Thomas Gardner (planter)
Thomas Gardner was an Overseer of the "old planters" party of the Dorchester Company who landed in 1624 at Cape Ann to form a colony at what is now known as Gloucester. Gardner is considered by some to have been the first Governor of Massachusetts, due to his being in authority in the first settlement that became the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Cape Ann
The area known as Cape Ann had been visited by the Plymouth group, who had obtained a Patent and had fished in the area known as Gloucester. These visitors from the south had built structures for salting and temporary housing. The Gardner-led group, who settled the area via another Patent, maintained themselves after their landing. Disagreements occurred between the Plymouth colonists and the "West Country" colonists over Patent conflicts. Roger Conant, a Plymouth colonist, was instrumental in working out a compromise between the parties, part of which was moving the Dorchester group away. The colony that had been planned for Cape Ann was doing well, having brought over adequate provisions and having had the proper skills, yet it was commercially unsuccessful because of the rocky, infertile soil and poor fishing in the area. In 1626, the Dorchester Company granted permission for Conant, who had arrived in 1625 from Plymouth via Nantasket, to assess the situation, to become the new Overseer, and to move the colony.The first Great House in New England was built on Cape Ann by the planters. This house was dismantled on the orders of John Endecott in 1628 and was moved to Salem to serve as his Governor's house. When Higginson arrived in Salem, he wrote that "we found a faire house newly built for the Governor", which was remarkable for being two stories high.
Salem
Some of the Old Planters moved with Conant to the mouth of the Naumkeag River, now the North River. They first landed near the foot of present-day Skerry Street. Other members of the group returned to England or went south to Virginia. For a few years, the area was multicultural; the settlers had a peaceful relationship with Native Americans, who had been regular visitors to the area for generations. In the early years, the thatched cottages of the planters huddled along the bank of the river.The new colony at Naumkeag proved to be successful and was named Salem in 1629. According to Conant, the settlement laid the foundation for the Commonwealth. Those following Gardner and Conant as leader were John Endicott and John Winthrop, respectively, as new planters. Thomas and Roger continued to be considered old planters, who got little recognition from the religious leaders, such as Francis Higginson. Gardner and his sons played several roles in the early development of the settlement. They did much of the early survey work in the area. Thomas also served on the court and oversaw highway work.
Biographical information
Thomas Gardner's origins are not clearly known. He may have been born in 1592 to Thomas and Elizabeth Gardner. His mother may have been the sister of Minister John White, who help found and fund the Dorchester Company that became the colony of Massachusetts Bay. According to Goff, Gardner may have been chosen through family ties to head the 1623 Cape Ann Colony, which was a "fishing station and saltworks" whose goal was to ship seafood to England.Gardner had two wives; Margaret and Demaris UNK, widow of UNK Shattuck. He had six sons with Margaret; Thomas, George, John, Samuel, Joseph, and Richard, and three daughters; Sarah, Seeth, and Miriam. In 1623, Gardner landed at Cape Ann with Margaret and the three sons, who had been born in England. A fourth son was born in 1624. He and the widow Shattuck had no children together. Gardner died on 29 December 1674 and is buried in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts.
Descendants
The legacy of Thomas Gardner, from seven children is wide and varied. Some of Thomas' descendants are as follows, grouped by category and in chronological order by birth.American patriots (and military)
- Capt John Gardner – On crew for first survey of the Merrimack River for Gov. John Winthrop, Chief Magistrate, Nantucket, Massachusetts
- Capt Joseph Gardner – King Philip's War casualty. Joseph was killed in the Great Swamp Fight on 19 December 1675. He was captain of a Salem company. His widow, Ann Gardner, is noted for an agreement that she got Governor Simon Bradstreet, Jr, to sign before they got married.
- Ruth Gardner – wife of John Hathorne
- John Gardner – Captain – Salem Company, French-Indian War
- Jonathan Gardner – Commander of a privateer, French-Indian War, Commander of Minutemen, American Revolution —Described by William Bentley thusly: A most useful Citizen, of amiable temper, inflexible integrity, and a sober friend to all useful, social & religious institutions.
- Benjamin Balch – first Chaplain, Continental Navy
- Nathaniel Gorham – Signer of US Constitution
- Samuel Gardner – in-law of one of the consignees of the tea thrown in Boston Harbor
- Ebenezer Gardner – American Revolutionary patriot, builder of the Gardner House, Machias, Maine
- Gideon Gardner – Whaler from Nantucket, U.S. Representative, Gardner Island namesake
- William Balch – first Chaplain, U.S. Navy. His father was first chaplain of the Continental Navy; his grandfather had been a chaplain in the Royal Navy.
- Samuel Knapp Gardner – Mariner, captured in War of 1812, held in Dartmoor His 3rd great-grandfather, Edward Woodman, was a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts.
- Rebecca Gardner – wife of Captain John Allen who died, in 1814, POW, Dartmoor
- Lucretia Coffin Mott – early abolitionist, feminist, and co-founder of Swarthmore College
- Emily Lee – wife of U.S. Civil War General Daniel Tyler
- George Pollard, Jr. – Captain of the Essex and the Two Brothers
- Elizabeth Cabot Blanchard – wife of Robert Charles Winthrop
- Edwin M. Stanton – Secretary of War, American Civil War
- William Crowninshield Endicott – Secretary of War in the Administration of President Grover Cleveland
- Ebenezer Gardner Goldthwaite – son of Rebecca Gardner, served Andrew's Sharpshooters, 22nd Regt, Massachusetts Volunteers
- Charles Jackson Paine – Union General, American Civil War.
- Charles Francis Adams II – Union General, President of Union Pacific Railroad
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr – American Jurist
- Stephen Minot Weld, Jr. – General, American Civil War hero
- Arent S. Crowninshield – admiral of the United States Navy, Civil War
- Adolphus Greely – American Polar explorer, recipient of the Medal of Honor
- George William Coffin – Commander of 'Alert', Greely Relief Expedition
- Francis Cabot Lowell – longtime United States federal judge
- Henry Cabot Lodge – American Senator
- Charles G. Dawes – 30th Vice President of the United States
- Augustus Peabody Gardner – Distinguished Service Medal, Spanish–American War
- Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt – 1st wife of Theodore Roosevelt
- Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt – 2nd wife of Theodore Roosevelt
- Chase A. Clark – Governor of Idaho.
- John Henry Balch – United States Navy, World War I, Medal of Honor, Lieutenant, World War II
- Pierpont Morgan Hamilton – Medal of Honor winner
- Endicott Peabody – the 62nd Governor of Massachusetts from 3 January 1963 to 7 January 1965
- John Forbes Kerry – Vietnam War, United States Senator, presidential candidate in 2004 election, Secretary of State
Business
- Jonathan Gardner – his Great Pastures became Salem Woods
- John Lowell Gardner I – grandnephew of Col Timothy Pickering, East Indies trader, ship fleet owner
- Rowland Hussey Macy – founder of Macy's
- James A. Folger – founder of Folger's
- Henry Clay Folger – head of Standard Oil of New York, founder of the Folger Library
- George Swinnerton Parker – founder, Parker Brothers
- William Coffin Coleman – founder of Coleman Company
- Juliet Pierpont Morgan – daughter of J. P. Morgan
- Harold M. Stratton – founder of Briggs & Stratton
- Alfred Winslow Jones – created first hedge fund
Academic/science/arts
- Sarah Gardner – wife of Benjamin Balch )
- Mary Gardner – wife of Jethro Coffin
- Timothy Folger – studied the Gulf Stream with his cousin, Benjamin Franklin
- Abel Gardner – his grandparents led the effort to save the life of Rebecca Nurse. Elizabeth's grandfather, Major William Hathorne, had come on the Arbella with John Winthrop.
- John Gardner – builder of the Gardner-Pingree House
- Nathaniel Bowditch – autodidactic mathematician
- Mayhew Folger – rediscovered Pitcairn Islands in 1808
- Nathaniel Hathorne – American author, descendant of John Hathorne.
- Ezra Cornell – founder of Cornell university
- Charles Sanders Peirce – philosopher and mathematician
- John Lowell Gardner II – John's wife founded Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
- Phillips Brooks – author of a well-known carol.
- Francis Ellingwood Abbot – American philosopher
- Frederic Ward Putnam – American naturalist
- Lilla Cabot Perry – American artist
- Elizabeth Gardner Amory – grandmother of Dorothy Winthrop Bradford
- Endicott Peabody – headmaster for Franklin D. Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt at Groton School
- Anna Parker Lowell – wife of Abbott Lawrence Lowell
- Elliott P. Joslin – founder of Joslin Diabetes Center
- William Sydney Porter – author
- Robert Frost – four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry
- Charles Austin Beard – historian, co-founder of The New School
- Julian Lowell Coolidge – chairman of the Harvard University Mathematics Department
- Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor – first editor of the National Geographic Magazine
- Charles Austin Beard – historian
- Erle Stanley Gardner – author, creator of Perry Mason
- Ezra Pound – poet
- Frank A. Gardner MD – Physician and Historian. Member of Essex Institute, Old Planters Society, Old Salem Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. Among his great-grandparents were Mary and Samuel Wardwell.
- Edmund Wilson -- man of letters
- C. W. Grafton – Attorney, Author.
- Esther Williams – American swimmer and movie star
Degrees of separation