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John Throckmorton (settler) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Throckmorton (settler)

John Throckmorton (1601–1684) was an early settler of Providence in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, and one of the 12 original proprietors of that settlement. Originating in Norfolk, England, he first settled in Salem in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, but religious tensions brought about his removal to Providence. In 1643 he made a land purchase in New Netherland and settled there with several dozen others, but an attack by the natives during Kieft's War caused many, including Throckmorton, to return to Rhode Island. He became active in Providence civil affairs, serving as moderator, deputy, and treasurer. He died in 1684 in Middletown, New Jersey, where he went to visit his children, and was buried there. Throggs Neck in Bronx, New York City is named for him.
== Life ==

John Throckmorton was almost certainly the one of that name who was baptized in Norwich, county Norfolk, England, on 9 May 1601, the son of the grocer and Alderman, Bassingburn Throckmorton. On 20 March 1621 he was apprenticed to a scrivener, but by 1638 his whereabouts was unknown to his father, and in 1640 the executors of his father's estate also did not know of his whereabouts. Several writers suggest that he was the same person as a "George Throckmorton" who arrived in New England aboard the ''Lion'' and was made a freeman in May 1631. Anderson, however, says this is highly unlikely because a person of his stature would not be absent from the colonial records from 1631 to 1638, suggesting that George Throckmorton either died soon after his arrival, or else returned to England, and John Throckmorton did not arrive in the colonies until closer to 1638.
Throckmorton may have been in Salem in the Massachusetts Bay Colony as early as 1635, but the first definitive record of his presence in New England is in 1638 when he was one of the 12 original proprietors of Providence, being named in the deed signed by Roger Williams in October of that year. Nevertheless, it is certain that Throckmorton was in Salem at some point in time, because in July 1639 the Reverend Hugh Peters of that town alluded to Throckmorton and his wife as having "the great censure passed upon them in this our church," and complaining that they and certain others "wholly refused to hear the church, denying it and all the churches in the Bay to be true churches."
On 27 July 1640, Throckmorton was one of 39 settlers who signed an agreement for a form of government in Providence. Three years later he obtained a grant of land for himself and 35 others from Governor Willem Kieft in New Netherland. The land was named after him, and is called Throggs Neck, now a part of The Bronx in New York City. Other nearby English settlers included Thomas Cornell, and Anne Hutchinson, who may have purchased her land from Throckmorton. The settlement was short-lived, and its fate was summed up by Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor John Winthrop in September 1643, who said the Indians set upon the English who dwelt under the Dutch, and killed "such of Mr. Throckmorton's and Mr. Cornhill's families as were at home." He further added that these settlers "had cast off ordinances and churches, and now at last their own people, and for larger accommodation had subjected themselves to the Dutch, and dwelt scatteringly near a mile assunder."
Some of those who escaped the Indian attack returned to Rhode Island, and on 27 February 1647 Throckmorton was in Providence when he was granted a house and land once belonging to Edward Cope. Soon he became active in civil affairs, and in 1652 he was a Providence Moderator, and from 1664 to 1675 he served for eight years as Deputy to the General Assembly. Also, in 1667 he was on the Providence Town Council, and ten years later he was the town treasurer. In July 1672, Throckmorton wrote one of three letters to Roger Williams, critical of Williams' unfavorable opinions of the Quakers.
Throckmorton died in March or April 1684 in Middletown, New Jersey where he had gone to visit his children, and was also buried there. He had owned land in Middletown, but never resided there permanently.

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