Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 2
1628-02-04
I doe blesse and prayse god for the continuance of your health, and for the safe deliuery of my good sister Downinge,3 it was very welcom Nuse to us. I thanke the lord wee are all heare resonably well my pore Stephen is vp to day. Ame hath had a very sore Ague but is well againe. I hope the lorde will heare our prayers and be pleased to stay his hand in this visitasion which if he please to doe we shall haue great cause of thankfulnesse. but I desire in this and all other things to submit vnto his holy will, it is the lord let him doe what semeth good in his owne eyse. he will doe nothinge but that shall be for our good if we had harts to thust vs with all. he wounds and he can heale. he hath neuer fayled to doe vs good, and now he will not shake vs of but continue the same god still that he hath bin heare to fore the lorde santify vnto 59vs what soeuer it shall please him to send vnto vs that we may be the better for it and furthered in our corce to heauen. I am sorye for the hard condishtion of Rochell. the lord helpe them and fite for them and then none shall preuayle against them or ouercome them, in vaine thay fite that fite against the lorde who is a myty god and will destroye all his enimyes and now my deare husband I haue nothinge but my dearest affections to send thee with many thankes for my
I send vp a turkeye and 2 capons and a cheese the carier is payde
W. Au. 34;
L. and L.
, I. 281–282; Twichell, Puritan Love-Letters
, 90–92.
Robert Charles Winthrop placed this letter a year later, no doubt because of the reference to the illness of Amy the servant (Vol. I. 413). Such a time, however, would be inconsistent with the reference to “the continuance of your health”; while the date is fixed pretty definitely by a baptismal entry in the Register of St. Bride's, Fleet Street: “3 Feb. 1627/8. Joshua sonn to Emmanuell Downing Gent: wyef Luce.” It is reasonable to assume that the birth was during the week preceding the Sunday baptism, and that Margaret's answer to her husband's letter was written not far from the succeeding Monday, February 4. The reference to La Rochelle is also decisive, since that town capitulated October 28, 1628, after a siege of fifteen months.
See the preceding note.
1628-05-04
This Indenture made the twelveth day of may in the Fourth yeare of the Reigne of our soveraigne lord Charles by the grace of God Kinge of England Scotland France and Ireland defender of the Faith etc. Betweene John Wynthropp of Groton in the Countie of Suff
Et memorandum quod Quartodecimo die Maij anno suprascripto prefati Johannes Wynthropp Armiger et Johannes Winthropp filius eius venerunt coram dicto domino Rege in Cancellaria sua et recognoverunt Indenturam predictam ac omnia et singula in eadem contenta et specificata in forma supradicta.
Irrotulata nono die Octobris anno predicto.
Close Roll, 4 Charles I, pt. 6, no. 15.
“Henry fetherston of the Blackfryers London.” See Vol. I. 379, 382, 383, 385, 389, 396, 397, 398. He was son of “Cuthbert fetherston of Hathery Cleugh in the parish of Stanhop in the Countie of Duresme,” who “came to London beinge younge and lived in Chauncery Lane where he died anno 1613.” Visitation of London (H.S., Pub.
, xv), I. 273, where his autograph is given in facsimile. By his second wife, Katherine, daughter of Michael Heneage of London, he had one son, Heneage Fetherston, who was created a baronet December 4, 1660. Cockayne, Complete Baronetage, III. 133.
Great Stambridge, Much Stambridge, or Stambridge Magna, a parish in the hundred of Rochford, co. Essex. The Winthrop property here was derived from John Forth, father of John Winthrop's first wife.
“Thomas Bode of Rocheforde in the Countie of Essex yeoman,” died 1581. Muskett, 123–124, 131.
Thomasine (Hilles | Crymble) Bode, who after the death of her second husband married John Forth of Great Stambridge; mother of Mary Forth, first wife of John Winthrop. Muskett, 123–124, 131.
“To Thomazine my wief my tenement and lands in Muche Stambridge called Moones to hir and hir heires for evermore.” Will of Thomas Bode, 1581, in Muskett, 123.