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William Carpenter (Rhode Island colonist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English colonist in North America (c. 1610–1685)
William Carpenter
Bornabt. 1610
Died7 September 1685
Known forFirst surnamed Carpenter to make permanent residence in America
Stonehenge nearAmesbury in Wiltshire, England

William Carpenter (c. 1610 – 7 September 1685) was a co-founder of theEnglishColony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, born about 1610, probably inAmesbury,Wiltshire,England. He died September 7, 1685, in the Pawtuxet section of Providence, now inCranston, Rhode Island. He was listed by 1655 as a"freeman" of the colony.

Life and career

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William Carpenter was the son of Richard Carpenter, who was born in England, probably in or near theWiltshire town and parish of Amesbury or the adjacent parish of Newton Ton(e)y. His mother may have been Alice Knight, but this is not confirmed.

William married Elizabeth Arnold (Nov 23, 1611 - after Sep 7, 1685), who was born inIlchester,Somerset, England, the daughter ofWilliam Arnold (June 24, 1587 - 1675/76) and sister ofBenedict Arnold, the first governor of theColony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.[1] William and Elizabeth had eight children together: Joseph, Lydia, Ephraim, Priscilla, Timothy, Silas, Benjamin, and William. The couple were probably buried on their homestead in present-day Cranston, Rhode Island.[2][3]

William Carpenter is the first person bearing thesurname "Carpenter" to make permanent settlement in America.[4] He settled in Providence Plantation and was instrumental in its development as a Colony, holding many public offices.

Original 1600s town layout of Providence, RI with many of the street names on the East Side named after the original homestead strip owners. William Carpenter's lot is left of the letter "D" in Providence Neck.

Providence Plantation

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See also:History of Providence

William Carpenter was not one of the first six settlers of Providence Plantation withRoger Williams[5] in 1636, but he arrived early the next spring with seven others.[6] His name islisted in the first deed executed in the settlement by Roger Williams.[7][8] In 1640, his name appears with the names of38 others on anagreement to form a government in Providence.

Carpenter built ablock house on his property soon after settling there for defense against Indian attacks, the first in the colony. Many of the surviving Providence Plantation settlers gathered there for protection from an Indian attack duringKing Philip's War, and their brave stand compelled the Indians to retreat. Carpenter's son William Jr. was killed in the attack, along with many other settlers.[9] During King Philip's War, the counsel of the most judicious inhabitants of the colony was sought by the General Assembly, and Carpenter wasone of 16 individuals named in this request.

Public offices

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William Carpenter was one of four appointed byBoston authorities "to keepe the peace in [Pawtuxet]," 1642[–1658?].

Commissioner (deputy?) for Providence to Rhode Island General Court Assembly
1657-1665, 1675, 1676, 1679.
Appointed juror, General Court of Trials
1657/8 (but did not serve), 1661[/2], 1663, 1664; juror for Grand Inquest, 1658/9, 1663, 1665; then warden (magistrate) for General Court of Trials, 1660/1.
Providencetown meeting moderator
June 1662, June 1665, September 1665, April 1666, September 1666, October 1670, December 1670, February 1670/1, April–September 1671.
General assistant for Providence to Rhode Island General Assembly
1665-1672.
Providencejustice of the peace
1665/6, 1667, 1668 and officiated marriages from his office as an assistant for the Providence to the Rhode Island General Assembly from 1669-1671/72.
Providencetown councilman
January 1670/1, June 1673.

Section References:[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Pawtuxet section of then Providence, now inCranston

References

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  1. ^John O. Austin, Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island, 1887, p 242
  2. ^36; John Osborne Austin, The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island, rev. ed. (Baltimore, 1969)
  3. ^5:323–25, 6:141, 150, 17:62–63; The Early Records of the Town of Providence, 21 vols. (Providence, 1892–1915); digital images online at http:// books.google.com and www.ancestry.com
  4. ^SEE: "GENEALOGICAL & FAMILY HISTORY OF WESTERN NEW YORK", LEWIS 1912, PAGE 274.
  5. ^See: Pawtuxet at:http://www.pawtuxetcove.com/Archived 2006-10-31 at theWayback Machine
  6. ^3:90–91, 4:73, 14:274; The Early Records of the Town of Providence, 21 vols. (Providence, 1892–1915); digital images online at http:// books.google.com and www.ancestry.com
  7. ^See also: William Carpenter in New England appears in Providence records under the heading "Agreements & orders the second year of ye Plantation" (Robert Charles Anderson, George F. Sanborn Jr., and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, THE GREAT MIGRATION: IMMIGRANTS TO NEW ENGLAND 1634-1635, Vol. 1 (A-B) [Boston, 2000], p. 84, citing Hingham Book of Possessions, p. 30; THE EARLY RECORDS OF THE TOWN OF PROVIDENCE, Vol. 1 [Providence, 1892], p. 3).
  8. ^SEE: "Genealogical History of the Carpenter Family" aka "The Carpenter Memorial", by A.B. Carpenter 1898, page 34 (No. 9-4).
  9. ^Amos B. Carpenter (1898).Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family. Carpenter & Morehouse. p. 34+.(No. 9-4)
  10. ^Records of the Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, 1628–1886, ed. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, 5 vols. in 6, 4:1: 332, 333; (Boston, 1853–1854)
  11. ^Nathaniel Bradstreet Shurtleff, ed. (1853).Records of the Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England: 1642-1649. Vol. 2. Massachusetts: W. White, printer to the commonwealth. pp. 26–27.
  12. ^Nathaniel Bradstreet Shurtleff, ed. (1854).Records of the Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England: 1642-1649. Vol. 5. Massachusetts: W. White, printer to the commonwealth.
  13. ^passim, 4:52, 6:103–4, 7:227, 8:11, 47, 15:84–149; The Early Records of the Town of Providence, 21 vols. (Providence, 1892–1915)
  14. ^Horatio Rogers, George Moulton Carpenter, ed. (1892).The Early Records of the Town of Providence. Vol. 1. Providence (R.I.). City Council: Snow & Farnham. p. 28.
  15. ^Horatio Rogers, George Moulton Carpenter, ed. (1893).The Early Records of the Town of Providence. Vol. 2. Providence (R.I.). City Council: Snow & Farnham. pp. 110, 114,118–19, 128, 131.
  16. ^Horatio Rogers, George Moulton Carpenter, ed. (1893).The Early Records of the Town of Providence. Vol. 3. Providence (R.I.). City Council: Snow & Farnham. pp. 2–247.
  17. ^1:366, 419, 428, 468, 480, 492, 501, 504, 508, 2:38–449, passim, 3:28–29; Records of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in New England, 10 vols., ed. John Russell Bartlett (Providence, 1856–1865); digital images of vols. 1 and 3 online at www.familysearch.com
  18. ^1 1:39, 50–51, 70, 2:42–75, passim; Rhode Island Court Records: Records of the Court of Tri-als of the Colony of Providence Plantations, 1647–1670, 2 vols. (Providence, 1920–1922); digital images online at www.ancestry.com
  19. ^1, 6, 7, 8; Rhode Island General Court of Trials, 1671–1704, transcr. Jane Fletcher Fisk (Boxford, Mass., 1998)
  20. ^159; More Early Records of the Town of Warwick, Rhode Is-land, ed. Cherry Fletcher Bamburg and Jane Fletcher Fiske (Boston, 2001)
  21. ^For other assignments, activities, etc., see: 2:123–24, 3:19, 28, 31, 42–43, 58; The Early Records of the Town of Providence, 21 vols. (Providence, 1892–1915); digital images online at http:// books.google.com and www.ancestry.com. and RICR 1:430, 444, 482, 507, 2:151–537, passim; Records of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in New England, 10 vols., ed. John Russell Bartlett (Providence, 1856–1865); digital images of vols. 1 and 3 online at www.familysearch.com and 46; Rhode Island General Court of Trials, 1671–1704, transcr. Jane Fletcher Fisk (Boxford, Mass., 1998)

Bibliography

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Further reading

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Carpenter, Daniel Hoogland (1901). "The Providence Line".History and Genealogy of the Carpenter Family in America From the Settlement at Providence, R.I., 1637-1901. New York:The Marion Press. pp. 8–29.[the chapter opens with:] The first person bearing the name of Carpenter who made permanent settlement in America was William Carpenter, son and heir of Richard Carpenter* of Amesbury, Wiltshire, England...

External links

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First settlers of Providence with Roger Williams
(1636)
State Seal of Rhode Island
Original proprietors of Providence
(signers of "initial deed", October 1638)
Pawtuxet Claimants
(settled 1638; under Massachusetts jurisdiction 1642–1658)
Founders of Portsmouth
(signers ofPortsmouth Compact, 7 March 1638)
Founders of Newport
(signers of initial agreement, 28 April 1639)
Founders of Warwick
(original purchasers, 1643)
Italics: The names of Clarke, Johnson, Hall, and Brightman at the end of the Portsmouth list were crossed out, and it is uncertain if they came to Portsmouth, though most, if not all, of them did appear on Aquidneck Island.
International
National
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