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For more information on Edward Winslow, visit Britannica.com.
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| Biography: Edward Winslow |
Edward Winslow (1595-1655) was a Pilgrim leader in colonial America. He conducted Plymouth's diplomatic business on both sides of the Atlantic and wrote histories of the colony.
The son of a salt dealer, Edward Winslow received a classical education and later became a printer's apprentice in London. Probably employed by William Brewster, he moved to Leiden, Holland, in 1617. Once associated with the Pilgrims there, he became an important supporter and invaluable servant.
Winslow sailed to America with the Pilgrims on the Mayflower and from the first bore the Pilgrims' diplomatic responsibilities. He attended to Indian relations and was the colony's major trade representative. He went to the Maine coast to buy provisions from fishing ships and was active in the creation and defense of furtrading posts. He also served three terms as Plymouth's governor.
However, it was as Plymouth's agent in England that Winslow performed his greatest service. He went to England in 1623 to sell a supply of boards and furs and to report to the colony's investors. He returned to Plymouth the next year with a patent for a fishing center at Cape Ann and with three heifers and a bull, the beginnings of Plymouth's herd. In 1630 he replaced the questionable Isaac Allerton as Plymouth's agent to the London investors and in 1634 defended Plymouth's jurisdiction over its Maine trading fort. During the latter visit Winslow proposed that New England create a united military front against the encroachments of the Dutch and French. The proposal aroused political opposition, and he was imprisoned for 4 months for being a Separatist in religion. He undertook his last journey to England in 1646 as the agent of both Massachusetts and Plymouth to defend them from the attacks of their English enemies, notably Robert Childe and Samuell Gorton.
Winslow did not return to Plymouth but instead joined Oliver Cromwell's government in England. He was appointed one of the three joint commanders of the expedition that captured Jamaica in 1655, and he died on the return voyage. His departure from Plymouth and his death were sad losses for the colony.
Winslow wrote a number of pamphlets and tracts recording Plymouth's early history. Mourt's Relation, of which he was coauthor, and his Good Newes from New England were Plymouth's first authoritative histories.
Further Reading
There is no recent biography of Winslow. One of the best sources of information, especially on Winslow's contribution to Plymouth, is William Bradford, Of Plimouth Plantation, edited by Samuel Eliot Morison (1952). Specific information as well as general background can be found in George F. Willison, Saints and Strangers (1945); Bradford Smith, Bradford of Plymouth (1951); and George D. Langdon, Jr., Pilgrim Colony: A History of New Plymouth, 1620-1691 (1966).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Edward Winslow |
Bibliography
See G. F. Willison, Saints and Strangers (rev. ed. 1965).
| Works: Works by Edward Winslow |
| 1622 | A Relation or Journal of the Beginning and Proceedings of the English Plantation Setled at Plimoth in New England. The first account of the Plymouth settlement, recording the Mayflower Compact and the earliest days of the colony. It is conjectured that William Bradford and Edward Winslow prepared the account. Published anonymously, the book is commonly known as Mourt's Relation, based on the signature of "G. Mourt," attributed to George Morton (1585-1624), who may have been responsible only for the book's publication. |
| 1624 | Good News From New England; or, A True Relation of Things Very Remarkable at the Plantation of Plymouth in New England. Winslow continues the journal chronicle of the Plymouth colony begun in Mourt's Relation (1622) up to September 1623. |
| 1646 | Hypocrisie Unmasked by the True Relation of the proceedings of the Governour and Company of the Massachusetts Against Samuel Gorton.... Winslow, coauthor of Mourt's Relation (1622) and Good News from New England (1624), defends the colony's religious and political policies against the charges of Samuel Gorton (c. 1592-1677), who had been imprisoned for his Antinomian beliefs in 1644. |
| 1647 | New-Englands Salamander Discovered by an Irreligious and Scornfull Pamphlet. Winslow replies to an attack by Major John Child in New-Englands Jonas Cast Up in London (1647) on the Puritan regime in general and Winslow in particular. The war of words over religious and civil liberty anticipates what would become a central debate among colonial writers. |
| Wikipedia: Edward Winslow |
| Edward Winslow | |
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3rd, 6th & 10th Governor of Plymouth Colony
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| In office 1633 – 1634 1636 – 1637 1644 – 1645 |
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| Preceded by | William Bradford (thrice) |
| Succeeded by | Thomas Prence (1634) William Bradford (1637 & 1645) |
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| Born | October 18, 1595 Droitwich Spa, Worcestershire, England |
| Died | May 8, 1655 (aged 60) near Jamaica |
| Nationality | English |
| Religion | Puritan |
Edward Winslow (1595 – 1655) was an American Pilgrim leader on the Mayflower. He served as the governor of Plymouth Colony in 1633, 1636, and finally in 1644. His testimony in Mourt's Relation is one of only two primary sources of the "first thanksgiving" in existence.
He was born in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England, on October 18, 1595 and attended The King's School, Worcester. Winslow then apprenticed as a printer in London. In 1617 he removed to Leiden, united with John Robinson's church there, and in 1620 was one of the "pilgrims" who emigrated to New England on the Mayflower and founded the Plymouth colony.
His first wife was Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow, whom he married in May 1618 at Leiden. She accompanied him on the Mayflower, and died soon after their arrival in Plymouth. Also accompanying Winslow were his children, George Soule, a teacher for the children, and Elias Story, a servant. Winslow remarried in May 1621 to Mrs Susannah (---) White, the mother of Peregrine White (1620-1704). This was the first marriage in the New England colonies.[citation needed] Winslow later founded what would become Marshfield in the Plymouth Colony where he lived on an estate he called Careswell.
Winslow was delegated by his associates to treat with the Native Americans in the vicinity and succeeded in winning the friendship of their chief, Massasoit (c. 1580-1661). He was one of the assistants from 1624 to 1647, except in 1633-1634, 1636-1637 and 1644-1645, when he was governor of the colony. He was also, in 1643, one of the commissioners of the United Colonies of New England. On several occasions he was sent to England to look after the interests of Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Colony, and defend these colonies from the attacks of such men as John Lyford, Thomas Morton and Samuel Gorton. He left on his last mission as the agent of Massachusetts Bay, in October 1646, and spent nine years in England, where he held a minor office under Cromwell, and in 1654, was made a member of the commission appointed to determine the value of certain English ships destroyed by Denmark.
In 1655 he was the chief of the three English commissioners whom Cromwell sent on his expedition against the West Indies to advise with its leaders Admiral Venables and Admiral William Penn, but died near Jamaica on 8 May 1655, and was buried at sea. Winslow's portrait, the only likeness of any of the "Mayflower pilgrims" done from life, is in the gallery of the Pilgrim Society at Plymouth, Massachusetts.
His son Josiah Winslow later served as governor of Plymouth colony.
His writings, though fragmentary, are of the greatest value to the historian of the Plymouth colony. They include:
With William Bradford he also is supposed to have prepared a Journal of the Beginning and Proceeding of the English Plantation settled at Plymouth in New England (1622), which is generally known as Mourt's Relation, owing to its preface having been signed by "G. Mourt."
Some of his writings may be found reprinted in Alexander Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrims (Boston, 1841).
Also see a paper by W. C. Winslow, Governor Edward Winslow, his Place and Part in Plymouth Colony, in the Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1895 (Washington, 1896)
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