John Winthrop
Born:
Ipswich, Massachusetts; March 14, 1638
Died: Boston, Massachusetts;
November 27, 1707
Entry
by Bruce P. Stark
John
Winthrop, Connecticut governor, is usually known as Fitz-John
Winthrop in order to distinguish him from his famous father and
grandfather. He attended but never graduated from Harvard College
and in 1658 traveled to England to accept a commission in the
Parliamentary Army. Winthrop returned to Connecticut in 1663 and
made his home in New London. Although twice elected a deputy to
the General Assembly, he was chiefly interested in military affairs.
In 1672 Winthrop was chosen chief officer of the New London militia.
The next year he commanded Connecticut troops defending Southold
from Dutch attack and later served with distinction in King Phillips'
War.
After
the death of his father, he spent much of his time in Boston.
In 1686, with the establishment of the Dominion of New England
he was appointed to the governor's Council. He served Governor
Andros until the collapse of the Dominion of New England in
the
wake of the Glorious Revolution. Fitz-John Winthrop took no part
in the overthrow of the Dominion in either Massachusetts or
Connecticut
but quickly became a leader of the middle faction in Connecticut
politics. At one extreme stood James Fitch (1649-1727) and
his
followers who sought to democratize charter government and exclude
from office all those who had collaborated with Andros. On
the
other extreme was Gershom Bulkeley (1635-1713) who argued that
the Connecticut corporation was dissolved and urged that royal
government be continued. The middle party wished to restore
charter
government, to resist the demands of Fitch, and to share power
in the restored government. The latter faction eventually triumphed,
due primarily to the efforts of Fitz-John Winthrop. He was
sent
to England in 1693 to plead for confirmation of Connecticut's
1662 Charter, its legality having been questioned by Bulkeley
and his supporters. When news reached the colony in December
1697
that Winthrop’s mission had succeeded, his friends in Connecticut
worked to elect him governor in place of the capable Robert Treat
(1624-1710). Winthrop triumphed and served as governor until
his
death in 1707. His incumbency was marked by struggles with Fitch
over control of the Quinebaug lands in eastern Connecticut. Although
Winthrop and the colony eventually emerged victorious, the battle
divided the colony.
Fitz-John
Winthrop was a lesser man than his father and grandfather but
served Connecticut well. He was primarily responsible for confirming
the Charter that his father had secured, and he was an able governor.
For
Further Reading
Dunn,
Richard S. Puritans and Yankees: The Winthrop Dynasty of New
England, 1630-1717. Princeton, New Jersey, 1962. See chapters
13 and 14.
*
Entry under revision.
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