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Topic: Mozambican Civil and Guerilla Wars of 1976-92

The Plymouth Council for New England (successor …

Years: 1629 - 1629

The Plymouth Council for New England (successor to the Plymouth Company) had in 1624 established a small fishing village at Cape Ann under the supervision of the Dorchester Company (Thomas Gardner (Planter) as Overseer).

This company was originally organized at the urging of the Puritan Reverend John White (1575–1648) of Dorchester, in the English county of Dorset.

White has been called “the father of the Massachusetts Colony”, despite remaining in England his entire life, because of his influence in establishing this settlement.

But the settlement was not profitable, and the financial backers of the Dorchester Company had terminated heir support by the end of 1625.

A few settlers from the Cape Ann fishing village, including Roger Conant who had arrived in 1625, did not abandon the area, but removed in 16226 to establish a new town at the nearby native village of Naumkeag (later named Salem).

White helps this small band by going back to the Council for New England and obtaining a new land grant and fresh financial support.

Dated March 19, 1627, this new patent is known as the Massachusetts Company.

This Company had sent about one hundred new settlers and provisions in 1628 to join Conant, led by John Endecott, who had become the governor of the fledgling settlement.

The next year, 1629, Naumkeag is renamed Salem and fortified by another three hundred settlers, led by Rev.

Francis Higginson, first minister of the settlement.

Nevertheless, the colonists struggle against disease and starvation, and many die.

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