Ferdinando Gorges

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Ferdinando Gorges
2nd colonial governor of Maine
In office
1639–1647
Preceded by William Gorges
Succeeded by Thomas Gorges
Personal details
Born 1565
Ashton Phillips, Somerset, England
Died 1647
Spouse(s) Ann Bell (died 1620); 4 children  · Mary Fulford, Mrs Achims (a widow)  · Elizabeth Gorges, Mrs Courteney (a widow)  · Elizabeth, Lady Smyth (a widow)
Profession Governor, entrepreneur and founder of the Province of Maine
Signature

Sir Ferdinando Gorges (1565–1647), the "Father of English Colonization in North America",[1] was an early English colonial entrepreneur and founder of the Province of Maine in 1622, although Gorges himself never set foot in the New World.

Biography

Gorges was born in Ashton Phillips, Somerset, descended from a cadet branch of the Russells of Kingston Russell, Dorset, which had changed its name to the metronymic Gorges, which family had died out in the male line on the death of Ralph de Gorges of Knighton, Isle of Wight, 2nd Baron Gorges, in 1331. In 1601, he became involved in the Essex Conspiracy and later testified against its leader, Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex.[2] [3] He entered the army at an early age and had obtained the rank of captain at the siege of Sluys in 1587, was a prisoner at Lisle in 1588, wounded at the siege of Paris in 1589 and knighted at the siege of Rouen in 1591.[4] He was rewarded for his services by the post of Governor of the Fort at Plymouth, which he held for many years.[5]

His interest in colonisation was invoked when Captain George Weymouth presented him with three captured American Indians.[6] In 1605, he helped sponsor the expedition of Weymouth to the mouth of the Kennebec River along the coast of the present day state of Maine in the United States.[7] In 1607, as a shareholder in the Plymouth Company, he helped fund the failed Popham Colony, near present-day Phippsburg, Maine.[8]

In 1622, Gorges received a land patent, along with John Mason, from the Plymouth Council for New England for the Province of Maine, the original boundaries of which were between the Merrimack and Kennebec rivers.[3][9][10] In 1629, he and Mason divided the colony, with Mason's portion south of the Piscataqua River becoming the Province of New Hampshire.[11] Gorges and his nephew established Maine's first court system. Capt. Christopher Levett, early English explorer of the New England Coast, was an agent for Gorges, as well as a member for the crown's Plymouth Council for New England.[12] Levett's attempt to establish a colony in Maine ultimately failed, and he died aboard ship returning to England after meeting with Governor John Winthrop in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630.[13][14]

America Painted to the Life, book published in London, 1659, by Ferdinando Gorges Esq., grandson of Ferdinando Gorges

Ferdinando Gorges's son was Robert Gorges, Governor-General of New England from 1623–1624. But Robert Gorges was seen with some suspicion by American colonists, who were skeptical of Gorges' almost feudal idea of governance and settlement, and ultimately Gorges returned to England. In the 1630s Gorges attempted to revive the moribund claims of the Plymouth Company. In concert with colonists banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, he formally questioned the issuance of its royal charter in 1632, and forwarded complaints and charges made by the disaffected colonists to the Privy Council of Charles I. His efforts were ultimately unsuccessful.[15]

Death

Ferdinando Gorges died destitute in 1647[11] and is buried in Long Ashton. His eldest son, John, inherited his Province of Maine, of which Robert, his younger son, had been for such a short time Governor. In 1677 his grandson, another Ferdinando, finally sold to Massachusetts all rights to Maine for £1,250. In 1820 Maine achieved separate statehood.[16]

Personal life

He married four times. His first wife was Ann, daughter of Edward Bell of Writtle, Essex, whom he married in 1589 at St. Margaret's, Westminster, and who died in 1620: they had two sons, John and Robert, and two daughters, Ellen and Honoria, the last of whom died young. Secondly, in 1621, Mary, daughter of Thomas Fulford of Devon, the widow of Thomas Achims of Pelint, Cornwall. Thirdly, in 1627, at Ladock, Cornwall, to Elizabeth, daughter of Tristam Gorges of St. Budeaux, and widow of Edward Courteney and of William Bligh (she died within a few weeks of the marriage). Fourthly, at Wraxall in 1629, to Elizabeth, Lady Smyth, daughter of Sir Thomas Gorges and Helena, Marchioness of Northampton, and widow of Sir Hugh Smyth of Ashton Court.[17][11]

References

  1. John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler, The American historical review, Volume 4:P683
  2. "GORGES, Sir Ferdinando (c.1568-1647), of Plymouth, Devon; later of Ashton Phillips, Som.". History of Parliament. The History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Ferdinando Gorges". Son of the South. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  4. New England Historic Genealogical Society (2000). The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 29, 1875. Heritage Books, Inc. pp. 44–47. ISBN 978-0788401954. 
  5. "Sir Ferdinando Gorges Facts". Encyclopedia of World Biography. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  6. Laughton, John Knox. "Gorges, Ferdinando". Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  7. "Sir Ferdinando Gorges". Carl Leonard. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  8. "Sir Ferdinando Gorges". Maine Public Broadcasting Network. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  9. "Grant of His Interest in New Hampshire by Sir Ferdinando Gorges to Captain John Mason". Teaching American History. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  10. "A Grant of the Province of Maine to Sir Ferdinando Gorges and John Mason, esq., 10th of August, 1622". Yale Law School. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 "Sir Fernando Gorges". Empire in your backyard. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  12. York Deeds, Maine Historical Society, Maine Genealogical Society, John T. Hull, Portland, 1887
  13. History of Plymouth Plantation, William Bradford, Massachusetts Historical Society, 1912
  14. Portland in the Past, William Goold, 1886
  15. "The Massachusetts Bay Colony's annexation of Maine". Maine Public Broadcasting Network. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  16. "About the Maine Senate". Maine Senate. Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  17. Collections for a Parochial History of Wraxall, Google Books

See also

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