Elder 'William Brewster' (born c.
1560 in
Scrooby,
England, died
10 April 1644 in
Plymouth, Massachusetts), was a
Pilgrim colonist leader and preacher who came from
Scrooby, in north
Nottinghamshire and reached what became the
Plymouth Colony in the ''
Mayflower'' in
1620. He is generally considered to be the most famous of the pilgrims. He was accompanied by his wife, Mary Brewster, and his sons, Love Brewster and Wrestling Brewster. Son Jonathan joined the family in November 1621, arriving at Plymouth on the ship ''Fortune'', and daughters Patience and Fear arrived in July 1623 aboard the ''Anne''.
Biography
Origins
William Brewster was baptised in
1560 in
Scrooby,
Nottinghamshire. He was the son of William Brewster and Mary Smyth, and he had a number of half-siblings. His paternal grandparents were William Brewster and Maud Mann. His maternal grandfather was Thomas Smyth. Brewster may have been born in
Doncaster.
Scrooby Manor was in the possession of the Archbishops of York. Brewster's father, William senior, had been the estate bailiff for the archbishop for thirty-one years from around 1580. With this post went that of
postmaster, which was a more important one than it might have been in a village not situated on the Great North Road, as Scrooby was then.
William Junior studied briefly at
Peterhouse,
Cambridge before entering the service of William Davidson in 1584. In 1585, Davidson went to the
Netherlands to negotiate an alliance with the
States-General. In 1586, Davidson was appointed assistant to
Queen Elizabeth's Secretary of State Francis Walsingham, but in 1587 Davidson lost the favour of Elizabeth, after the beheading of her cousin (once removed) Mary, Queen of Scots.
Dissent
Cambridge was a centre of thought concerning religious reformism, but Brewster's time in the Netherlands, in connection with Davidson's work, gave him opportunity to hear and see more of reformed religion. While, earlier in the
sixteenth century, reformers had hoped to amend the
Anglican church, by the end of it, many were looking toward splitting from it. (See
Brownist).
On Davidson's disgrace, Brewster returned to Scrooby. There, from 1590 to 1607, he held the position of postmaster. As such he was responsible for the provision of
stage horses for the mails, having previously, for a short time, assisted his father in that office. By the 1590s, Brewster's brother, James, was a rather rebellious Anglican priest, vicar of the parish of Sutton and Lound, in Nottinghamshire. From 1594, it fell to James to appoint curates to Scrooby church so that Brewster, James and leading members of the Scrooby congregation were brought before the ecclesiastical court for their dissent. They were set on a path of separation from the Anglican Church. From about 1602, Scrooby Manor, Brewster's home, became a meeting place for the dissenting Puritans. In 1606, they formed the Separatist Church of Scrooby.
Emigration
Restrictions and pressures applied by the authorities convinced the congregation of a need to emigrate to the more sympathetic atmosphere of
Holland, but leaving
England without permission was illegal at the time, so that departure was a complex matter. On its first attempt, in 1607, the group was arrested at
Scotia Creek, but in 1608 Brewster and others were successful in leaving from
The Humber. In 1609, he was selected as ruling elder of the congregation.
Initially, the Pilgrams settled in Amersterdam, and worshipped with the
Ancient Church of Francis Johsonson and Henry Ainsworth. Offput by the bickering between the two, though (which ultimately resulted in a division of the Church]], the Pilgrams left Amsterdam and moved to Leiden, after only a year.
In
Leiden, the group managed to make a living. Brewster taught English and later, in 1616-1619, printed and published religious books for sale in England though they were proscribed there, as the partner of one Thomas Brewer. In 1619, the printing type was seized by the authorities under pressure from the English ambassador Sir Dudley Carleton and Brewster's partner was arrested. Brewster escaped and, with the help of Robert Cushman, obtained a land patent from the London Virginia Company on behalf of himself and his colleagues.
In 1620 he joined the first group of Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower on the voyage to
North America. When the colonists landed at
Plymouth, Brewster became the senior elder of the colony, serving as its religious leader and as an advisor to Governor
William Bradford.
As the only university educated member of the colony, Brewster took the part of the colony's religious leader until a pastor,
Ralph Smith, arrived in 1629. Thereafter, he continued to preach irregularly until his death in April 1644.
Brewster was granted land amongst the islands of
Boston Harbor, and four of the outer islands (
Great Brewster,
Little Brewster,
Middle Brewster and
Outer Brewster) now bear his name.
[1][2]
Descendants
William Brewster married
Mary (whose maiden name is unknown) and together they had six children, five of whom survived to adulthood and four of whom had children. There are many notable descendants of William Brewster, including
Zachary Taylor,
Cokie Roberts,
Roger Nash Baldwin,
Katharine Hepburn,
Bing Crosby,
Brewster Shaw,
Lyndon LaRouche,
George B. McClellan,
Julia Child,
Richard Gere,
Nelson Rockefeller,
Norman Rockwell,
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
Chevy Chase,
Ted Danson,
Howard Dean,
Seth MacFarlane,
Holly Rudd,
Charles G. Dawes,
Bill Richardson,
Bill W.,
Tom Rudd,
John Foster Dulles,
David Souter,
Adlai Stevenson III, and
Jan Masaryk.
References
Specific references
1. Calf Island Factsheet
2. Islands You Can Visit - Great Brewster Island
General references
#Dowsing, J. ''Places of the Pilgrim Fathers'' Sunrise Press, London.
#''Encyclopædia Britannica''. (1960)
#
See Ashbel Steele's ''Chief of the Pilgrims; or the Life and Time of William Brewster'' (Philadelphia, 1857); and a sketch in William Bradford's ''History of the Plimouth Plantation'' (new ed., Boston, 1898).
External links
★
The Elder William Brewster Society, A Pilgrim Lineage Society