Vital Records of Ipswich, Massachusetts

Vital Records of Ipswich, Massachusetts

Author: Ipswich (Mass.)

Publisher:

Published: 1910

Total Pages: 738

ISBN-13:

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Vol. 3 " ... contains baptisms, marriages and deaths taken from a book of records of the First Congregational Church of Ipswich, which has come to hand since 1910, supplemented by Bible records, church records, and gravestone records, the same not being included in the Ipswich Vital Records published in 1910"--Explanation, v. 3.


Social and Economic Networks in Early Massachusetts

Social and Economic Networks in Early Massachusetts

Author: Marsha L. Hamilton

Publisher: Penn State Press

Published: 2015-09-10

Total Pages: 207

ISBN-13: 0271074310

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The seventeenth century saw an influx of immigrants to the heavily Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony. This book redefines the role that non-Puritans and non-English immigrants played in the social and economic development of Massachusetts. Marsha Hamilton shows how non-Puritan English, Scots, and Irish immigrants, along with Channel Islanders, Huguenots, and others, changed the social and economic dynamic of the colony. A chronic labor shortage in early Massachusetts allowed many non-Puritans to establish themselves in the colony, providing a foundation upon which later immigrants built transatlantic economic networks. Scholars of the era have concluded that these “strangers” assimilated into the Puritan structure and had little influence on colonial development; however, through an in-depth examination of each group’s activity in local affairs, Marsha Hamilton asserts a much different conclusion. By mining court, town, and company records, letters, and public documents, Hamilton uncovers the impact that these immigrants had on the colony, not only by adding to the diversity and complexity of society but also by developing strong economic networks that helped bring the Bay Colony into the wider Atlantic world. These groups opened up important mercantile networks between their own homelands and allies, and by creating their own communities within larger Puritan networks, they helped create the provincial identity that led the colony into the eighteenth century.