Nathaniel Morton
Biography
Nathaniel Morton the eldest son of
The Morton family sailed for Plymouth on the ship Ann in 1623. After his father's untimely death, Nathaniel was taken into the household of his uncle
Morton married Lydia Cooper (1615 – 23 Sep 1673) on 25 Dec 1635. They had nine children: Remember, Mercy, Hannah, Eleazer, Lydia, Nathaniel, a stillborn daughter, Elizabeth and Joanna. After the death of Lydia, Nathaniel married Anne Pritchard (ca. 1624 – 26 Dec 1691). Remember Morton, daughter of Nathaniel Morton, married Abraham Jackson of Plymouth, another initial proprietor of the colony.[2] Their descendant Lydia Jackson became the second wife of philosopher, poet and Transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson.[3]
Colonial Secretary and Historian
From December 1645 until his death, Morton was annually elected Secretary of Plymouth Colony, and most of the colony records are in his handwriting. His careful maintenance of the records enabled him to compile New England's Memorial, considered the first comprehensive history of the colony, published at Cambridge in 1669 and widely considered the first book of history published in the United States.[4] Much of Memorial was based on the history of the colony written by Morton's uncle,[5] Gov. Bradford, a manuscript which was lost for many years following the American Revolutionary War, when it was likely appropriated by an English soldier. It later turned up in the library of the Bishop of London in 1855, and was returned to Massachusetts.
Morton also wrote First Beginnings and After Progress of the Church of Christ at Plymouth, in New England.
Annually since 1961, The Wall Street Journal publishes an excerpt from Morton's history of Plymouth Colony as an op-ed the Wednesday before Thanksgiving Day.
Morton was also the first to record the list of signers of the Mayflower Compact in his work of 1669.[1]: 26 [6] The document itself was lost.
See also
References
- ^ a b Morton, Nathaniel (1855) [1669]. New England's Memorial. Boston: Congregational Board of Publication.
- ^ Thacher, James (1832). History of the Town of Plymouth From Its First Settlement in 1620, to the Year 1832. Marsh, Capen & Lyon. p. 159.
- ^ Plymouth Colony, Its History and People, 1620–1691, Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Reissued by Ancestry Publishing, 1986
- ^ Many scholars consider Bradford's history the better written volume of the two, and some even classify Morton's book as an abridgment of his uncle's work.[1]
- ISBN 9780722266441.
- ISBN 978-0-670-03760-5.
Further reading
- Anderson, Robert Charles (1995), The Great Migration Begins 1620-1633, vol. II, Boston, Mass.: NEHGS, pp. 1296–97.
- Morton, Nathaniel (1826), New England's Memorial (5th ed.), Boston
- "The Desolate Wilderness, Nathaniel Morton", The Wall Street Journal, 25 November 2009
- Library and Archives, Pilgrim Hall Museum, Plymouth, Massachusetts, archived from the original on 2009-11-04
- Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1900. .