Description:

Colonial Massachusetts
Plymouth, MA, ca. 1705-1723
Winslow Family, Mayflower Passengers, Archive of 4 Pieces
Archive
A collection of four documents relating to the prominent Winslow family, whose early members came to America on the Mayflower. Edward Winslow (1595-1655) was a Separatist and New England political leader who traveled on the Mayflower in 1620. He was one of the first governors of Plymouth Colony. Both Edward Winslow and his brother, Gilbert Winslow (1600-1631) who was only 20 years old at the time, signed the Mayflower Compact.

The documents have flattened folds and creases. Varying degrees of expected age toning, browning, dampstaining, soiling, and foxing. Paper loss and edge chipping, with previous mounting for reinforcement. Scattered pencil notations from prior collector. Please review images for more details on condition and content. The collection consists of, in chronological order:

1.) Manuscript Document Signed by James Cole, Edward Gray and Nathaniel Winslow, as the Committee, 1p, 7.5" x 10.75", Taunton, Bristol County, Massachusetts, July 5, 1705, a General Sessions of the Peace to determine "the most convenient way from Asonet River in Free Town to a certain place called Baiting Brook at or near Middlebury..."

2.) Manuscript Document Signed by John Ballantine as clerk, Edward Winslow as Sheriff, and the widow Giles Harris, with her mark, 3pp bifolium, 7.5" x 11.75", Boston, Massachusetts, September 18, 1717, a writ of execution ordering Thomas Hendry to restore title and possession of "a certain piece of Land on the North East side of Cross Street in Boston...with a wooden house..." to Giles Harris, executrix of her late husband's estate and rightful owner of the property.

3.) Autograph Document Signed, "Isaac Winslow", 1p bifolium, 6" x 7.5", Plymouth, Massachusetts, March 6, 1722/23, a memo addressed on the verso to and in reply to Mr. Robert Robinson: "I shall not be willing to comply with the proposal you make in your letter but...I shall be at Boston in a short time when I will not fail to see you..."

4.) Manuscript Document Signed by John Ballantine as clerk, 2pp on one sheet measuring 7.5" x 12", Boston, Massachusetts, September 26, 1723, a contemporary copy of an order for John Menzies of Leicester, Judge of His Majesty's Vice-Admiralty, to appear at Boston's Inferior Court of Common Pleas to answer charges of questionable financial dealings in the sale of the Sloop Africa. Signed and witnessed twice by Edward Winslow, as sheriff. Verso bears an undated, signed testimony by Robert Auchmuty, lawyer in the Court of Admiralty, attesting to Menzies's innocence.

Isaac Winslow (c. 1671-1738) was an American politician and military officer who lived in Marshfield, Massachusetts. A member of the prominent Winslow family of the Plymouth Colony, he served as a civil and military official in a period marked by political transition. Winslow was appointed to the Plymouth County Inferior Court of Common Pleas in 1712 and served until 1738, for the last nine years as its chief justice. In 1715, he was commissioned a colonel in the Massachusetts militia and given charge of a regiment drawn from Plymouth County, and was a judge of the Court of Probate for Plymouth from 1718 to 1738. A decade after Plymouth's incorporation into Massachusetts, Winslow became prominent at a wider colonial level. In 1703, he was appointed for the first time to the Council for the Province of Massachusetts Bay. As a representative in the legislature's upper house, he and his fellow councilors were to serve as advisors to the Royal Governor in Boston, as well as pass laws and approve government expenditures.

Colonel Edward Winslow (1669-1753) was an American silversmith, military officer, sheriff and jurist. He was one of ten children, and his father died when he was 13 years old. He was the grandson of John Winslow and Mary Chilton who came to America on the Mayflower. Edward was the grand nephew of Edward Winslow, one of the first governors of Plymouth Colony. In 1682, he became an apprentice to Jeremiah Dummer, who was one of America's first silversmiths. Winslow excelled and became a sought-after silversmith. Numerous examples of his work are in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Yale University Art Gallery, Art Institute of Chicago, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

John Ballantine (1653-1734) was a Register of Deeds for the county of Suffolk, Massachusetts. He was a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts, as ensign in 1694, lieutenant in 1697, and captain in 1703 and 1710.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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  • Dimensions: largest 7.5" x 12"
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