(This post is a follow-up to an introductory post about my personal genealogical journey.)
![]() |
Puritans head to church in the snow. |
“Puritanism is the fear that someone somewhere might be having a good time.”—HL Mencken
Although it happened nearly 400 years and multiple generations ago, I have no problem imagining how my 10th great-grandfather, Edmund Hobart, must have felt on the morning of 16 September 1635. An anxious anticipation would have gripped his chest as he awaited the arrival of his second eldest son, 31-year-old Peter Hobart—my 9th great-grandfather—aboard a small boat from Boston, where Peter had been living most of that summer after emigrating from England. Peter, his family and other settlers from Hingham in England's Norfolk region were joining Edmund in a nearby village called Bare Cove where Edmund had been living the last two years, following his arrival from England.
Now Peter’s arrival would mark not only a milestone
event for Edmund, but also for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the history of New
England and, of course, my lineage as the Hobarts would become one of three
foundational New England family lines down to my mother’s birth in 1918 in
Missouri. I shared the story of one of those lines in a 2020 post about the
four ancestors who preceded the Hobarts by arriving aboard the Mayflower in
1620: Stephen Hopkins (also a 10th great-grandfather), his daughter Constance
Hopkins (9GG), Thomas Rogers (10GG) and his son Joseph Rogers (9GG). I
will post at some other time about the third New England line through my
ancestor John Libby, who came to Maine about 1630 to build a life as a
commercial fisherman.
For now, however, I am focusing on the Hobarts and their Puritan contribution to American culture. When Peter arrived at Bare Cove in 1635, he hadn’t come just to join the community. He came to succeed Edmund as the head of the Puritan oligarchy, ruling the place with his brother Joshua Hobart until his death in 1679.
As the anointed leader, Peter wasted no time taking charge. Bare Cove was quickly renamed Hingham as a salute to the homeland, and it carries that name today. Immediately, Peter and his new arrivals had drawn lots to choose their homesteads. Guess who was allowed to pick first. Peter chose lot 19 with a 10-acre plot. My 9th great-uncle Joshua picked second so he could live next door. As a Puritan minister, Peter would control the religious community, town commerce and the village government for the next 44 years. Joshua was destined to lead the militia.
Along with Edmund, the younger Hobarts represented the
vanguard of what would become known as the Puritan Great Migration, a movement
destined to bring more than 20,000 Puritan immigrants to New England between
1620 and 1640. Before looking closer at the subsequent lives of the Hobarts as
they established Hingham and created Massachusetts, it’s necessary to review a
bit of English history to understand why the Puritans had come and how they
lived.
I’ve undertaken this writing project as part of my
interest in genealogy and researching my own family history. While I have
managed to identify hundreds of ancestors to fill out a tree, I also have
realized I want to do more than provide names and dates. So, I have researched
several important sources to produce this profile of the Hobarts, Hingham, and
the Puritan Great Migration.
This post will include profiles of three other
ancestors associated with the Puritan Great Migration: The Scottish prisoner of
war Robert Dunbar; an ancestor hanged for murder, Amaziah Harding; and, a
veteran of the American Revolution, Francis Lane. All were multi great-grandfathers
of mine who lived in Massachusetts more than three centuries ago.
A crucial source has been a 2001 biography of Peter
Hobart written by descendant Edward Franklin Ripley (1927-2009). Although no
longer available in print, that biography, Shepherd In The Wilderness,
was available online when I first went searching for background on the Hobarts
a few years ago. Thus, this post enjoys the benefit of meticulous research by
Ripley for his biography, using colonial journals and town records to recreate
the story of the Hobarts.
“A central theme of the biography is the quest of
Hobart and the Hingham Parish for inclusiveness, which helped prepare New
England for democracy,” writes Ripley in his introduction. He also cites the
biography of Peter Hobart included by the colonial literary icon Cotton Mather in
his 1702 history of New England, Magnalia Christi America.
RELIGIOUS UPHEAVAL
As a religious agnostic, I believe I can write about
the Protestant Reformation more objectively than many others with a religious
bias. If you want to research deep in the weeds of this development from the 16th
and 17th centuries, you can spend years reading details in sections of public
libraries devoted to the subject. Or, there’s always Wikipedia For the purposes of this posting, however,
I will summarize the events to show how they impacted the migration of my
ancestors from England to Massachusetts.
The Protestant Reformation began in 1517 when a German
priest named Martin Luther expressed his opposition to corruption in the
Catholic Church in writing. But it was the invention of moveable type and the
evolution of the printing press in the previous century that laid the
foundation for sweeping religious change across Europe. Publication of
affordable Bibles and other philosophical works offered the masses greater
access to ideas. They no longer needed to rely on Catholic priests to interpret
their religious texts.
They started to challenge the authority of the church,
which had reigned supreme across Western Europe for the prior millennium. While
they still considered themselves Christians—followers of Jesus—they also
questioned some rules and beliefs imposed by the Papacy in its control of the
Catholic Church. As a result, Europe saw the creation of numerous new
protestant sects and, of course, they fought with each other. The 16th Century
became a dangerous time to express beliefs.
In England, King Henry VIII used the upheaval to political advantage.
Ruling from 1509-1547, Henry first sought to win favor with the Catholic Church
in 1521 by challenging the Protestant movement and defending the Papacy. His
efforts made him a hero in Rome. But not enough of a hero to persuade the Pope
to grant him an annulment from his first wife Catherine so he could marry the
younger Anne Boleyn a few years later.
![]() |
Henry VIII |
By 1534, Henry had solved his problem by creating his
own church, the Church of England and cutting ties with the Catholic Church. He
spent the rest of his reign looting monasteries and diverting money that
traditionally would have gone to Rome for his own use. In England, the 16th
Century became a dangerous time to be a Catholic.
Following Henry’s death, the British monarchs bounced
from Protestant to Catholic and back, while battling Scotland’s Catholic
leaders about control of both governments and thoroughly confusing the populace
about which heretics might get burned at the stake for practicing the wrong
religion. Meanwhile, the Church of England continued to provide the monarchs
with the power to control both the religious and secular activities of the
country.
ENTER THE PURITANS
They never called themselves “Puritans.” That became a term of derision after they emerged as a Protestant sect with a mission to “purify” the Church of England by wiping clean its remaining vestiges of Catholic pomp and circumstance. The simplest definition on the internet describes puritanism as “the beliefs or principles of a group of English Protestants of the late 16th and 17th centuries who regarded the Reformation of the Church under Elizabeth I as incomplete and sought to simplify and regulate forms of worship.”
I found a solid and concise summary of Puritanism on the History.com web site for anyone eager to learn more.
“As they gained strength, Puritans were portrayed by
their enemies as hairsplitters who slavishly followed their Bibles as guides to
daily life or hypocrites who cheated the very neighbors they judged inadequate
Christians,” notes History.com.
But the “movement found wide support among these new
professional classes, who saw in it a mirror for their growing discontent with
economic restraints,” reports History.com.
The article continues: “In the early decades of the
17th century, some groups of worshipers began to separate themselves from the
main body of their local parish church where preaching was inadequate and to
engage an energetic ‘lecturer,’ typically a young man with a fresh Cambridge
degree, who was a lively speaker and steeped in reform theology.”
Just as the English separatists and Puritans began
seeking places to practice their beliefs in peace, opportunities for emigration
emerged across the Atlantic Ocean, where the English had been trying to
establish permanent colonies for the last century. Once the Pilgrim separatists
had created a commercially successful colony in Plymouth, Massachusetts after
1620, the Puritans realized they could start fresh as well.
History.com notes: “The Puritan migration was
overwhelmingly a migration of families (unlike other migrations to early
America, which were composed largely of young unattached men). The literacy
rate was high, and the intensity of devotional life, as recorded in the many surviving
diaries, sermon notes, poems and letters, was seldom to be matched in American
life.”
Citing the German historian Max Weber, History.com
concludes Puritanism “supplied ethics that somehow balanced charity and
self-discipline. It counseled moderation within psychology that saw worldly
prosperity as a sign of divine favor. Such ethics were particularly urgent in a
New World where opportunity was rich, but the source of moral authority was
obscure.”
Ask Google for a list of Puritan beliefs and its
artificial intelligence generator says “They believed in a stricter moral code,
emphasized individual piety and advocated for a more pure form of worship, free
from unnecessary rituals and practices.”
They emphasized a need for education because they
wanted individuals to find God from their own readings of the Bible and
considered it the foundation for all decisions in life. Many Puritans adopted a
belief in predestination arguing that God had already determined a person’s
salvation before birth.
But they also emphasized community and religious
conformity within a moral code that sometimes prohibited activities like
gambling, drinking or dancing. They advocated the importance of hard work and
diligence as aspects of religious duty.
Despite misgivings about their strict rules and
punishments, I must conclude that the resulting nation benefitted greatly from
the Puritan Great Migration. These were clearly serious and ambitious people
determined to make a new world in this New World. The results would speak for
themselves. They founded Harvard University in 1636 and invented universal public
education. New England became a prosperous and thriving colony under their
leadership building global trade relationships based on fur, lumber, agricultural
and other goods.
Although the most fiery Puritanical views had mellowed
within two generations of emigration to Massachusetts, the population boom
triggered movement across the American continent and the Puritan work ethic
played a crucial role in commercial development across the land.
OLD HINGHAM AND THE HOBART FAMILY
I’m usually skeptical of family trees dating back
beyond the American colonial period. But Ripley writes authoritatively of the
Hobart family legend dating the line back to the 9th Century through the
Norseman King Hubba, killed in 878 during the Scandinavian Wars. Hubbas appear
in records later under a variety of similar-sounding names such as Hubbard,
Hubbert, Hubberde and Hobart. If the legends are true and my line traces back
to old King Hubba, then it likely ranks as the oldest known line in my
genealogy research.
Ripley appears satisfied in identifying Sir James
Hobart (1436-1517) as an ancestor, noting he served as attorney general to King
Henry VII. But he seems most eager to make the point that the Hobart family
likely aligned with the crown and the Catholic Church while establishing their
land holdings in the Hingham area of Norfolk County. And there’s no doubt about
the history of the land.
Hingham is an ancient village, with a name identifying
it as the town of “Hega’s People.” In 925, it belonged to King Athelstan, a
descendant of Alfred the Great, and became a royal holding under William the
Conqueror after the 1066 Battle of Hastings. Hingham was located in Norfolk or
East Anglia as the market center for that agricultural area. The parish church
of St. Andrews was rebuilt in the 1300s and would be the dominant focal point
for succeeding generations in Hingham.
According to Ripley’s research, Sir Walter Hobart
served as sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk counties until his death in 1538. By
then, the Protestant Reformation had begun shaking the roots of my lineage in
the Hobart family tree. Ripley speculates that Thomas Hobart (1542-1609), who
served as Lord of the Manor in Hingham likely became the first Hobart to
consider separation from the Catholic Church.
While Ripley records Thomas Hobart as the father of my
10th great-grandpa Edmund Hobart, the WikiTree online genealogy research site
records Edmund’s parentage as
disputed. And the FamilySearch genealogy site lists no known father for Edmund.
Thanks to my research into American colonial and United States census records,
however, I remain satisfied listing Edmund as my ancestor and can
provide this chart to record my Hobart lineage in America.
Gen |
Name |
Spouse |
comments |
1 |
Edmund
Hobart (1575-1646) |
Margaret
Dewe (1577-1634) |
Edmund
emigrated to New England in 1633. |
2 |
Peter
Hobart (1604-1679) |
Elizabeth
Ibrook (1608-1645) |
Peter
arrived in 1635 to found Hingham, Mass. |
3 |
Elizabeth
Hobart (1632-1692) |
John
Ripley (1621-1684) |
John
arrived in 1638 after Elizabeth’s 1635 arrival. |
4 |
John
Ripley (1655-1720) |
Jane
Whitmarsh (1664-1705) |
John
was first generation born in Massachusetts |
5 |
Hezekiah
Ripley (1693-1736) |
Sarah
Garnet (1691-1737) |
|
6 |
Abner
Ripley (1723-1808) |
Abigail
Robbins (1718-1773) |
|
7 |
Thaddeus
Ripley (1746-1831) |
Lydia
Abigail Ransom (1754-1786) |
Thaddeus
served in the American Revolution. |
8 |
Ransom
Ripley (1786-1842) |
Susan
Lane (1797-1851) |
Susan’s
father was a sea captain in the Revolution. |
9 |
Abbie
Jane Ripley (1833-1870) |
Joseph
Clement Libby (1831-1902) |
Joseph
moved the family to Missouri in 1860. |
10 |
Henry
Augustus Libby (1852-1913) |
Mary
Lamburth (1861-1939) |
Henry
was a baseball player in St. Louis, then a prominent farmer in Pike County, Missouri. |
11 |
Della
Libby (1891-1969) |
Leslie
Wright (1891-1972) |
|
12 |
Rheva
Wright (1918-1981) |
Dale
Taylor (1921-1984) |
|
13 |
Gary
Dale Taylor (1947-) |
|
|
EDMUND HOBART LEADS AN EXODUS FROM HINGHAM
By the time of Edmund’s birth on New Year’s Day 1573
in Hingham, the Protestant Reformation had become the most significant
religious movement to sweep across Europe since the birth of Christianity. By
the time Edmund became an adult, it is clear the movement had impacted his
thinking. Because his conversion to Puritanism would prove so significant for
the future of Old Hingham and the New England migration, Ripley spends a good
deal of time speculating about the circumstances, asking: “Why did the Thomas Hobart
family change their loyalty so drastically and become Puritans?”
To suggest an answer, he cites the movement of a group
of persecuted protestant radicals into southeastern England during the decades
before Edmund’s birth. Called the Lollards, they had developed their beliefs
after gaining personal access to the Bible thanks to the invention of moveable
type. No longer forced to learn Biblical verses from priests reading in Latin, more
common people could hear the Bible read in their language and make their own
conclusions about the meaning of the words. As a result, Ripley concludes:
“Popular reading of the Bible in turn gave birth to non-conformity and
criticism of the Church and clergy.”
Influenced by the Lollards, parishes in the region
began rejecting many of the Roman Catholic rituals in a bid to simplify their
lives and, in their view, move closer to God. This Puritan movement evolved as
part of the broader divisions between all Protestants and Catholics in Europe
and England—divisions marked by violence and government controls.
St. Andrews in Hingham was one of the parishes that simplified
its rituals. Moreover, a Hingham citizen named William Carman was one of the
more than 300 Protestants burned at the stake between 1555 and 1558 for
offenses against the Church. Carman met his end in 1556 in Norwich at an
execution spot called Lollards’ Pit for the offense of owning a Bible written
in English. While this event occurred well before the birth of Edmund, it had
happened recent enough to have affected open-minded young men for generations
to come.
As Lord of the Manor in Hingham, Edmund likely
reflected the views of his neighbors. He managed the Hobart estate there, and
married Margaret Dewe in 1600. They had 10 children by 1617, including Peter
born in October of 1604. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603),
they thrived in the peaceful period for religious freedom that prevailed in
England. But the uncertainties of the future there, and the eventual successes
of English colonists seeking new opportunities in America pushed Edmund toward
a decision to leave his homeland and join them.
With creation of the Massachusetts Bay Colony as an
investment company in 1628, Edmund found his vehicle. That colony evolved from
a land grant issued to a group of English investors led by the Puritan minister
John White, who would never join the migration himself. The company recruited
settlers and sent about 100 by the end of 1628 to its grant of land in the
Boston area, then known as Charlestown. The next year they received a royal
charter from King Charles I, who likely had no idea that settlers planned to
establish a Puritan stronghold in Massachusetts.
The Puritan Great Migration really got rolling in 1630
with the appointment of John Winthrop as governor, a position he would hold for
12 years. Winthrop would coordinate the emigration of more than 20,000 Puritan
settlers to the area during his time running the colony. By 1633, Edmund Hobart
had become one of them, leading an exodus from Hingham destined to devastate
the area in their wake.
Edmund’s group had been so prominent in the community
that those left behind had to petition the English government for assistance. Historical
documents from the period described the town as having been uprooted physically,
socially and spiritually from England to Massachusetts.
THREE DECADES OF PREPARATION
Just as his parentage remains in dispute, the birth
year of my Grandpa Edmund Hobart is uncertain, too. Research by WikiTree’s
Puritan Great Migration Project places it in 1575 with marriage in Hingham to
my grandmother Margaret Dewe on 7 September of 1600, according to church
records. By 1617 they had created a family with 10 children, all baptized in
Hingham. Margaret’s parentage, birth and death also remain unclear, but it
appears she never made it to Massachusetts because no record reflects her
joining the church with Edmund upon his arrival.
Optimism about the opportunities in Massachusetts had blossomed by 1625 with the publication of stories touting the successes of the Pilgrims at Plymouth Plantation, including circulation of letters from the colonists themselves. Winthrop arrived with a fleet of 11 ships and 700 colonists in June of 1630, scouting the coast from Maine south to what today is Boston harbor and settling on the southern end of the bay at Charlestown on the mouth of the Mystic River.
Charlestown had been established by an earlier
immigrant named Samuel Maverick, who had built a house. The newcomers began
building wigwams to prepare for the winter. But sickness triggered fears about
the water supply there. So, Winthrop relocated his colony across the bay to
what would become Boston, about 20 miles north of Charlestown.
Meanwhile, Edmund was continuing his life in Hingham—a
life that had prepared him to lead a party of colonists into a virgin landscape.
Notes Ripley: “In making his plans for living in the wilderness, Edmund’s
experience of operating his estate in Hingham, England, was invaluable.”
As Lord of the Manor in Hingham, Edmund managed land
and tenants. He supervised construction of housing and farm buildings,
purchased equipment and made repairs. He oversaw the breeding of cattle and
raised livestock, buying and selling them. Margaret would have been adept at
managing the farm economy, gardening and supervising the manufacture of
clothing. She also would have supervised home education as a crucial part of
the Puritan culture.
About the time of Peter’s birth in 1604, Hingham
welcomed the controversial Robert Peck as the Puritan rector at St. Andrews.
Peck would have a great influence on the community in general and the Hobart
family in particular as a mentor for Peter. Later Peck would join them in
moving briefly to Massachusetts.
Edmund shared correspondence with Winthrop after
establishment of the colony in Boston. By then, ships were moving regularly
between London and the American colonies as commercial trading got under way.
He received important advice on preparations for moving the Hingham
congregation across the Atlantic. Families usually sold their homes and
furniture before emigrating, replacing them in the colony after arrival.
With Winthrop’s advice, Edmund decided to eventually
settle his group of 14 family members and seven wealthy community leaders south
of Boston at a place called Bare Cove. That area of coastline offered many
potentially suitable locations for harbors. One of Edmund’s acquaintances had
already settled at Bare Cove, so the first Hobart party enjoyed several
advantages of advance information when it landed at Charlestown on 15 June of
1633. Edmund planned to live in Charlestown for a while, dispatching work parties
to Bare Cove to prepare shelter, survey home lots and scout for farmland.
Researching an ancestor like Edmund leads me to
philosophize a bit on the subject of leadership. I wonder how one man like
Edmund became a leader for so many in such a dangerous and arduous venture, to
pack up and cross an ocean without knowing what really lay on the other side? I
recall from my own life that leaders always seem to emerge. As early as first
grade, for example, I recall my classmates dividing into groups following one
little boy or another. In my case, I remember three boys named Mike emerging as
leaders of three different groups and a fourth group led by a boy named Ronnie.
These groups congregated during our recess periods—our free time away from the
teachers.
I can’t remember how they led us. Did they assign
positions for ball games? Why did we follow their orders? Were they persuasive
and articulate in the view of their first-grade peers? Did we fear them
physically? Or, did they just assume a dominant role as alphas for some reason?
How far would we have followed them? Later on, these questions probably would
arise if boys advanced into gangs with criminal intentions. Would we have
accepted their orders on a trip across the ocean?
Writing for Forbes magazine in 2015, Kevin Kruse explored the concept of leadership within companies. He emphasizes that titles do not make a
leader in any endeavor—church, community or workplace. Seeking a definition of
leadership, Kruse offers quotes from noted business icons to help but finally
he concludes with his own definition: “Leadership is a process of social
influence, which maximizes the efforts of others, towards the achievement of a
goal.”
So, how did Edmund Hobart and his son Peter influence
their neighbors to follow them toward achieving the goal of building a new
world in the New World? Since the followers were adults, it seems obvious that
both men would have had to have articulate and persuasive language skills,
dominating conversation and debate in a way that engendered trust in their
decisions. But Ripley in his biography of Peter Hobart offers additional
observation that makes sense.
Although the WikiTree Puritan Great Migration Project
as well as FamilySearch declines to identify any parents for Edmund, Ripley
seems confident in identifying his father as Thomas Hubbarde and credits that
link for Edmund’s power in Hingham. He writes: “Edmund’s status as gentry came
from inherited wealth and land holdings. In 1598 at age 26, Edmund Hobart
arrived in Hingham, England from Snoring Magna near Norwich to assume the
hereditary title of Lord of the Manor and to receive rents and services from lands
which his father, Thomas Hubbarde, had willed to him.”
The search for confirmation of Edmund’s parentage has
taken several interesting twists over the years. In 1966, for example,
descendant Keith W. Hubbard offered a $150 reward for anyone providing proof of
Edmund’s parentage. One researcher claimed the reward by supplying records of a
baptism of “Edwardi Hubbard” in 1573 at Snoring Magna listing Thomas Hubbarde
as the father. In his source materials for his 2001 book about the family,
Ripley cites records from Keith W. Hubbard as the source for his belief in
Edmund’s inheritance. Later researchers have discounted the fruits of Keith
Hubbard’s reward. One explanation for the confusion likely stems from the
family’s use of several different names through the centuries before finally
settling on Hobart in colonial America.
Nevertheless, Ripley makes a strong case for Edmund
having inherited wealth from somewhere. While Edmund may have been illiterate
himself, he had the resources to finance a Cambridge education for Peter. And
after the Hobarts abandoned Hingham, England with their group, their departure
left the town so devastated it needed aid from the government.
In addition, Edmund has been described by American
contemporaries as a profoundly religious man, a Puritan zealot, which means he
could probably bring the fire and brimstone into any conversation with fellow
parishioners already terrified about religious persecution from the English
monarchy. By 1633 he had demonstrated the skills of management and the will to
succeed that attracted followers.
Landing in Charlestown, Edmund joined the church and
became a citizen. He began building three houses side by side to use while
expanding into the Bare Cove area. He was named a constable of Charlestown and
later would become a justice of the peace after relocating to Bare Cove and
renaming it Hingham.
At 60 years of age, Edmund was entering the twilight
of his productive life when he led the Hingham congregation into the New World.
But he had planned for the future, too. He had persuaded his well-educated son—my
9GG Peter Hobart—to join the community as its new pastor. By the time of
Edmund’s death 13 years later in 1646, the old man could take pride in a
successful passing of the baton to the next generation. He was always known as “Edmund
Hobart the Elder.”
PETER HOBART AND THE PURITAN THEOCRACY
Born 8 October of 1604, my 9th great-grandpa Peter Hobart was the third child of ten born to Edmund Hobart and Margaret Dewe, who
had married in 1600 in Hingham, England, where Edmund was Lord of the Manor. As
usual for those days, Edmund and Margaret wasted no time in building their
family. Peter followed sister Nazareth in 1601 and brother Edmund Jr. in 1603.
Some reports claim they were twins. He was followed by four younger brothers
and three younger sisters each born about a year apart until 1617. Younger
brother Joshua Hobart, born 1614, also would play a key role in the development
of Hingham, Massachusetts.
The timing could not have been more perfect for Peter
to grow to manhood. By all accounts, Peter as a lad benefitted from an agile
and curious mind in a time of the European reawakening. He walked several miles
daily to reach a grammar school. After attending a free school at Lyn, Peter
received a recommendation from the master there for advancement. He took
advantage of all educational opportunities and earned a bachelor’s degree of
arts in 1625 from Queen’s College and Magdalen College at Cambridge University.
He added a Master of Arts in 1629 and was ordained as a minister in the
Anglican Church of England.
At that time, Puritan scholars dominated the faculty
at Cambridge, exposing Peter to their religious philosophy. He also became
influenced by the Reverend Robert Peck (1580-1656), a Puritan lecturer who
became the rector at St. Andrews in old Hingham. Later, in New England, Peter
would marry one of Peck’s nieces after the death of his first wife, and my 9GG Elizabeth Ibrook.
Besides teaching children at a grammar school, the
young graduate had no difficulty finding invitations to lecture at many
churches around that part of England. The masses hungered for education and
welcomed the Puritan scholars who brought philosophical enlightenment. These
contracts also paid well.
Ripley writes: “In London of 1628, with a total
population of about 250,000, ninety percent of the 116 Anglican parishes had
hired lecturers, and almost half of these were Puritans…Peter easily found
employment as a lecturer at various Church of England parishes in and around
Southwold, and it proved to be a lucrative living.”
Even before graduating, Peter had married my 9th
great-grandmother Elizabeth Ibrook in 1628. Her parents Richard Ibrook (1580-1651)
and Margaret Gentleman (1587-1664) also would emigrate to Massachusetts in 1635,
living in new Hingham until their deaths and outliving daughter Elizabeth, who
died in 1645 at the age of 37 during childbirth.
Before her death, Elizabeth had 11 children with
Peter, including my 8th great-grandmother, also named Elizabeth (1632-1692).
Her 1654 marriage to my 8GG John Ripley (1621-1684) joined the Hobarts with another
powerful Puritan oligarch family, and my lineage would descend through Ripley
males until the 19th Century.
Citing Cotton Mather’s (1663-1728) short biography of
Peter Hobart, author Ripley notes in his biography of Peter that the couple lived
comfortably on Peter’s earnings from a lecturing assignment in Haverhill thanks
to Peter’s “diligence” and Elizabeth’s “frugality.” They were prosperous enough
to retain indentured servants who would accompany them to New England. Peter
also spent those years before emigration learning from Peck as a mentor and
honing his skills as a lecturer.
Say what you may about the excesses of Puritan
religious views. But it remains clear to me that their religious zeal served
them well facing the challenges of settling a wilderness. They believed they
had a duty to their creator to live as perfect a life as possible—a view that
motivated them culturally and commercially toward success. Peter Hobart
harnessed that motivation as he gathered an emigration party from Hingham and
Southwold to join Edmund’s group in Massachusetts.
By the time Peter’s group arrived in Charlestown on 8
June of 1635, his father’s group had relocated to Bare Cove—so named because
the water there fell so shallow at low tide. Peter’s party moved into the three
houses Edmund had built in Charlestown and occupied since his arrival two years
before. Charlestown and the Boston area had grown into bustling market towns.
While Peter established himself as a new citizen and
pastor in the colony, Edmund waited in Bare Cove building new houses and
organizing a new town. Bare Cove already boasted a small population of English
settlers who had come earlier as fishermen. Known as the West Countrymen, they
welcomed the new Puritan arrivals as evidence of commercial growth and eagerly
awaited Peter’s arrival as a new pastor.
After taking an oath of allegiance to the
Massachusetts Bay Colony in Boston and joining the Congregational Church in
Charlestown, Peter received permission from the colony’s General Court to
incorporate Bare Cove as a new town named Hingham and distribute land there for
settlement. On 2 September of 1635 his party took the short four-hour boat ride
along the coast to join his father.
While the Pilgrims living at Plymouth considered
themselves “separatists” without ties to the Anglican Church of England, the
Puritan pastors like Peter Hobart received their ordination from the Anglican
church. They just practiced their religion more independently from the Anglican
ceremonies. But they were separated by distance in New England and free to
create their own governing structure. The result was a theocracy or oligarchy
in which the pastors and church members controlled everything in their communities.
They also became wealthy through control of commercial enterprises and the
land.
They called their churches “congregational churches”
or Church of Christ and only members could vote as “Freemen.” The charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
established the offices of governor, deputy governor and 18 additional
magistrates elected annually by freemen and serving as the Governor’s Council
in Boston.
As the population grew, communities emerged across New
England. From 506 settlers in 1630, the colony swelled to 8,932 by 1640 and
more than 14,000 in 1650—excluding colonists living in Maine. Immigration
attracted few titled nobles, but most of the newcomers boasted some degree of
wealth and skill that influenced commercial growth.
Commercial enterprises included shipbuilding,
fisheries, fur and lumber. By 1632, ships from Massachusetts were trading with
other colonies, England and some countries in Europe. A merchant might ship
dried fish to Portugal or Spain, collect wine and oil for buyers in England and
carry finished goods back to New England. By 1660, historians believe the
colony’s merchant fleet counted more than 200 vessels.
After arriving in Hingham and drawing lots for their
homesteads, Peter’s group joined his father in selection of a place for construction
of a large building for a meeting house as required by the governor’s council
for new settlements. They designed this building to serve as a place of
worship, a town hall and a fort for defense against hostile natives or invaders
from other colonial empires. But they had to start building individual homes
first.
Peter arrived at about the time the colony became
engaged in its first war with native Americans, known as the Pequot War (1636-1638).
For the previous decade, settlers in Plymouth and around Boston had enjoyed a
peaceful relationship with New England natives who engaged with them in the fur
trade. By 1635, however, those commercial relationships had frayed to a point
where violence erupted. It concluded with annihilation of the Pequot nation by
an alliance of the colonial communities in New England and ushered in a period
of peace destined to last 40 years until the larger conflict known as King
Philip’s War (1675-1678).
Besides the meeting house, colony regulations required
that each community also build a training field for their militia, a town
common, school, tavern, stocks, pillories and animal pens. They could build no
house farther than a half-mile from the meeting house. In the event of attack,
residents could reach their fortress in haste. Living so closely together,
however, they enjoyed little privacy from their neighbors policing their Puritanical
ways.
But their general level of freedom in New England must
have created a significant cultural shock for a population accustomed to
monarchy. It was here that the foundations for American democracy were laid.
“They well understood that much of the English
medieval culture had to be abandoned to make room for a new, prosperous
theocracy,” writes Ripley. “The Reverend Peter Hobart and the Hingham
Plantation congregation were active participants.”
Ripley cites the advantage of Hingham’s large,
circular and sheltered harbor as a foundation for the community’s growth and
prosperity. Hingham quickly became a thriving seaport with the construction of
new wharves and shipyards. Although the settlers had brought farming skills
from England, they diversified into merchants, lumbermen, fishermen and seamen.
The community erected three mills for grinding grain and sawing lumber. Those
mills emerged as gathering spots for a wide range of people—locals to sailors
arrived from foreign lands.
Within the Hingham community, Ripley identified three
distinct classes. Atop the oligarchy sat the pastor Peter Hobart, local elected
government leaders and wealthy owners of property. Colony rules prohibited
Peter from holding a government position. But only church members could vote.
And to join the church, newcomers were required to sit for an interview with
the local pastor—giving him control over citizens with voting rights. Lesser
gentry and craftsmen formed the second class while cottage farmers labored at
the bottom.
Regulations required all able-bodied men between 16
and 55 to train with the local militia. But Hingham enjoyed peaceful relations
with the natives in its area. They lived in wigwams nearby and often received
work in the town. In 1665, the local chief would officially cede the land to
the Hingham settlers in exchange for what was recorded only as a “valuable
consideration,” according to Ripley.
Seven ships brought more than a hundred settlers in
1638, including Robert Peck, who would stay only for three years. Meanwhile,
local politics grew complicated as the Old Hingham settlers easily outnumbered
the earlier West Country fishermen who had come from Cornwall, Devon, Dorset
and Somerset. But Peter helped keep the peace by including the West Country
folks in church positions, despite their disdain for Puritan reforms in the
Anglican church.
“Moreover, early records seemed to indicate that the
West Country people were a somewhat bawdy country folk, fond of common
pleasures,” writes Ripley. “This included the pagan rite of Maypole dancing,
cavorting with ladies of pleasure and public drunkenness.”
Still, 90 percent of the Hingham population had become
members of the Puritan church by 1640, compared with just 50 percent in Boston.
Cotton Mather credited Peter Hobart’s personality and even-handed leadership
for his success in leading the parish growth. Peter also earned respect for his
fearlessness in challenging the colony authorities in Boston and championing
his community’s right to make decisions for themselves.
In one example, Peter welcomed to the Hingham
congregation the carpenter Thomas Joy after he had been jailed and then forced
out of Boston in 1646 for opposition to Governor Winthrop there. In a notable controversy,
Peter challenged the colony’s general council in a dispute that
became known as Peter Hobart’s Rebellion. The dispute involved the excommunication
and dismissal of Hingham’s elected militia leader despite the objections of
Governor Winthrop.
After researching official accounts, Ripley concluded:
“The standard historical interpretation retained Winthrop’s casting of Hobart
as a rebellious troublemaker.”
Later analysis, however, has come to portray my 9th great-grandpa as a local hero of sorts who eventually accepted a fine rather than surrender local rule. And his congregation joined him—armed with muskets—in a trip to Boston where he accused the governor of exceeding his authority under the charter. The affair ended with the council acquitting Winthrop and issuing a small fine against Peter and some of Hingham’s militia. Ripley writes he could find no record it ever got paid. In 1646, the record reflects an official from Boston failed to collect the fines from Peter and the other members of the militia.
In 1652, Peter’s brother Joshua became the captain of
the militia, which would join the colonial alliance against the native tribes
in what became known as King Philip’s War (1675-1678). Named
after the English title for the native chief Metacom, that conflict raged across
New England in the years just before Peter’s death, and represented the first
major war in America between English settlers and Native Americans.
Often overlooked when compared with later conflicts on
the western plains, King Philip’s War devastated the New England colonies and
ranked as the native tribes’ final bid to chase the settlers from North
America. More than half of all New England towns suffered attacks during the
war with many destroyed. Hingham sent more than 50 of its militia men to the
colonial alliance, including Peter’s brother Joshua as captain of the force.
The city constructed three forts for defensive purposes.
Nevertheless, the natives attacked the town on 19
April 1676 and burned five houses before withdrawing. They apparently
determined Hingham too well-defended for further risk. Peace arrived later that
year following the death of the native chief, King Philip.
Ripley concludes the Hingham oligarchy used its power
of wealth and elected positions to maintain political control of the town and
the local congregation. One analysis from 1642-1688 found that 10 percent of the
leading families controlled 31 percent of Hingham’s wealth. Ripley notes:
“During the first half century, the three families of Hobarts, Cushings and
Beales held one-third of all elected positions in the Hingham settlement.”
Peter received an annual salary of 70 to 100 pounds
(worth about $20,000 in 2025), making him one of the highest compensated
pastors in the colony, according to Ripley. He also received grants of land
from time to time. Besides leading the parish, Peter also served as the town’s
primary physician, a position that likely required little medical knowledge at
that time. But his academic credentials must have impressed the patients who
contacted him to cure their ills.
The inventory of his holdings after his death in 1679
recorded his net worth in money and land at 1,254 British pounds, worth an
estimated $348,070 in 2025.
Also for their money, the congregation received
lectures lasting six to eight hours on Sunday and Thursday every week. I can’t
imagine sitting through sermons like that or being able to talk for that long.
I can see why the serious Puritan era lasted only about two decades before the
younger generations discovered more entertaining activities. Church membership
began a decline.
Peter fathered 11 children with my 9th great-grandmother,
Elizabeth Ibrook, and seven more with his second wife, Rebecca Peck. At least
five of those children graduated from Harvard, which the Puritans founded in
1636 shortly after creation of the colony. His third child, my 8th
great-grandmother Elizabeth Hobart (1632-1692) married John Ripley (1621-1684)
about 1654 in Hingham.
In 1671 Peter contracted an unidentified illness so
severe it forced him to take a leave of absence. But he recovered and resumed
his ministry the next year until 1679 when he died at the age of 75. According
to Cotton Mather, Peter suffered depression during his final years as he
reviewed his life and concluded he had not fulfilled his full potential.
But Ripley offers his perspective in the final lines of his biography: “Peter Hobart’s colorful life and brave dedication to the on-going development of both religious tolerance and political inclusiveness in America warrants him a significant place in American colonial history.”
![]() |
Peter's Old Ship Church in Hingham today. |
SCOTTISH PRISONER OF WAR: ROBERT DUNBAR
Once the Puritans had established their oligarchy in
Massachusetts, they realized they still needed outsiders to ensure growth and
economic development. That realization coupled with the outbreak of civil war
in England would provide me with another 8th great-grandfather in Robert Dunbar
(1634-1693), a man destined to become an intriguing figure in Hingham,
Massachusetts. Many things remain mysterious about him, but the facts that are
known sound fascinating indeed.
The first group of non-Puritan immigrants came to work
in an ironworks constructed by English investors between 1641 and 1645. Thanks
to tax exemptions and cooperation from the colony’s general court, those
investors demonstrated the power of public-private partnerships long before the
advent of those kinds of deals in our time.
“Puritan leaders were moving toward the diversified economy that sustained Massachusetts throughout the colonial period, a change that encouraged immigration from many Protestant regions of Europe,” notes Marsha Hamilton in a 2004 academic paper reporting research into “Alternative Communities in Seventeenth Century Massachusetts.”
The paper describes construction of an “elaborate”
plant in Saugus between Boston and Salem. Equipment included a furnace, two
refining forges, a finishing forge, a water-powered hammer, a slitting mill,
and a complex water system that powered seven water wheels. It attracted
skilled indentured workers from Europe.
As the first indentures expired about 1650, however,
the investors needed a new source of cheap labor. That need would be filled by England’s
Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell, who
had captured 10,000 prisoners in a battle at Dunbar south of Edinburgh during
his war against Scottish royalists seeking to maintain the English monarchy
just overthrown by Parliament under Cromwell’s leadership.
Unwilling to simply release those prisoners,
Cromwell’s government decided to exile many of them to England’s colonial
holdings from New England to the West Indies through indentures to budding
businesses there. The first group of 150 POWs arrived in December of 1650 in
Boston destined for the ironworks. My 8GG Robert Dunbar was among them.
Peter Hobart later would mention Robert Dunbar in his
journal as being one of the wealthiest residents of Hingham, where Robert lived
soon after his arrival. Peter noted that only two other Hingham residents paid
higher annual taxes, leaving many researchers to speculate that Robert may have
somehow brought funds from Scotland at some point. He married a woman known
only by her first name Rose—my 8th great-grandmother “Rose”—and speculation
suggests she might have joined him from Scotland with a nest egg of some sort.
In Hingham, they lived on Scotland Street—of course!
Descendants of New England’s Scottish POWs have
actively researched their family lines. Organized as The Scottish Prisoners of War Society, they maintain a web site and Facebook presence. The Society’s web site includes a profile of Robert under its list of prisoners
from the Battle of Dunbar on 3 September 1650 in East Lothian, Scotland. A 2017 article in Archeology Magazine also includes an account of
the Battle of Dunbar and the long, brutal forced march of prisoners south to
England before transport to the colonies.
![]() |
This 1886 painting depicts Cromwell at Dunbar |
Robert’s parentage remains a matter in dispute. One
record listed his rank as lieutenant colonel when captured but he would have
been a teenage officer in 1650. In a 1659 deposition for a legal dispute, he
reported his age as 25, offering the best written record on his birth. After
arriving in Boston, Robert was assigned to the ironworks at Braintree.
My Dunbar lineage chart:
Gen |
Name |
Spouse |
comments |
1 |
Robert
Dunbar (1634-1693) |
Rose
(Unknown) (?-1700) |
Transported
as a Scottish POW to Hingham 1650. |
2 |
Joseph
Dunbar (1661-1725) |
Christian
Garnet (1668-1726) |
Both
were born in Hingham, Massachusetts. |
3 |
Deborah
Dunbar (1697-1772) |
Samuel
Ransom (1693-1737) |
|
4 |
David
Ransom (1724-1801) |
Content
Tilson (1718-1804) |
|
5 |
Lydia
Abigail Ransom (1754-1786) |
Thaddeus
Ripley (1746-1831) |
Thaddeus
served in the American Revolution. |
6 |
Ransom
Ripley (1786-1842) |
Susan
Lane (1797-1851) |
Susan’s
father was a sea captain in the Revolution. |
7 |
Abbie
Jane Ripley (1833-1870) |
Joseph
Clement Libby (1831-1902) |
Joseph
moved the family to Missouri in 1860. |
8 |
Henry
Augustus Libby (1852-1913) |
Mary
Lamburth (1861-1939) |
Henry
was a baseball player in St. Louis, then a prominent farmer in Pike County, Missouri. |
9 |
Della
Libby (1891-1969) |
Leslie
Wright (1891-1972) |
|
10 |
Rheva
Wright (1918-1981) |
Dale
Taylor (1921-1984) |
|
11 |
Gary Dale Taylor (1947-) |
|
|
A MURDER IN MY FAMILY TREE
Likely the most infamous episode to emerge from my
genealogical research concerns the fate of my 7th great-grandmother Hannah Rogers (1669-1733), who died at the hands of her husband, my 7th
great-grandfather Amaziah Harding (1671-1734). Hannah was the granddaughter of
Mayflower passenger and my 9th great-grandfather Joseph Rogers (1603-1678).
Neither Hannah nor Amaziah were related to the Hobarts or Dunbars of Hingham.
But they remain part of my Massachusetts heritage, so their story belongs in
this post.
Although his lineage remains in dispute, Amaziah likely
was the grandson of my 9th great-grandfather Joseph Harding, who arrived in
1623. Amaziah was the fifth of 10 children born in Plymouth Colony to Joseph
Harding (1632-1687) and Bethia Cook (1640-1687). He married Hannah Rogers
before 1694 when the first of their nine children was born. Amaziah worked as a
miller, processing grains into flour.
Amaziah and Hannah lived a relatively inconspicuous
life together with their last child born in 1717. The brood included my 6th
great-grandfather John Harding (1698-1761). Then they made the papers and the
history books.
On 18 July 1733, Amaziah beat and strangled Hannah to death, then
tried to pretend she died of natural causes. His profile on WikiTree cites an
article from the Boston Weekly Newsletter of July 1733 to provide the details:
“We hear from Eastham on Cape Cod, That the beginning of last Week, a most barbarous Murder was committed there, on the body of one Mrs. Harding, suppos'd to be done by her own Husband Amaziah Harding; he having for a great while before, as 'tis said, carried it very ill towards her, to the imparing of her Reason; and now being found in the Room alone with her, where she lay dead near him, with her Neck twisted and broke, and about her Mouth and Throat much beat and bruis'd. The hard-hearted Man being thus surpriz'd, and charg'd with the Fact, by those who first discover'd it, endeavoured to put an end to his own Life, by stabing a Knife into his Bowels, which stroke not proving mortal immediately, he went to repeat it, aiming at his Breast, but was prevented by those about him, and on Friday last he was sent to Barnstable Goal.(sic)”
At Amaziah's trial in May 1734, neighbors testified
they met him at the door of his house, asked if his wife was dead, and were
told, “yes & he was glad of it.” They entered the house and found her body
on a bed wrapped in bed clothes. They testified he told them she had drank her
fill of rum. He added that she had been a “plague” to him for 20 years and he
hoped now he could find someone to clean the house for him.
So, the authorities hanged my 63-year-old 7th great-grandpa Amaziah on 5 June 1734 in Barnstable. To date, he is the only ancestor I’ve found who committed serious criminal acts.
SEA CAPTAIN AND REVOLUTIONARY WAR PRIVATEER FRANCIS
LANE
By 1750 the Massachusetts colony had grown
substantially following the Puritan Great Migration and other waves of
immigration. Established in 1642, Gloucester had grown into one the colony’s
most successful port towns with a population of 2,700 and a reputation for a
harbor lifestyle that extends into the present. After four or five generations
in the New World, the colonists had begun to consider themselves more Americans
than British, taking pride in the creation of a culture and commercial identity
all their own. They had grown ripe for revolution.
“In Gloucester as much as in any other community in Eastern Massachusetts, the warlike spirit was easily fostered and developed,” noted James R. Pringle in his 1892 History of the Town and City of Gloucester, Cape Ann, Massachusetts.
So, it should be no surprise to learn that Gloucester
moved quickly to join the fray after learning about the April 1775 battles
between colonial “Minute Men” and British regulars at Lexington and Concord.
Gloucester boasted its own group of Minute Men, too. Among the 225 recruits
mustering out from Gloucester toward Boston on 12 June 1775 was my 4th
great-grandfather Francis Lane—just 19 at the time.
“Captain Row’s company marched from Gloucester, June
12, and on the evening of the 16th reached Breed’s Hill where they
assisted in throwing up a redoubt,” recorded Pringle, listing Francis Lane as a
member of that group.
Two companies of militia had left Gloucester to assist
patriot forces in what would become known as the Battle of Bunker Hill. Actually
fought on nearby Breed’s Hill, the Battle of Bunker Hill erupted 17 June 1775
after colonial forces in Boston learned of British plans to occupy the hills
overlooking this crucial seaport. On their third assault of the hill, the
British forced colonial forces to retreat, seizing control of the Charlestown
Peninsula in a tactical victory.
![]() |
British charging up Breed's Hill |
But the British suffered many more casualties with 226
dead and another 828 wounded—including 100 commissioned officers. Colonials
lost 140 dead and another 310 wounded. The British lost a significant portion
of the regular officers stationed in America. The Battle of Bunker Hill ranks
as a landmark in the revolution demonstrating that colonial militia squads
could handle British regulars on the battlefield.
Thanks to his service at Bunker Hill, Francis Lane is a Patriot Ancestor for the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) A068597. But he was just getting started. Francis returned to Gloucester and signed aboard one of the vessels known as a privateer in the fleet that would become America’s guerilla navy.
“While the Continental fleet had little impact on the outcome of the war, tens of thousands of citizen sailors seeking both freedom and fortune played a critical, yet underappreciated, role in the quest for independence,” wrote historian Christopher Klein in a 2020 article for History.com. “An armada of more than 2,000 so-called privateers commissioned by both the Continental Congress and individual states preyed on enemy shipping on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, severely disrupting the British economy and turning British public opinion against the war.”
Investors posted bonds to receive privateering commissions that would allow the ship captains and crews to keep British cargos and vessels seized at sea. Operating like a navy of pirates, the privateer navy provided my 4GG with an education in seamanship and a nest egg by the end of the war. Of course, the service did not come risk-free, as many privateers went down and crews were killed or captured.
To learn more about the privateers, you can read about the Irish captain Luke Ryan in an article by Bob Ruppert in 2017 on the web site for the Journal of the American Revolution.
“Much like investors in the stock market, speculators made vast fortunes by buying shares in and bankrolling privateering enterprises,” noted Klein in History.com. “Ship owners and investors usually received half the value of seized goods, with the other half divided among privateering crews.”
The privateers operated as far afield as Canada, the
Caribbean and even close to England itself, forcing insurers to increase the
costs of commerce for the British. But an estimated 12,000 Americans died in
British prison ships, with most of those privateers who spawned a generation of
orphans and widows back in New England. Gloucester lost all 24 of its
registered privateers, according to Klein’s research, cutting the town’s male
population in half by the war’s end.
Nevertheless, American privateers captured an
estimated 2,300 British ships, compared with just 200 by the American regulars
of the Continental Navy. They helped turn popular opinion in Britain against
continuation of the war.
Although many of his fellow sailors from Gloucester
failed to return, my 4GG Francis Lane managed to survive and collect his share
of several cargoes, according to genealogical records. He became Captain
Francis Lane after the war and took ships around the world. He wrecked once on
Sable Island off the coast of Nova Scotia in Canada, spending a winter there
while recovering a cargo of cotton from the sunken ship.
Born 12 December 1756 in Gloucester, Francis Lane
descended from colonists who had arrived in Maine a century before but moved to
Gloucester about 1700 to escape wars with natives. He married my 4th great-grandmother Esther Griffin in 1779 in Gloucester. A descendant of a family that arrived as part of
the Puritan Great Migration in 1639, she died at age 38 in 1799 while helping a
neighbor recover from Yellow Fever.
They had six children together, including my 3rd great-grandmother Susan Lane (1797-1851).
Francis survived Esther, remarried and lived until 1829
when he died in Paris, Maine at the age of 73. Lane family genealogy records report him as
“rather small in stature with light complexion, blue eyes and delicate
constitution—soldier, scholar and gentlemen.”
I really would have enjoyed sitting down and sharing a
round of drinks with Francis Lane so I could hear more details about his
adventures on the high seas.
My Lane lineage chart
Gen |
Name |
Spouse |
comments |
1 |
Francis
Lane (1756-1829) |
Esther
Griffin (1761-1799) |
Revolutionary
veteran of Bunker Hill and privateer |
2 |
Susan
Lane (1797-1851) |
Ransom
Ripley (1786-1842) |
|
3 |
Abbie
Jane Ripley (1833-1870) |
Joseph
Clement Libby (1831-1902) |
Joseph
moved the family to Missouri in 1860. |
4 |
Henry
Augustus Libby (1852-1913) |
Mary
Lamburth (1861-1939) |
Henry
was a baseball player in St. Louis, then a prominent farmer in Pike County, Missouri. |
5 |
Della
Libby (1891-1969) |
Leslie
Wright (1891-1972) |
|
6 |
Rheva
Wright (1918-1981) |
Dale
Taylor (1921-1984) |
|
7 |
Gary
Dale Taylor (1947-) |
|
|