way of Congregational Churches Cleared).[69] Wheelwright then wraps up this middle section by "vehemently accusing Weld of lying," and deceiving his readers.[69]

The four theses stem from the synod of 1637, and herein Wheelwright portrays himself as an orthodox minister following the lead of such early reformers as Calvin, Zanchi, the Synod of Dort, Beza, Perkins and others.[70] As his theses become repetitious of his propositions, they become abbreviated, and he returns to the accusations made in Short Story. He ends his work claiming that he was right all along, and that he was not an Antinomian.[71]

The writing of Wheelwright's Brief and Plain Apology may have commenced as early as 1644 when Short Story was published, but based on datable events the last part was written after his vindication by the Massachusetts court in 1654. In the first half of this work, Wheelwright refers to the author of Short Story as a singular person, clearly thinking that Thomas Weld had written the entire piece. Later in his Apology, however, Wheelwright refers to the authors (plural) of Short Story, realizing that Weld was not alone in writing the material.[71] Though Wheelwright mentions no author of Short Story by name other than Thomas Weld, he certainly had come to realize that the other author was John Winthrop, since the 1648 books by both Cotton and Rutherford mentioned this fact as an aside.[72] Winthrop had died in 1649 with a reputation as an effective colonial leader, respected in both England and the colonies, and there was no rational reason for Wheelwright to impugn his good name.[72]

England

 
Oliver Cromwell welcomed Wheelwright during his stay in England.

In late 1655, Wheelwright moved back to England with his family, to Alford, the home town of his wife, Mary. He had received his final salary payment from the Hampton church in the late summer, but was preaching in Alford by 12 December when a salary augmentation of £60 was to be granted "to John Wheelwright, minister of Alford, co. Lincoln, who has a great charge of children".[56] This remuneration was in addition to a £40 salary already allowed.[56]

Extraordinary events had recently transpired in England, with King Charles I executed, power in the hands of Cromwell, and the pulpits handed over to Puritans.[73] Henry Vane, who had been close to Wheelwright during the events of the Antinomian Controversy, had also reached high positions in government.[73] Vane and Cromwell had been working side by side but became estranged and hostile towards each other in the early 1650s. Vane had retired from public life while Cromwell moved into the highest position of authority in England.[74] Wheelwright was well received by Cromwell, with whom Wheelwright had gone to college, and who once described him this way: "I remember the time when I was more afraid of meeting Wheelwright at football than I have been since of meeting an army in the field, for I was infallibly sure of being tripped up by him".[3] Wheelwright wrote a letter to his church in Hampton, dated 20 April 1658, in which he described his meeting with Cromwell, writing, "I had discourse in private about the space of an hour. All his speeches seemed to me very orthodox and gracious".[75]

Wheelwright probably spent most of his time in England in Lincolnshire, and besides preaching in Alford he likely preached at Belleau, the estate of Sir Henry Vane "who had greatly noticed him since his arrival in the kingdom".[76] It is possible that Vane encouraged Wheelwright to publish his Apology.[56] After the death of Cromwell in 1658, events became less favorable for England's Puritans. After the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660, Vane was imprisoned for his role during England's Interregnum and executed in June 1662. Wheelwright returned to New England in the summer of 1662 with several other ministers who had been visiting the kingdom.[77]

Salisbury

Wheelwright's position at the church in Hampton had, as expected, been filled during his absence, but he was quickly called by residents of the neighboring town of Salisbury to be their pastor, and on 9 December 1662, when 70 years old, he was installed there.[77] This became Wheelwright's longest pastorate in his varied life, lasting nearly 17 years.[78]

 
John Wheelwright monument, Colonial Burial Ground, Salisbury, Massachusetts

Probably the most noteworthy event of his tenure in Salisbury occurred very late in his life when Major Robert Pike, a layman and prominent member of his church, collided with him during the winter of 1675 to 1676.[79] There may have been multiple reasons for the severe friction between the men, one of them being that Wheelwright was against the Quaker presence in New England, whereas Pike was more tolerant of their evangelism.[80] Another reason may have been that during the election of 1637, Pike traveled all the way from Newbury to Newtown to vote Governor Vane out of office.[80] A more recent and local cause of dissension was likely over the division of Salisbury when the town of Amesbury was created from it. Pike had made certain claims of Wheelwright, to which Wheelwright wrote a petition to the court, and on 10 March 1676 the court sided with Wheelwright.[79] Not easily rebuked, Pike enlisted support from other members of the church and town, following which Wheelwright called for intervention by civil authorities.[81]

The intervention did not occur immediately, leaving the two sides to cast aspersions at each other. While a majority of church members supported Wheelwright, a large minority were in support of Pike, and when the brethren attempted to subject Pike to discipline for misconduct, he contemptuously refused the judgment, and Wheelwright then excommunicated him from the church. In the spring of 1677 disaffected members of the church and town petitioned the court that Wheelwright was the cause of the disturbance, and that his preaching had a tendency to pit one person against another, and requested he be removed from the ministry.[82] Pike's biographer wrote in 1879 that Pike "opposed Wheelwright, and the arbitrary devices of his church polity, to the extent of incurring excommunication".[83] The legislature appointed a committee, earlier proposed by Wheelwright, and through much effort was able to establish a peace. Both parties were assigned fault in the matter, Pike was required to make a concession of his faults, and the church was prompted to return him to communion. From all that is known, the matter was resolved, and did not recur.[84]

In October 1677, Wheelwright sold his property in Lincolnshire, (purchased of Francis Levett, gentleman) to his son-in-law Richard Crispe, the husband of his youngest daughter, Sarah.[1][85] In June 1679, Wheelwright was given, following an earlier recommendation, an assistant, the Reverend George Burroughs, who later became the only minister executed during the Salem witch trials.[84]

At nearly 87 years old, Wheelwright died of apoplexy on 15 November 1679 and was buried at the East Village Graveyard, where no marker had been placed for the next 200 years.[86] The graveyard became the Colonial Burying Ground of Salisbury, and memorials have since been installed recognizing Wheelwright's historical significance.[87][failed verification]

Wheelwright deed of 1629

In 1707 a deed was found among the ancient files of York County, Maine, near where Wheelwright had brought his flock to settle in Wells.[88] The deed, dated 17 May 1629, showed Wheelwright as being one of several recipients of land from the Indian sagamores of southern New Hampshire, and a signer of the document. The deed thus implied that Wheelwright was present in New England in 1629, even though he was known to be the vicar of Bilsby in Lincolnshire at the time. While many historians declared the deed to be a forgery, Charles H. Bell, in his biography of Wheelwright in 1876, presented the case that the deed could be legitimate.[89] It was known that as the vicar of Bilsby, Wheelwright was required to send a transcript of the parish registers to a central repository once a year, and this was done in March. However, of the transcripts found with Wheelwright's signature attached, the one for March 1629 could not be found, leaving open the possibility that Wheelwright had come to New England during this time frame and then returned to England. Sometime after Bell published his book on Wheelwright, the missing transcript was found, proving almost conclusively that Wheelwright had never left England during his ministry at Bilsby, and demonstrating with certainty that the deed of 1629 was a forgery. Sometime before his death, Governor Bell acknowledged the sequence of events and that the deed was an ingenious fabrication, and stated this in an undated letter to the New England Historical and Genealogical Society.[90]

Legacy

Charles Bell, in his biography of Wheelwright, provided a mixed assessment of the character of Wheelwright, calling him contentious, lacking a conciliatory spirit, and never one to shrink from controversy. In Massachusetts he was to blame for much of the temper and spirit which he displayed, when "by a more moderate carriage he might have mitigated the bitterness of the strife ..."[91] However, Bell found him to be neither intractable nor unforgiving, and called him notably energetic, industrious and courageous. His sincere piety was never called into question, even by those with whom he differed most widely.[92]

Governor Winthrop, although he favored the proceedings against Wheelwright, said publicly that "he did love that brother's person, and did honor the gifts and graces of God in him". New England divine and historian Cotton Mather spoke of him as "being a man that had the root of the matter in him". Historian and Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson called him "a zealous minister, of character both for learning and piety" and New Hampshire historian Jeremy Belknap styled him "a gentleman of learning, piety and zeal".[75]

Wheelwright Hall at Phillips Exeter Academy, the Wheelwright room at the Exeter Town Office,[93] Wheelwright Pond in Lee, New Hampshire, site of a battle during King William's War,[94] and Wheelwright Avenue in Exeter[95] are all named for him.

Family

Wheelwright had 12 children, 10 of whom survived to adulthood. With his first wife, Mary Storre, Wheelwright had four children, three of whom survived childhood, and came to New England.[1] The oldest child of this marriage, John Wheelwright, Jr., remained in England and published a vindication of his father in 1645. With his second wife, Mary Hutchinson, Wheelwright had eight more children. The first three were baptized in England, and two survived, leaving him with five children during his immigration to New England. Five more children were born in New England, all of whom survived and married.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Noyes, Libby & Davis 1979, p. 744.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Wheelwright, John (WHLT611J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ a b c d Bell 1876, p. 2.
  4. ^ Bell 1876, p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c Dictionary of Literary Biography 2006.
  6. ^ Winship 2005, pp. 18–19.
  7. ^ a b c Noyes, Libby & Davis 1979, p. 743.
  8. ^ Hall 1990, pp. 6–12.
  9. ^ Bell 1876, p. 9.
  10. ^ Winship 2002, pp. 1–9.
  11. ^ Winship 2002, pp. 92–93.
  12. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 22.
  13. ^ Winship 2002, p. 23.
  14. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 94.
  15. ^ Winship 2002, pp. 64–82.
  16. ^ Winship 2002, pp. 83–89.
  17. ^ a b c Winship 2002, p. 111.
  18. ^ Anderson 2003, p. 482.
  19. ^ a b c Hall 1990, p. 6.
  20. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 11.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Hall 1990, p. 7.
  22. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 114.
  23. ^ Winship 2002, p. 116.
  24. ^ Winship 2002, p. 120.
  25. ^ a b c d Hall 1990, p. 8.
  26. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 121.
  27. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 122.
  28. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 123.
  29. ^ Winship 2002, p. 124.
  30. ^ a b c Winship 2002, p. 125.
  31. ^ Winship 2002, p. 127.
  32. ^ Hall 1990, p. 153.
  33. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 20.
  34. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 128.
  35. ^ a b Hall 1990, p. 9.
  36. ^ Bell 1876, p. 23.
  37. ^ Battis 1962, p. 180.
  38. ^ Bell 1876, pp. 27–28.
  39. ^ a b Battis 1962, p. 182.
  40. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 28.
  41. ^ a b Battis 1962, p. 183.
  42. ^ Winship 2002, p. 168.
  43. ^ Winship 2002, p. 169.
  44. ^ Battis 1962, pp. 184–5.
  45. ^ Bell 1876, p. 29.
  46. ^ Bell 1876, p. 36.
  47. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 214.
  48. ^ Bell 1876, p. 39.
  49. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 44.
  50. ^ Bell 1876, p. 46.
  51. ^ Bell 1876, p. 47.
  52. ^ Bell 1876, p. 48.
  53. ^ Bell 1876, p. 49.
  54. ^ a b c Bell 1876, p. 51.
  55. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 52.
  56. ^ a b c d Bush 1991, p. 39.
  57. ^ a b c Bell 1876, p. 53.
  58. ^ Bush 1991, p. 42.
  59. ^ Bell 1876, p. 54.
  60. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 57.
  61. ^ Bell 1876, p. 58.
  62. ^ Bell 1876, p. 59.
  63. ^ Bush 1991, pp. 22–25.
  64. ^ Bush 1991, pp. 24–25.
  65. ^ Bush 1991, p. 27.
  66. ^ Bush 1991, p. 28.
  67. ^ Bush 1991, pp. 30–31.
  68. ^ Bush 1991, p. 31.
  69. ^ a b Bush 1991, p. 33.
  70. ^ Bush 1991, p. 34.
  71. ^ a b Bush 1991, p. 38.
  72. ^ a b Bush 1991, p. 40.
  73. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 60.
  74. ^ Bell 1876, p. 61.
  75. ^ a b Dow 1893.
  76. ^ Bell 1876, p. 63.
  77. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 64.
  78. ^ Bell 1876, p. 65.
  79. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 71.
  80. ^ a b Winship 2002, p. 240.
  81. ^ Bell 1876, p. 72.
  82. ^ Bell 1876, pp. 73–4.
  83. ^ Pike 1879, pp. 10–11.
  84. ^ a b Bell 1876, p. 74.
  85. ^ Suffolk County, Massachusetts 1899, pp. 215-217.
  86. ^ Bell 1876, p. 75.
  87. ^ Find-a-grave 2006.
  88. ^ Bell 1876, p. 80.
  89. ^ Bell 1876, pp. 80–130.
  90. ^ Bell c. 1890, pp. 1–3.
  91. ^ Bell 1876, p. 76.
  92. ^ Bell 1876, pp. 76–77.
  93. ^ Exeter Town Office 2012.
  94. ^ Smith 1880, p. 187.
  95. ^ Wheelwright Avenue.

Bibliography

  • Anderson, Robert Charles (2003). The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England 1634–1635. Vol. III G-H. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society. ISBN 0-88082-158-2.
  • Battis, Emery (1962). Saints and Sectaries: Anne Hutchinson and the Antinomian Controversy in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-0863-4.
  • Bell, Charles H. (1876). John Wheelwright. Boston: printed for the Prince Society.
  • Bell, Charles H. (c. 1890), "The Wheelwright Deed of 1629", in Bell, Charles H. (ed.), John Wheelwright, Boston: Prince Society, appendix 1–3
  • Bush, Sargent Jr. (March 1991). "John Wheelwright's Forgotten Apology: The Last Word in the Antinomian Controversy". The New England Quarterly. 64 (1): 22–45. doi:10.2307/365896. ISBN 978-1-1503-9243-6. JSTOR 365896.
  • Dow, Joseph (1893). History of Hampton, N.H. Retrieved 16 September 2012 – via Lane Memorial Library.
  • Hall, David D. (1990). The Antinomian Controversy, 1636–1638, A Documentary History. Durham [NC] and London: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-1091-4.
  • Noyes, Sybil; Libby, Charles Thornton; Davis, Walter Goodwin (1979). Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8063-0502-8.
  • Pike, James Shepherd (1879). The New Puritan, New England two hundred years ago, some account of the life of Robert Pike ... New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers.
  • Smith, Samuel Francis (1880). History of Newton, Massachusetts. Boston: The American Logotype Company. p. 762. Wheelwright Pond.
  • Suffolk County, Massachusetts (1899). Suffolk Deeds. Liber X. Boston: Municipal Printing Office.
  • Winship, Michael Paul (2002). Making Heretics: Militant Protestantism and Free Grace in Massachusetts, 1636–1641. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08943-4.
  • Winship, Michael Paul (2005). The Times and Trials of Anne Hutchinson: Puritans Divided. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-1380-3.

Online sources

  • Dictionary of Literary Biography on John Wheelwright. Book Rags. 2006. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  • . Quinta.house.gov. 20 January 2012. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  • "Wheelwright, John (WHLT611J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  • "Rev John Wheelwright". Find-a-grave. 18 March 2006. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
  • "Wheelwright Avenue". Realtor.com. Retrieved 3 July 2012.

Further reading

  • Jefferds, Jerome S. (1982). The Jefferds Family. ASIN B0006EJR36.
  • Clark, C. C. (1938). The Wheelwright Family. The Brick Store Museum.

External links

  • Historical background of the Wheelwright portrait
  • Great Migration Newsletter
  • Biography at Ancestry.com
  • "Wheelwright, John" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

john, wheelwright, american, poet, john, brooks, wheelwright, 1592, 1679, puritan, clergyman, england, america, noted, being, banished, from, massachusetts, colony, during, antinomian, controversy, subsequently, establishing, town, exeter, hampshire, born, lin. For the American poet see John Brooks Wheelwright John Wheelwright c 1592 1679 was a Puritan clergyman in England and America noted for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter New Hampshire Born in Lincolnshire England he graduated from Sidney Sussex College Cambridge Ordained in 1619 he became the vicar of Bilsby Lincolnshire until he was removed for simony The ReverendJohn WheelwrightReverend John Wheelwright c 1677Bornc 1592Saleby Lincolnshire EnglandDied15 November 1679Salisbury MassachusettsResting placeColonial Burying Ground SalisburyEducationSidney Sussex College Cambridge B A 1614 5 M A 1618OccupationClergymanSpouse s 1 Mary Storre 2 Mary HutchinsonChildren 1st wife John Thomas William Susannah 2nd wife Katherine Mary Elizabeth Mary Samuel Rebecca Hannah Sarah 1 ParentRobert WheelwrightSignatureLeaving for New England in 1636 he was welcomed in Boston where his brother in law s wife Anne Hutchinson was beginning to attract negative attention for her religious outspokenness Soon he and Hutchinson accused the majority of the colony s ministers and magistrates of espousing a covenant of works As this controversy reached a peak Hutchinson and Wheelwright were banished from the colony Wheelwright went north with a group of followers during the harsh winter of 1637 1638 and in April 1638 established the town of Exeter in what would become the Province of New Hampshire Wheelwright s stay in Exeter lasted only a few years because Massachusetts activated an earlier claim on the lands there forcing the banished Wheelwright to leave He went further east to Wells Maine where he was living when his order of banishment was retracted He returned to Massachusetts to preach at Hampton later part of the Province of New Hampshire where in 1654 his parishioners helped him get the complete vindication that he sought from the Massachusetts Court for the events of 17 years earlier In 1655 Wheelwright moved back to England with his family and preached near his home in Lincolnshire While in England he was entertained by two of his powerful friends Oliver Cromwell who had become Lord Protector and Sir Henry Vane who occupied key positions in the government Following Cromwell s death the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660 and Vane s execution Wheelwright returned to New England to become the minister in Salisbury Massachusetts where he spent the remainder of his life He was characterized as being contentious and unbending but also forgiving energetic and courageous His sincere piety was never called into question even by those whose opinions differed greatly from his Contents 1 Early life 2 Massachusetts 2 1 Theological views 2 2 Antinomian Controversy 2 2 1 Fast day sermon 2 2 2 March trial 2 2 3 May 1637 election 2 2 4 Order of banishment 3 Exeter Wells and Hampton 3 1 Exeter 3 2 Wells 3 2 1 Lifting of banishment 3 2 2 Mercurius Americanus 3 3 Hampton 3 3 1 Vindication by the court 3 3 2 Self published vindication 4 England 5 Salisbury 6 Wheelwright deed of 1629 7 Legacy 8 Family 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditJohn Wheelwright born about 1592 was the son of Robert Wheelwright of Cumberworth and Saleby in Lincolnshire England 2 When his father died in 1612 Wheelwright administered the estate and was also the heir to some property in Lincolnshire 3 His grandfather also named John Wheelwright died in 1611 at Mumby 4 In 1611 Wheelwright entered Sidney Sussex College Cambridge as a sizar receiving his B A in 1614 5 and his M A in 1618 2 At Cambridge University Wheelwright had noteworthy athletic abilities and the American Puritan Cotton Mather born 1663 wrote when Wheelwright was a young spark at the University he was noted for more than an ordinary stroke at wrestling 3 A college friend of Wheelwright was Oliver Cromwell 3 Holy Trinity Church Bilsby where Wheelwright was vicar Wheelwright was ordained a deacon on 19 December 1619 and the following day was ordained a priest in the Church of England 2 On 8 November 1621 he married Mary Storre the daughter of Thomas Storre who was the vicar of Bilsby 1 2 In April 1623 following the death of his father in law Wheelwright was instituted as the vicar of Bilsby 2 5 His first wife died in 1629 and was buried in Bilsby on 18 May of that year 1 He soon thereafter married Mary Hutchinson a daughter of Edward Hutchinson of Alford and a sister of William Hutchinson whose wife was Anne Hutchinson 2 After nearly ten years as vicar Wheelwright was suspended in 1633 following his attempt to sell his Bilsby ministry back to its patron to get funds to travel to New England Instead of procuring the necessary funds he was convicted of simony selling church offices and removed from office 6 After his removal from Bilsby he was likely in Laceby in June 1633 where his daughter Elizabeth was baptized 7 He then preached at Belleau Lincolnshire 2 but was soon silenced by the Church authorities for his Puritan opinions citation needed Wheelwright left England in 1636 with his second wife her mother Susanna Hutchinson and his five living children 1 Massachusetts EditWheelwright arrived in Boston in the Massachusetts Bay Colony on 26 May 1636 and was admitted to the Boston church on 12 June 1636 with his wife Mary and her mother Susanna Hutchinson 2 7 During the year of his arrival several of the Puritan ministers of Massachusetts had taken notice of the religious gatherings that his relative by marriage Anne Hutchinson had been holding at her house and they also began having questions about the preaching of John Cotton whose Boston parishioners seemed to them to be harboring some theologically unsound opinions 8 Wheelwright was a strong advocate of Cotton s theology as was Hutchinson but their views differed from those of the majority of the colony s ministers and they soon became embroiled in a major clash over this issue 9 10 Theological views Edit After his arrival in New England Wheelwright preached primarily to the Boston settlers who owned land at Mount Wollaston still considered a part of Boston but located about ten miles south of the Boston meetinghouse Within months someone had alerted magistrate John Winthrop a lay person in the Boston church that Wheelwright was harboring familist and antinomian doctrines 11 Familism the theology of the Family of Love involved one s perfect union with God under the Holy Spirit coupled with freedom from both sin and the responsibility for it 12 Antinomianism or being freed from moral law under the covenant of grace was a form of familism 13 Most of the New England Puritan ministers were adamantly opposed to these theological doctrines seeing them as the cause of the violent and bloody ravages of the anabaptists in Germany during the Munster Rebellion of the 1530s 12 When confronted with accusations of familism Wheelwright denied preaching such a doctrine While Winthrop and many of the colony s ministers may have viewed Wheelwright as a familist Cotton saw him as an orthodox minister 14 Antinomian Controversy Edit Main article Antinomian Controversy As early as spring 1636 the minister of Newtown later renamed Cambridge Thomas Shepard began a correspondence with Boston minister John Cotton and in his letters Shepard notified Cotton of his concern about Cotton s theology and of some strange opinions circulating among the members of the Boston church Cotton who advocated that God s free grace was the only path to salvation differed from all of the colony s other ministers who felt that sanctification works was a necessary ingredient to salvation 15 When Wheelwright arrived in the colony he became a firm ally of Cotton in these theological differences Opinions that were first shared in private correspondence soon began to find their way into Shepard s sermons to his Newtown congregation 16 This pulpit aggression did not go unnoticed by Wheelwright and soon his own sermons began taking a critical view of the covenant of works being preached by Shepard 17 Anne Hutchinson related to Wheelwright by marriage was one of the first to be blamed for the colony s difficulties during the Antinomian Controversy Theological tension was mounting in the colony but it wasn t until October 1636 when it became noticeable enough for Winthrop to record an entry in his journal On or shortly after 21 October 1636 he noted the rising disunity but instead of pointing fingers at one of the godly ministers he instead put the blame on Wheelwright s sister in law writing One Mrs Hutchinson a member of the church at Boston a woman of a ready wit and a bold spirit brought over with her two dangerous errors 1 That the person of the Holy Ghost dwells in a justified person 2 That no sanctification can help to evidence to us our justification 18 Late in October the colony s ministers confronted the question of religious opinions directly and had a conference in private with Cotton Hutchinson and Wheelwright 19 The outcome of this meeting was favorable and the parties were in agreement Cotton whose theology rested on a covenant of grace gave satisfaction to the other ministers that sanctification a covenant of works did help in finding grace in the eyes of God and Wheelwright agreed as well 19 However the effects of the conference were short lived because a majority of the members of the Boston church Cotton s parishioners held the free grace ideas strongly and they wanted Wheelwright to become the church s second pastor behind Cotton The church already had another pastor Reverend John Wilson who was unsympathetic to the free grace advocates Wilson was a friend of Winthrop who was a layman in the church and it was Winthrop who took advantage of a rule requiring unanimity in a church vote to thwart Wheelwright s appointment 19 Though Winthrop thought reverendly of Wheelwright s talents and piety he felt that he was apt to raise doubtful disputations and he could not consent to choose him to that place 20 This was Winthrop s way of suggesting that Wheelwright maintained familist doctrines 14 In December 1636 the ministers met once again but this meeting did not produce agreement and Cotton warned about the question of sanctification becoming essentially a covenant of works 21 When questioned directly Hutchinson accused the other ministers of preaching works and not grace but did this only in private 21 These theological differences had begun to take their toll in the political aspects of the colony and the Massachusetts governor Henry Vane who was a strong free grace advocate announced his resignation to a special session of the deputies 21 While citing urgent matters back in England as being his reason for stepping down when prodded he broke down blurting out his concern that God s judgment would come upon us for these differences and dissensions 21 The members of the Boston church successfully induced Vane to withdraw his resignation while the General Court began to debate who was responsible for the colony s troubles 21 The General Court like the remainder of the colony was deeply divided and called for a general fast to take place on 19 January in hopes that such repentance would restore peace 21 Fast day sermon Edit During the appointed day of fasting on 19 January 1637 John Cotton preached in the morning focusing his sermon on the need for pacification and reconciliation 17 Wheelwright then spoke in the afternoon and while in the eyes of a lay person his sermon may have appeared benign and non threatening to the Puritan clergy it was censurable and incited mischief 20 Historian Michael Winship more pointedly called it a bitterly uncharitable sermon and the most notorious Boston contribution to the escalation of pulpit rhetoric 17 There was no immediate reaction to the sermon other than Winthrop noting in his journal that the ministers were now disputing the doctrinal issues in their pulpits 22 He also noted that Cotton alone was of one party against the other ministers not even thinking of Wheelwright as being a player in the developing controversy 22 As word of Wheelwright s sermon circulated however Winthrop was made more aware of its incendiary character and he then wrote that Wheelwright inveighed against all that walked in a covenant of works and concerning those who preached works he called them antichrists and stirred up the people against them with much bitterness and vehemency 21 The free grace advocates on the other hand were encouraged by the sermon and intensified their crusade against the legalists among the clergy During church services and lectures they publicly asked the ministers about their doctrines which disagreed with their own beliefs 21 and Henry Vane in particular became active in challenging the doctrines of the colony s divines 23 March trial Edit During the next two months the other ministers made several doctrinal charges against Wheelwright noting not only his fast day sermon but also his sermons at Mount Wollaston 24 When the General Court next met on 9 March Wheelwright was called upon to answer for his fast day sermon 25 There were 12 magistrates and 33 deputies sitting on the court at the time and of the magistrates Henry Vane William Coddington and Richard Dummer were strong Wheelwright partisans Four of the other magistrates John Humphrey Simon Bradstreet Richard Bellingham and John Winthrop Jr were all known for their tolerance of religious diversity compared with their fellow magistrates 26 It was the deputies who led the case against Wheelwright and the charge they brought against him was preaching on the Fast Day a Heretical and Seditious sermon tending to mutiny and disturbance 26 After more charges and countercharges Wheelwright presented a transcript of his fast day sermon to the court and was then dismissed for the day Following his departure his supporters presented the court with a petition signed by more than forty people challenging the court s right to try a case of conscience before it was heard by the church The petition was rejected 27 Governor Henry Vane strongly supported Wheelwright during the colony s difficulties from 1636 to 1637 The next morning Wheelwright was given a private session with the court at which time he asked who his accusers were The court s answer was that his sermon was the accuser 27 That afternoon the court was opened to the general public and the colony s ministers were also present 28 One of the lines of attack used against Wheelwright was identifying his doctrine and that of Cotton as being False Doctrine because of its difference from that of all of the other New England ministers Cotton s angry response to this was Brother Wheelwright s Doctrine was according to God letting the court know that by going after Wheelwright they were going after him as well and this essentially ended that line of attack 28 After some additional ineffective prosecutorial attempts the court hit on the idea of asking the colony s ministers if they felt they were attacked by Wheelwright s sermon Following an evening to discuss this among themselves the ministers returned to the court the next day With Cotton dissenting the other ministers said that they did walk in and teach what Wheelwright called a covenant of works and therefore they were the Antichrists alluded to in the sermon 29 To their credit the ministers presented Wheelwright with a means to gracefully back down from the ordeal and this greatly impressed Winthrop who noted their humanity and respect 30 Wheelwright was intransigent however and not interested in any reconciliation so the court continued with its course Coddington later noted that the priests got two of the magistrates on their side and so got the major part with them 30 With the deputies then casting their votes Wheelwright was declared guilty of contempt amp sedition for having purposely set himself to kindle and increase bitterness within the colony 25 30 Though sentencing was deferred to the next court the controversy now became a political issue 31 Wheelwright s conviction did not pass without a fight and his friends protested formally Governor Vane and some of the magistrates and deputies who did not concur with the ruling wanted their dissenting opinion entered into the court record but the court refused They then tendered a protest which was also rejected 32 33 For this reason a remonstrance was prepared penned by William Aspinwall but the initial version was so belligerent that further edits had to be made to tone down the rhetoric Even the final version veered dangerously away from being deferential suggesting that the court was meddling against the prophets of God thus inviting the Lord s retribution 34 However the resentment over Wheelwright s conviction was so high that over 60 men signed the document Those who signed were not of little consequence either most of them were freemen a large number of them held office or were among the colony s wealthier inhabitants and most had been in the colony more than three years 34 This petition became the pretext for severe penalties later inflicted upon the signatories 33 May 1637 election Edit As the political aspects of the controversy intensified Governor Vane was unable to prevent the Court from holding its next session in Newtown where the orthodox party of most of the magistrates and ministers stood a better chance of winning if the elections were held away from Boston 25 During election day 17 May 1637 Governor Vane wanted to read a petition in defense of Wheelwright but Winthrop and his party insisted the elections take place first and then the petition be heard 25 Following clamor and debate the majority of freemen wanting the election to take place went with Winthrop to one side of the Newtown common and elected him governor in place of Vane After this additional measures were taken against the free grace advocates and in the election of magistrates those who supported Wheelwright were left out 35 In addition the Court passed a law that no strangers could be received within the colony for longer than three weeks without the Court s permission Winthrop declared this law as being necessary to prevent new immigrants from being added to the number of his free grace opponents 35 Order of banishment Edit When the court met again in August 1637 Wheelwright was informed that if he would retract his obnoxious opinions he might expect favor To this he responded that if he were guilty of sedition he ought to be put to death and if the court intended to sentence him he should appeal to the king No further action was taken and his sentencing was again deferred 36 John Winthrop was the governor and presiding judge when Wheelwright was banished from the Massachusetts colony The next session of the General Court began on 2 November 1637 at the meeting house on Spring Street in Newtown 37 Wheelwright biographer Charles Bell wrote that the purpose of the meeting was to rid the colony of the sectaries who would not be dragooned into the abandonment of their convictions 38 One of the first orders of business on that Monday was to deal with Wheelwright whose case had been long deferred by Winthrop in hopes that he might finally see the error of his ways 39 When asked if he was ready to confess his offenses Wheelwright responded that he was not guilty that he had preached nothing but the truth of Christ and he was not responsible for the application they the other ministers made of it 39 40 Winthrop painted a picture of a peaceful colony before Wheelwright s arrival and how after his fast day sermon Boston men refused to join the Pequot War effort Pastor Wilson was often slighted and controversy arose in town meetings 41 The court urged him to leave the colony voluntarily but this he would not do seeing such a move as being an admission of guilt 42 Wheelwright was steadfast in his demeanor but was not sentenced as the court adjourned for the evening 41 On Tuesday after further argument in the case the court declared him guilty and read the sentence Mr John Wheelwright being formerly convicted of contempt and sedition and now justifying himselfe and his former practise being to the disturbance of the civill peace hee is by the Court disfranchized and banished 40 Massachusetts General Court 3 November 1637 Wheelwright was initially given until March to leave the colony but when ordered not to preach during the interim he refused and was then given two weeks to depart the jurisdiction 43 44 When asked to give security for his peaceful departure he declined but later realized the futility of defiance after spending a night in custody When directed not to preach during his two weeks of preparation he again refused and this time the court determined that such an injunction was not worth pursuing 45 Exeter Wells and Hampton EditExeter Edit Following the events of the Antinomian Controversy some families went north with Wheelwright into the Province of New Hampshire and others went south with the Hutchinsons to Aquidneck Island With some loyal friends Wheelwright removed to the Piscataqua region about 50 miles 80 km north of Boston and spent the severe winter of 1637 to 1638 at Squamscott 5 Following the winter he purchased the rights of the Indian sagamore of Wehanownouit and his son and founded the town of Exeter New Hampshire on 3 April 1638 His wife children and mother in law left Mount Wollaston to reach the embryo settlement at about this time 46 About 20 married men were there by spring 1638 about half of whom had ties with Wheelwright back in Lincolnshire England 47 Almost immediately a house of worship was built with Wheelwright as the pastor The need of a government soon became apparent and in 1640 a combination governing agreement was drawn up by Wheelwright and signed by himself the members of the church and other area inhabitants 48 By contrast to the turmoils that infected the settlement at Aquidneck Wheelwright s Exeter community began smoothly 47 Wells Edit Wheelwright s stay in Exeter was short lived however as the Bay Colony planted a settlement at Hampton which included Wheelwright s purchase in its jurisdiction and this put the banished Wheelwright in Massachusetts territory He then began looking for a new place to settle and two of his partners from the 1638 purchase Samuel Hutchinson and Nicholas Needham began prospecting the region to the northeast On 24 September 1641 they obtained a license from Thomas Gorges the deputy governor of Maine for a property that became Wells Maine 49 Wheelwright purchased 400 acres 1 6 km2 of land on the Ogunquit River and almost immediately built a sawmill and a house for his large family His mother in law Susanna Hutchinson accompanied the family and died there not long afterward 49 A considerable number of his Exeter parishioners accompanied him to Wells so a church was built at once and he was its pastor The people he left behind in Exeter continued to hold Wheelwright in the highest regard and were slow to give up their hope that he might return to them 50 Lifting of banishment Edit Wheelwright probably felt that he could make peace with Massachusetts without undue difficulty In September 1642 while still in Exeter an application for reconciliation was made on his behalf to which the Bay Colony replied that he would be given safe conduct to return to Boston and petition the court While he does not appear to have acted in that regard Massachusetts was interested in mending fences and without solicitation they again invited him to the General Court to be held on 10 May 1643 51 This prompted him to communicate with some of the ministers there and they were so pleased with his demeanor that they likely coached him on how to frame a letter to the General Court He wrote this letter on 10 September and it reached Boston on 4 October 1643 The court was heavily inclined to retract the order of banishment and again he was offered safe conduct to present his case to the court John Winthrop had even sent a personal letter to him to which he responded 52 In this letter Wheelwright who may have come across as being too submissive in his first letter now rested his claim for acquittal on justice rather than mercy 53 He was not willing to desert his principles though he made a manly concession of his error to bring about reconciliation and peace as was eminently becoming his sacred calling 54 Upon receipt of Wheelwright s second letter Winthrop recommended that he appear in court in person but this he was not willing to do The matter then rested until 29 May 1644 when the legislature acted without Wheelwright s physical presence and made the following pronouncement that Mr Wheelwright upon piticular solenme and serious acknowledgmt amp concession by letter of his evill carriages amp of ye Ct s justice upon him for them hath his banishmt taken of amp is received in as a member of this commonwealth 54 Massachusetts General Court 29 May 1644 The added italics show that the Court perverted the honest intent of his letters and extended to him their grace based on an admission he never made 54 Mercurius Americanus Edit While this correspondence was taking place another issue arose when in early 1644 A Short Story of the Rise reign and ruin of the Antinomians Familists amp Libertines that infected the Churches of New England was published in London The author of the work was never stated though the Reverend Thomas Weld provided the introduction and preface Scholars through the years have almost unanimously attributed the authorship of this work to John Winthrop and Cotton said as much in a book he published in 1648 55 56 It was hardly a balanced account of events and Wheelwright s biographer Charles Bell wrote that it may be characterized as a very bitter and partisan production even for that day 55 Wheelwright received intelligence concerning this publication at about the time he received the letter lifting his banishment with its unwarranted assumptions He was deeply stung by the tenor of this work coming at a time when he was making serious inroads into putting the events of the controversy behind him with the help and encouragement of some influential magistrates and ministers in the Bay Colony 57 He did not want his friends and relatives in England to get their impressions of his time in New England from this unfair account of those who had opposed him 57 To defend his character Wheelwright obtained the assistance of some friends to help him publish a response to Short Story In 1645 Mercurius Americanus was published in London under the name of John Wheelwright Jr presumably his son who was in England attending Jesus College Cambridge at the time 58 Bell says of this work in tone and temper it is incontestably superior to the Short Story and while devoted especially to the vindication of its author s doctrinal views agreeably to the school of polemics then in vogue it contains some key retorts upon his detractors and indicates a mind trained to logical acuteness and imbued with the learning of the times 57 Hampton Edit After more than five years at Wells Wheelwright received an invitation from the church and town of Hampton then under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts to join the Reverend Timothy Dalton as a pastor of the church there Without apparent hesitation he went there in the spring of 1647 and entered into a written agreement with a committee of the church and town 59 He was installed as the minister on 12 April 1647 by some accounts 2 7 or 24 June 1647 by another 60 The job afforded the 55 year old Wheelwright with a larger salary than the parish at Wells did an important consideration given the large size of his family No longer in a frontier setting he was now within reach of professional brethren and laymen of culture and social refinement more aligned with his educational background 60 Vindication by the court Edit While the town acknowledged his service with gifts of land and remuneration their greatest gift came in a different form a vindication from the Massachusetts General Court The Short Story prefaced by Reverend Weld was largely accepted in England and had been endorsed by the prominent Scottish divine Reverend Samuel Rutherford Wheelwright had probably long felt that some reparation was due for the attitudes conveyed in both the Short Story and in his release from banishment and his Hampton townsmen were likely well aware of this 61 On 1 May 1654 they drafted a petition to the legislature and on 3 May the General Court made the following declaration that they were not willing to recall those uncomfortable differences that formerly passed betwixt this Court and Mr Wheelwright concerning matters of religion or practise nor do they know what Mr Rutherford or Mr Wells Weld hath charged him with yet they judg meete to certifie that Mr Wheelwright hath long since given such satisfaction both to the Court amp elders generally as that he is now amp so for many years hath bin an officer in ye church at Hampton wthin sic o u r jurisdiction amp yt w i thout offence to any so far as we know amp as we are informed he hath been a useful amp psitable sic instrument of doinge much good in that church 5 62 Massachusetts General Court 3 May 1654 Self published vindication Edit While his vindication from the Massachusetts court allowed Wheelwright to mend his relationships with his brethren in New England he still felt stung by the accusations of the authors of the Short Story and of Samuel Rutherford in his 1648 work A Survey of the Spiritual Antichrist and he was intent in clearing his name with people back in England 63 In 1658 Edward Cole of London published Wheelwright s A Brief and Plain Apology whose lengthy subtitle read Wherein he doth vindicate himself From al those Errors Heresies and Flagitious Crimes layed to his charge by Mr Thomas Weld in his short story And further Fastened upon him by Mr Samuel Rutherford in his Survey of Antinomianisme 64 Wheelwright s purpose in publishing this work was so that his innocence and the unfairness of his trial be recognized and that his views on the process by which the saved acquired grace be accepted as correct even orthodox 65 He chose to emphasize seven theological issues which he divided into three propositions and four theses The three propositions consisted of the substance of Wheelwright s doctrine which provided the basis for his fast day sermon 66 Following the propositions but before the theses are nine pages of text recounting the events and personalities of the Antinomian Controversy Here Wheelwright says that justice was not served and that he was accused of the political crimes of sedition and contempt when the real reason for his banishment was doctrinal differences with the other ministers 67 He goes on to accuse his prosecutors of engaging in underhanded dealings and working in secret He had learned of these dealings through a magistrate friend possibly William Coddington who secretly transcribed some of these proceedings and gave them to him 68 In this section Cotton s defense of Wheelwright is included I do conceive and profess that our Brother Wheelwright s Doctrine is according to God these words published by Cotton in his 1648 Way of Congregational Churches Cleared 69 Wheelwright then wraps up this middle section by vehemently accusing Weld of lying and deceiving his readers 69 The four theses stem from the synod of 1637 and herein Wheelwright portrays himself as an orthodox minister following the lead of such early reformers as Calvin Zanchi the Synod of Dort Beza Perkins and others 70 As his theses become repetitious of his propositions they become abbreviated and he returns to the accusations made in Short Story He ends his work claiming that he was right all along and that he was not an Antinomian 71 The writing of Wheelwright s Brief and Plain Apology may have commenced as early as 1644 when Short Story was published but based on datable events the last part was written after his vindication by the Massachusetts court in 1654 In the first half of this work Wheelwright refers to the author of Short Story as a singular person clearly thinking that Thomas Weld had written the entire piece Later in his Apology however Wheelwright refers to the authors plural of Short Story realizing that Weld was not alone in writing the material 71 Though Wheelwright mentions no author of Short Story by name other than Thomas Weld he certainly had come to realize that the other author was John Winthrop since the 1648 books by both Cotton and Rutherford mentioned this fact as an aside 72 Winthrop had died in 1649 with a reputation as an effective colonial leader respected in both England and the colonies and there was no rational reason for Wheelwright to impugn his good name 72 England Edit Oliver Cromwell welcomed Wheelwright during his stay in England In late 1655 Wheelwright moved back to England with his family to Alford the home town of his wife Mary He had received his final salary payment from the Hampton church in the late summer but was preaching in Alford by 12 December when a salary augmentation of 60 was to be granted to John Wheelwright minister of Alford co Lincoln who has a great charge of children 56 This remuneration was in addition to a 40 salary already allowed 56 Extraordinary events had recently transpired in England with King Charles I executed power in the hands of Cromwell and the pulpits handed over to Puritans 73 Henry Vane who had been close to Wheelwright during the events of the Antinomian Controversy had also reached high positions in government 73 Vane and Cromwell had been working side by side but became estranged and hostile towards each other in the early 1650s Vane had retired from public life while Cromwell moved into the highest position of authority in England 74 Wheelwright was well received by Cromwell with whom Wheelwright had gone to college and who once described him this way I remember the time when I was more afraid of meeting Wheelwright at football than I have been since of meeting an army in the field for I was infallibly sure of being tripped up by him 3 Wheelwright wrote a letter to his church in Hampton dated 20 April 1658 in which he described his meeting with Cromwell writing I had discourse in private about the space of an hour All his speeches seemed to me very orthodox and gracious 75 Wheelwright probably spent most of his time in England in Lincolnshire and besides preaching in Alford he likely preached at Belleau the estate of Sir Henry Vane who had greatly noticed him since his arrival in the kingdom 76 It is possible that Vane encouraged Wheelwright to publish his Apology 56 After the death of Cromwell in 1658 events became less favorable for England s Puritans After the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660 Vane was imprisoned for his role during England s Interregnum and executed in June 1662 Wheelwright returned to New England in the summer of 1662 with several other ministers who had been visiting the kingdom 77 Salisbury EditWheelwright s position at the church in Hampton had as expected been filled during his absence but he was quickly called by residents of the neighboring town of Salisbury to be their pastor and on 9 December 1662 when 70 years old he was installed there 77 This became Wheelwright s longest pastorate in his varied life lasting nearly 17 years 78 John Wheelwright monument Colonial Burial Ground Salisbury Massachusetts Probably the most noteworthy event of his tenure in Salisbury occurred very late in his life when Major Robert Pike a layman and prominent member of his church collided with him during the winter of 1675 to 1676 79 There may have been multiple reasons for the severe friction between the men one of them being that Wheelwright was against the Quaker presence in New England whereas Pike was more tolerant of their evangelism 80 Another reason may have been that during the election of 1637 Pike traveled all the way from Newbury to Newtown to vote Governor Vane out of office 80 A more recent and local cause of dissension was likely over the division of Salisbury when the town of Amesbury was created from it Pike had made certain claims of Wheelwright to which Wheelwright wrote a petition to the court and on 10 March 1676 the court sided with Wheelwright 79 Not easily rebuked Pike enlisted support from other members of the church and town following which Wheelwright called for intervention by civil authorities 81 The intervention did not occur immediately leaving the two sides to cast aspersions at each other While a majority of church members supported Wheelwright a large minority were in support of Pike and when the brethren attempted to subject Pike to discipline for misconduct he contemptuously refused the judgment and Wheelwright then excommunicated him from the church In the spring of 1677 disaffected members of the church and town petitioned the court that Wheelwright was the cause of the disturbance and that his preaching had a tendency to pit one person against another and requested he be removed from the ministry 82 Pike s biographer wrote in 1879 that Pike opposed Wheelwright and the arbitrary devices of his church polity to the extent of incurring excommunication 83 The legislature appointed a committee earlier proposed by Wheelwright and through much effort was able to establish a peace Both parties were assigned fault in the matter Pike was required to make a concession of his faults and the church was prompted to return him to communion From all that is known the matter was resolved and did not recur 84 In October 1677 Wheelwright sold his property in Lincolnshire purchased of Francis Levett gentleman to his son in law Richard Crispe the husband of his youngest daughter Sarah 1 85 In June 1679 Wheelwright was given following an earlier recommendation an assistant the Reverend George Burroughs who later became the only minister executed during the Salem witch trials 84 At nearly 87 years old Wheelwright died of apoplexy on 15 November 1679 and was buried at the East Village Graveyard where no marker had been placed for the next 200 years 86 The graveyard became the Colonial Burying Ground of Salisbury and memorials have since been installed recognizing Wheelwright s historical significance 87 failed verification Wheelwright deed of 1629 EditIn 1707 a deed was found among the ancient files of York County Maine near where Wheelwright had brought his flock to settle in Wells 88 The deed dated 17 May 1629 showed Wheelwright as being one of several recipients of land from the Indian sagamores of southern New Hampshire and a signer of the document The deed thus implied that Wheelwright was present in New England in 1629 even though he was known to be the vicar of Bilsby in Lincolnshire at the time While many historians declared the deed to be a forgery Charles H Bell in his biography of Wheelwright in 1876 presented the case that the deed could be legitimate 89 It was known that as the vicar of Bilsby Wheelwright was required to send a transcript of the parish registers to a central repository once a year and this was done in March However of the transcripts found with Wheelwright s signature attached the one for March 1629 could not be found leaving open the possibility that Wheelwright had come to New England during this time frame and then returned to England Sometime after Bell published his book on Wheelwright the missing transcript was found proving almost conclusively that Wheelwright had never left England during his ministry at Bilsby and demonstrating with certainty that the deed of 1629 was a forgery Sometime before his death Governor Bell acknowledged the sequence of events and that the deed was an ingenious fabrication and stated this in an undated letter to the New England Historical and Genealogical Society 90 Legacy EditCharles Bell in his biography of Wheelwright provided a mixed assessment of the character of Wheelwright calling him contentious lacking a conciliatory spirit and never one to shrink from controversy In Massachusetts he was to blame for much of the temper and spirit which he displayed when by a more moderate carriage he might have mitigated the bitterness of the strife 91 However Bell found him to be neither intractable nor unforgiving and called him notably energetic industrious and courageous His sincere piety was never called into question even by those with whom he differed most widely 92 Governor Winthrop although he favored the proceedings against Wheelwright said publicly that he did love that brother s person and did honor the gifts and graces of God in him New England divine and historian Cotton Mather spoke of him as being a man that had the root of the matter in him Historian and Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson called him a zealous minister of character both for learning and piety and New Hampshire historian Jeremy Belknap styled him a gentleman of learning piety and zeal 75 Wheelwright Hall at Phillips Exeter Academy the Wheelwright room at the Exeter Town Office 93 Wheelwright Pond in Lee New Hampshire site of a battle during King William s War 94 and Wheelwright Avenue in Exeter 95 are all named for him Family EditWheelwright had 12 children 10 of whom survived to adulthood With his first wife Mary Storre Wheelwright had four children three of whom survived childhood and came to New England 1 The oldest child of this marriage John Wheelwright Jr remained in England and published a vindication of his father in 1645 With his second wife Mary Hutchinson Wheelwright had eight more children The first three were baptized in England and two survived leaving him with five children during his immigration to New England Five more children were born in New England all of whom survived and married 1 See also Edit United States portal New England portal Calvinism portal Biography portalHistory of Boston History of Massachusetts History of New Hampshire Province of New HampshireReferences Edit a b c d e f g Noyes Libby amp Davis 1979 p 744 a b c d e f g h i Wheelwright John WHLT611J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c d Bell 1876 p 2 Bell 1876 p 1 a b c Dictionary of Literary Biography 2006 Winship 2005 pp 18 19 a b c Noyes Libby amp Davis 1979 p 743 Hall 1990 pp 6 12 Bell 1876 p 9 Winship 2002 pp 1 9 Winship 2002 pp 92 93 a b Winship 2002 p 22 Winship 2002 p 23 a b Winship 2002 p 94 Winship 2002 pp 64 82 Winship 2002 pp 83 89 a b c Winship 2002 p 111 Anderson 2003 p 482 a b c Hall 1990 p 6 a b Bell 1876 p 11 a b c d e f g h Hall 1990 p 7 a b Winship 2002 p 114 Winship 2002 p 116 Winship 2002 p 120 a b c d Hall 1990 p 8 a b Winship 2002 p 121 a b Winship 2002 p 122 a b Winship 2002 p 123 Winship 2002 p 124 a b c Winship 2002 p 125 Winship 2002 p 127 Hall 1990 p 153 a b Bell 1876 p 20 a b Winship 2002 p 128 a b Hall 1990 p 9 Bell 1876 p 23 Battis 1962 p 180 Bell 1876 pp 27 28 a b Battis 1962 p 182 a b Bell 1876 p 28 a b Battis 1962 p 183 Winship 2002 p 168 Winship 2002 p 169 Battis 1962 pp 184 5 Bell 1876 p 29 Bell 1876 p 36 a b Winship 2002 p 214 Bell 1876 p 39 a b Bell 1876 p 44 Bell 1876 p 46 Bell 1876 p 47 Bell 1876 p 48 Bell 1876 p 49 a b c Bell 1876 p 51 a b Bell 1876 p 52 a b c d Bush 1991 p 39 a b c Bell 1876 p 53 Bush 1991 p 42 Bell 1876 p 54 a b Bell 1876 p 57 Bell 1876 p 58 Bell 1876 p 59 Bush 1991 pp 22 25 Bush 1991 pp 24 25 Bush 1991 p 27 Bush 1991 p 28 Bush 1991 pp 30 31 Bush 1991 p 31 a b Bush 1991 p 33 Bush 1991 p 34 a b Bush 1991 p 38 a b Bush 1991 p 40 a b Bell 1876 p 60 Bell 1876 p 61 a b Dow 1893 Bell 1876 p 63 a b Bell 1876 p 64 Bell 1876 p 65 a b Bell 1876 p 71 a b Winship 2002 p 240 Bell 1876 p 72 Bell 1876 pp 73 4 Pike 1879 pp 10 11 a b Bell 1876 p 74 Suffolk County Massachusetts 1899 pp 215 217 Bell 1876 p 75 Find a grave 2006 Bell 1876 p 80 Bell 1876 pp 80 130 Bell c 1890 pp 1 3 Bell 1876 p 76 Bell 1876 pp 76 77 Exeter Town Office 2012 Smith 1880 p 187 Wheelwright Avenue Bibliography Edit Anderson Robert Charles 2003 The Great Migration Immigrants to New England 1634 1635 Vol III G H Boston New England Historic Genealogical Society ISBN 0 88082 158 2 Battis Emery 1962 Saints and Sectaries Anne Hutchinson and the Antinomian Controversy in the Massachusetts Bay Colony Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 0863 4 Bell Charles H 1876 John Wheelwright Boston printed for the Prince Society Bell Charles H c 1890 The Wheelwright Deed of 1629 in Bell Charles H ed John Wheelwright Boston Prince Society appendix 1 3 Bush Sargent Jr March 1991 John Wheelwright s Forgotten Apology The Last Word in the Antinomian Controversy The New England Quarterly 64 1 22 45 doi 10 2307 365896 ISBN 978 1 1503 9243 6 JSTOR 365896 Dow Joseph 1893 History of Hampton N H Retrieved 16 September 2012 via Lane Memorial Library Hall David D 1990 The Antinomian Controversy 1636 1638 A Documentary History Durham NC and London Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 1091 4 Noyes Sybil Libby Charles Thornton Davis Walter Goodwin 1979 Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8063 0502 8 Pike James Shepherd 1879 The New Puritan New England two hundred years ago some account of the life of Robert Pike New York Harper amp Brothers Publishers Smith Samuel Francis 1880 History of Newton Massachusetts Boston The American Logotype Company p 762 Wheelwright Pond Suffolk County Massachusetts 1899 Suffolk Deeds Liber X Boston Municipal Printing Office Winship Michael Paul 2002 Making Heretics Militant Protestantism and Free Grace in Massachusetts 1636 1641 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08943 4 Winship Michael Paul 2005 The Times and Trials of Anne Hutchinson Puritans Divided University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 1380 3 Online sources Dictionary of Literary Biography on John Wheelwright Book Rags 2006 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Exeter Town Office Hours Quinta house gov 20 January 2012 Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 3 July 2012 Wheelwright John WHLT611J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Rev John Wheelwright Find a grave 18 March 2006 Retrieved 15 October 2011 Wheelwright Avenue Realtor com Retrieved 3 July 2012 Further reading EditJefferds Jerome S 1982 The Jefferds Family ASIN B0006EJR36 Clark C C 1938 The Wheelwright Family The Brick Store Museum External links Edit Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclopaedia article about John Wheelwright Historical background of the Wheelwright portrait Great Migration Newsletter Biography at Ancestry com Early history of Exeter Wheelwright John New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Wheelwright amp oldid 1144447880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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