John Davenport (minister)
John Davenport (April 9, 1597 – May 30, 1670) was an English Puritan clergyman and co-founder of the American colony of New Haven.
Early life
Born in Manchester, Warwickshire, England to a wealthy family, Davenport was educated at Oxford University. He matriculated at Merton College in 1613 but migrated to Magdalen College two years later, eventually leaving Oxford before completing his degree.[1]
His father was Henry Davenport (d. May 29, 1627), draper, alderman, and Mayor of Coventry, son of Edward Davenport, Mayor of Coventry, and was born of numerous royal families. His mother, Winifred Barnaby (1569 - April 12, 1597), is a descendant of English and French Royalty. A direct descendant of King Edward the III.[2]
Career
After serving as chaplain of Hilton Castle, he became curate of St Lawrence Jewry in London. In 1624, he was chosen vicar of St. Stephen’s Church, in Coleman Street, London. In 1625, he returned to Oxford for further studies, receiving an MA and BD.[3] He became an associate of John Preston, a leading Puritan teacher and scholar, and edited his works for posthumous publication. His efforts to organize the re-purchase of "lay-impropriations" for the support of rural clergy were frustrated by Bishop William Laud and condemned by the Court of Exchequer, as were also his efforts for the relief of Reformed clergy displaced by war in the Electorate of the Palatinate. In 1633 he resigned from the established church and moved to Holland.
While in Holland, it is believed that he was the model for several portraits by Rembrandt, though these are now thought to be self-portraits of Rembrandt.
In 1637, he acquired the patent for a colony in Massachusetts and sailed with much of his congregation for Boston. While staying in Boston with Reverend John Cotton in March 1638, he sat during the church trial of Anne Hutchinson which resulted in her excommunication from the Boston church, ending the Antinomian Controversy.[4] Later that month he co-founded the Colony of New Haven along with his classmate, Theophilus Eaton, a wealthy merchant from London who became the colony's first governor. He was a large proponent of education in his colony and is often credited with the co-founding of Hopkins School.[5] As a burgess, he was an important figure in the colony up until his departure to Boston in 1668. He unsuccessfully opposed the incorporation of the New Haven colony into the reorganized colony of Connecticut under a royal charter in 1667.
Davenport was a lifelong advocate of the rigorous Puritan standards for church membership and for the strict qualifications for infant baptism, which he believed should be administered only to the children of full church members. His time in Holland had been disrupted by a controversy with his supervising pastor John Paget over this issue, and it led to his withdrawal from the Puritan church in Amsterdam. In New England, he was a staunch opponent of the recommendations made by the Synod of 1662, known as the Half-Way Covenant, which proposed that the children of "half-way" members (those who had been baptized as infants but who had not given evidence of a "conversion" and been admitted to full membership) be allowed to receive baptism.[6]
In September 1667, after the death of their pastor, John Wilson, the First Church in Boston invited Davenport to be their new pastor.[7] A minority in that church opposed the invitation, objecting to his rejection of the compromise on infant baptism. Convention required that Davenport secure a release from his former congregation before accepting a new post, and the church in New Haven was reluctant to let him go. Still, he moved to Boston in the spring of 1668, and eventually produced excerpts of a letter from the New Haven church that appeared to grant his release. He was installed as pastor of the First Church in December 1668, but a faction opposed to his appointment sought to withdraw from the church to form a new congregation. A council of clergy from local churches endorsed their request, and they formed the Third (or Old South) Church in May 1669.[8] On May 19, 1669, Davenport preached the Election Sermon before the General Court in Boston, using the occasion to condemn the actions of "Councils" that interfered with the liberty and administration of individual congregations. Perhaps instigated by this sermon, the Deputies (the lower house of the General Court) named a commission to investigate the actions of the founders of the Third Church and the ministers who had endorsed the separation. However, the Assistants (the upper house) blocked any action, including the publication of Davenport's sermon at public expense. Later that summer, it was discovered that the release letter from New Haven had been severely redacted to give an impression that was not perhaps warranted, though Davenport's First Church rejected charges that they had been misrepresented.[9]
Davenport's appointment to the leading church in New England and his inflammatory election sermon brought to a head the simmering disagreements over the compromise settlement of the Half-way Synod. But Davenport died the following year; Increase Mather, the other leading Anti-Synodist, experienced a change of heart; and Synodist deputies swept the election of 1671, ending the temporary crisis.
Davenport died in Boston of apoplexy on March 15, 1670, and was buried in the same tomb as John Cotton in King's Chapel Burying Ground.
Legacy
Yale University's Davenport College is named in his honor. Yale University itself was envisioned by the Rev. John Davenport.
DNA evidence has supported his descent from Ormus de Davenport, of Cheshire, and also his relationship to the present day Lord Bromley Davenport.[10]
Notable descendants include brothers John and James Davenport, who were Congressmen; Duncan Davenport, Claude Davenport, Abraham Davenport, the "Dark Day" poem; Archibald Cox, the Watergate Special Prosecutor, and Maxwell Perkins, the editor.
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ Lecture by Francis J. Bremer, Ph.D., at the Stamford Historical Society, April 17, 2005
- ↑ Gary Boyd Roberts. The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States, 1st edition. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 2004, pp. 422-3, 479-80; and Frederick Lews Weis, et al. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, 8th edition. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 2004, line 230A, p. 205. See Roberts, pp. 422-3, for discussion of Barnaby's ancestry.
- ↑ Francis J. Bremer, “John Davenport: The American Career of an International Puritan,” Lecture at the Stamford Historical Society, April 17, 2005; online at http://www.stamfordhistory.org/dav_bremer1.htm
- ↑ Battis, Emery (1962). Saints and Sectaries: Anne Hutchinson and the Antinomian Controversy in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 232–248.
- ↑ Chronicles of Hopkins Grammar School: 1660-1935. Thomas B Davis. Quinnipiack Press, New Haven, CT. 1938
- ↑ Perry Miller, The New England Mind: From Colony to Province (Cambridge, 1953).
- ↑ Richard D. Pierce, ed., The Records of the First Church in Boston 1630–1868 (Boston, 1961), p.62.
- ↑ Arthur B. Ellis, History of the First Church in Boston, 1630–1880 (Boston, 1881)
- ↑ Robert G. Pope, The Half-way Covenant: Church Membership in Puritan New England (Princeton, 1969).
- ↑ http://www.davenportdna.com/ Davenport Surname DNA project
Further reading
- Francis J. Bremer, Building a New Jerusalem: John Davenport, a Puritan in Three Worlds. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012.
External links
- A SERMON Preach’d at The Election of the Governour, AT BOSTON IN New-England May 19th 1669. Online edition
- Genepool: Saint Stephen's page
- M'Clure, Alexander Wilson, The lives of John Wilson, John Norton, and John Davenport (1846)
- "Sketch of the Life and Writings of John Davenport," by Franklin B. Dexter, Papers of the New Haven Historical Society, v. II (1877), 205–238.
- Hilton Castle, Durham An actual engraved image of Durham Castle can be found here, with links back to the London Genealogy page.
- Ancestry.com gives several references as to the death date of Davenport.
- Davenport DNA study