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Thomas Dudley

 
Biography: Thomas Dudley

Thomas Dudley (1576-1653), a Puritan leader of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in America, was four times elected governor of the colony.

Thomas Dudley was born in England. Little is known about his formative years except that he was an orphan and was befriended by people who saw that he was educated and placed in service to the English nobility. He rose to the post of steward to the Earl of Lincoln and took pride for having recouped the earl's diminishing fortune by raising tenant rents.

Dudley, converted to the Puritan belief by John Cotton, his pastor in England, came into contact with other emergent Puritans. By 1629 he was one of the small group who founded the Massachusetts Bay Company. Along with John Winthrop and other "persons of worth and qualitie," he became one of the eight shareholders in the company who arrived in the New World in 1630.

Dudley was second only to Winthrop among the leaders who made the crossing; once arrived, they assumed control of the new society. The former steward was now one of the "first magistrates of the Bay Company." Persecuted in the Old World, perhaps Dudley, more than the other oligarchs, became righteous and narrow in the New. "In Calvinism," historian Bernard Bailyn notes, men like Dudley "found doctrines that might be applied to every aspect of life."

For Dudley, at least, this proved all too true. He hoarded corn and lent it to his neighbors with the understanding that he would receive 10 bushels for every 7 1/2 lent; John Winthrop considered Dudley's practices usurious. Historian Edmund Morgan notes that "Dudley was a rigid, literal minded type, ready to exact his pound of flesh whenever he thought it due him." Yet, Dudley had his place in the development of the colony. He was 13 times deputy governor and was elected governor on 4 different occasions.

As might be expected, Dudley was no less rigid and fanatical in religious matters than in matters political and economic. The notorious expulsion of Roger Williams in 1635 was Dudley's most celebrated effort to thwart what he considered to be Winthrop's leniency in religious matters. Dudley also figured prominently in the persecution of Anne Hutchinson, who followed Williams into exile largely because of Dudley's allegations of her heresy. A strong believer in the political power of the oligarchy, and to his dying day (July 31, 1653) almost paranoid on the question of religious heresy, he was nevertheless a remarkable man, part of that first generation of New World Puritans who alone were able to keep the faith.

Further Reading

There is an excellent analysis of Dudley in Edmund S. Morgan, The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop, edited by Oscar Handlin (1958). James Truslow Adams, The Founding of New England (1921), remains useful in placing Dudley in his colonial setting.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Thomas Dudley
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Dudley, Thomas, 1576-1653, colonial governor of Massachusetts, b. England. As a young man he served as a clerk and later as steward to the earl of Lincoln. In 1630 he emigrated to America as deputy governor of the Massachusetts Bay colony and spent the remainder of his life in one public office or another, being elected deputy governor 13 times and serving four terms as governor. He was also a founder and one of the first overseers of Harvard.

Bibliography

See biography by A. Jones (1899).

Wikipedia: Thomas Dudley
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Thomas Dudley


In office
1634 – 1635
1640 – 1641
1645 – 1646
1650 – 1651
Preceded by John Winthrop (1634 & 1640)
John Endecott (1645 & 1650)
Succeeded by John Haynes (1635)
Richard Bellingham (1641)
John Winthrop (1646)
John Endecott (1651)

Born October 12, 1576
Northampton, England
Died July 31, 1653

Thomas Dudley (October 12, 1576 – July 31, 1653) was a colonial magistrate who served several terms as governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, during which he sometimes clashed with his rival John Winthrop. Dudley was the chief founder of Newtowne, later Cambridge, Massachusetts, and built the town's first home. As Governor, Dudley signed the Charter creating Harvard College. Thomas Dudley Gate at Harvard College was named in his honor, as is the non-residential Dudley House. Dudley's descendants were early governors, ministers, judges, as well as the nation's first poet.

Contents

Early years

He was born in Northampton, England, the son of Capt. Roger Dudley and Susanna Thorne. Many have written that Roger Dudley was a scion of the noble Dudley family, descendants of John Sutton, 1st Baron Dudley. The exact connection remains a subject of contention[1], reignited every few years by a new theory. Dudley's mother, Susanna Thorne, was descended from Henry II of England through her Purefoy ancestors.[2] Thomas Dudley's father was killed at the Battle of Ivry, orphaning the young Thomas at the age of fourteen. He entered the service of several wealthy patrons, and was introduced to Puritanism in the late 1590s.

In the 30 years between his conversion and his eventual emigration with the Winthrop Fleet, Dudley served as steward to Theophilus Clinton, 4th Earl of Lincoln, a job often delegated to promising young men of ambition, good lineage and little money. Apparently Dudley performed an exemplary job in the Earl's service: the financial mess the Earl had gotten himself into was apparently eased due to Dudley's efforts on his behalf.

Massachusetts Bay Colony

In 1629, with tensions between the Puritans and the English government high, Dudley was chosen as one of the five officers to travel to the Americas under the Royal Charter. He was elected deputy governor; John Winthrop was elected governor. Traveling on the Arbella, the flagship of the Winthrop Fleet, Dudley arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630. Perhaps due to his touchy nature, he clashed almost immediately with John Winthrop over the location of the seat of government of the new colony.[3]

Dudley served as governor in 1634, 1640, 1645, and 1650. Throughout most of the other years of his time in Massachusetts, he served as deputy governor.

Dudley's letter “To the Right Honourable, My very good Lady, The Lady Bridget, Countess of Lincoln”, written in March 1631, narrated the first year’s experience of those “planters” who came over in Winthrop’s fleet of 1630. It appeared in print for the first time in the 1696 compilation, by Joshua Scottow, MASSACHUSETTS: or The first Planters of New-England, The End and Manner of their coming thither, and Abode there: In several EPISTLES (1696).

It was Dudley who signed the charter creating Harvard College when he was Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.[4]

Family and property

Thomas Dudley married Dorothy Yorke in 1603. Her date of death is unknown. He married his second wife, Katherine Deighton, in 1644. His children include Rev. Samuel Dudley of Exeter, New Hampshire, Gov. Joseph Dudley, and poet Anne Bradstreet.

The ancestral Dudley Castle is located at 52°30′50.89″N 2°4′47.62″W / 52.5141361°N 2.0798944°W / 52.5141361; -2.0798944.

Descendants of Thomas Dudley

Charter creating Harvard College, signed by Governor Thomas Dudley, May 30, 1650

Thomas Dudley may have been a descendant of the Sutton Dudley clan of England, descended from Joan of Acre daughter of King Edward I of England and his wife Eleanor of Castile.

Descendants of his son Joseph Dudley, who married Rebecca Tyng:

Descendants of his daughter Anne Dudley, who married Simon Bradstreet:

Descendants of his daughter Mercy Dudley, who married John Woodbridge:

Descendants of his daughter Patience Dudley, who married Daniel Denison:

Descendants of his son Rev. Samuel Dudley, who married first Mary Winthrop (son of John Winthrop), second Mary Byley, and third Elizabeth Smith:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Augustine Jones. The Life and Work of Thomas Dudley, The Second Governor of Massachusetts. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. (1900), pp. 3-10.
  2. ^ Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham, David Faris, Published by Genealogical Publishing Company, 2004, ISBN 0806317507, 9780806317502
  3. ^ Sidney Lee, ed. Dictionary of National Biography. Macmillan (1909), Vol. XXI, pp. 699-700.
  4. ^ Harvard Charter of 1650, Held in the Harvard University Archives, harvard.edu
  5. ^ His parents gave Dudley Leavitt his name because he was descended from Gov. Thomas Dudley on both his father's and his mother's side.

External links


 
 

 

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