John Haynes, Esq. | 70 rods. | Steven Hart | 8 rods. |
Thomas Dudly, Esq. | 40 rods. | William Wadsworth | 7 rods. |
Mr. Symon Bradstreet | 20 rods. | George Steele | 6 rods. |
John Benjamin | 50 rods. | Richard Goodman | 6 rods. |
John Talcott | 36 rods. | John Bridg. | 6 rods. |
Mathew Allen | 45 rods. | Symon Sackett | 6 rods. |
William Westwood | 30 rods. | Richard Butler | 6 rods. |
James Omstead | 25 rods. | Capt. Patrike | 5 rods. |
Daniell Denison | 25 rods. | Richard Web | 5 rods. |
Samuell Dudly | 25 rods. | John Masters | 4 rods. |
Andrew Warner | 20 rods. | Antho. Colby | 4 rods. |
William Goodwine | 16 rods. | John Clark | 3 rods. |
John White | 15 rods. | Nath. Richards | 3 rods. |
John Steele | 14 rods. | Richard Lord | 3 rods. |
Edward Stebinge | 12 rods. | Abraham Morrill | 3 rods. |
William Spencer | 12 rods. | William Kelse | 3 rods. |
Thomas Hosmer | 10 rods. | Jonath. Bosworth | 2 rods. |
William Lewis | 10 rods. | Tho. Spencer | 2 rods. |
Hester Musse | 10 rods. | Garrad Hadon | 2 rods. |
Joseph Readinge | 2 rods. | Edward Elmer | 2 rods. |
Thomas Heate | 2 rods. | Jeremy Addams | 2 rods. |
This text is part of:
1 Thomas Dudley, Simon Bradstreet, Daniel Patrick, Simon Sackett, and William Spencer were here before August, 1632, when the “Braintree company” removed. Samuel Dudley was doubtless here also. Daniel Denison came here from Roxbury. Anthony Colby, Garrad Haddon, and Joseph Reading, were of Boston in 1630; and John Masters of Watertown, in 1631. John Benjamin, Edward Elmer, William Goodwin, William Lewis, James Olmstead, Nathaniel Richards, John Talcott, William Wadsworth, and John White, arrived at Boston, in the Lion, Sept. 16, 1632, a month after the Braintree Company removed; and John Haynes did not arrive until Sept. 3, 1633. The name of Simon Oakes is erroneously given in Col. Mass. Hist. Soc., VII. 10, instead of Simon Sackett.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.