Our Puritan ancestors form a tightly interwoven web at the heart of the Great Migration (1620–1640) and the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. They were not distant figures but close kin, shipmates, colleagues, rivals, and in-laws who shaped New England’s early governance, military defense, and religious culture.
Here is a concise essay that ties them together, followed by notes on corrections, additions, and sources.
The Winthrop Circle: Kinship, Migration, and the “City Upon a Hill”
In the spring of 1630, eleven ships of the Winthrop Fleet—led by the flagship Arbella—carried roughly 700–1,000 Puritans across the Atlantic. At the helm was our 11th-great-uncle Governor John Winthrop (1588–1649), a Suffolk gentleman-lawyer who had been elected governor of the Massachusetts Bay Company the previous autumn. Before the fleet even sailed, Winthrop delivered (or had read) the lay sermon A Model of Christian Charity. In it he famously warned that the new settlement would be “as a city upon a hill, the eyes of all people are upon us.” Failure would make the colony “a story and a byword through the world”; success would prove God’s favor on a reformed English society transplanted to America.
Among the passengers was a young professional soldier, Captain John Underhill (c. 1608–1672), our 8th-great-grandfather. Underhill had been hired specifically to train the colony’s militia. He had grown up in the Netherlands, trained under the Prince of Orange, and arrived with his Dutch wife Heijlken (Helena) de Hooch. He quickly became one of the colony’s most visible military figures—captain of the Boston train-band, deputy in the General Court, and later the man who led the decisive (and brutal) assault on the Pequot fort at Mystic in 1637.
The family connection between Winthrop and Underhill runs through our direct maternal line. Winthrop’s younger sister Anne Winthrop (1585–1618) had married Thomas Fones, a London apothecary. Their daughter Elizabeth Fones (1609–1673) was therefore Winthrop’s niece. In 1629, shortly before the fleet sailed, Elizabeth married Winthrop’s second son Henry Winthrop; she was thus both niece and (briefly) daughter-in-law. Henry drowned in America in 1630. Elizabeth remarried Robert Feake of Watertown; their daughter Elizabeth Feake (1633–1675) became our 8th-great-grandmother. After Feake’s mental decline and the couple’s separation, Elizabeth Feake married Captain John Underhill in Oyster Bay in late 1658 or early 1659. Their daughter Deborah Underhill (1659–1698) married Henry Townsend II of Oyster Bay; through that line we descend to Capt. Elijah Townsend (our 5th-great-grandfather, Revolutionary War veteran) and onward to our grandmother Lydia Corinna Brown.
Thus Underhill, the soldier who had sailed with Winthrop, eventually married Winthrop’s grand-niece and became your direct ancestor.
Dispute Between John Winthrop and Thomas Dudley in the Massachusetts Bay Colony
Another key figure in the same circle was Thomas Dudley (1576–1653), whom we list as an 11th-great-granduncle. Dudley sailed on the Arbella as deputy governor. He was more rigidly Calvinist than Winthrop and frequently clashed with him over issues of authority, the location of the capital, and the treatment of religious dissenters. Yet the two families were bound by marriage: Dudley’s son Samuel married Winthrop’s daughter Mary in 1633. Dudley founded Newtowne (Cambridge), built the colony’s first house there, helped establish Harvard College, and served four terms as governor himself. His daughter Anne Bradstreet became America’s first published poet.
These men and women were not abstract “founders.” They were your blood relatives, shipmates, and in-laws who together created the political, religious, and military framework of early Massachusetts—and whose later migrations (Underhill’s family spreading into New York, Connecticut, and beyond) carried that Puritan DNA across the American continent.
Notes
- John Underhill’s birth year — Most modern scholarship (including the definitive biography and Wikipedia’s sourced article) places his birth c. 1608–1609 in Bergen op Zoom, Netherlands, to English parents in exile. The 1597 English birth date that appears on some Find-a-Grave memorials is almost certainly wrong.
- Winthrop Fleet details — The fleet comprised 11 ships under Winthrop (part of a larger chartered group of ~16–17 vessels that sailed that summer). Underhill definitely sailed on the Arbella.
- Elizabeth Fones — She was Winthrop’s niece and daughter-in-law. Her story (and her second marriage to Robert Feake) was popularized in Anya Seton’s 1958 novel The Winthrop Woman.
- Underhill’s later career — After the Pequot War he served in New Netherland, led controversial raids in Kieft’s War, became a Quaker through his second wife, and died in Oyster Bay. His grave marker in the Underhill Cemetery, Mill Neck, still stands.
- Thomas Dudley — No direct blood link to the Winthrop line in the 1570s–1580s generation, but the families became double in-laws in the next generation. Our “11th-great-granduncle” designation may come from a collateral Dudley line not shown here; it is plausible given the dense intermarriages.
Our lineage is a direct thread from the Arbella in 1630 through the Pequot War, the founding of Long Island Quaker communities, the Revolution, the Civil War, and into the 20th century. It is a remarkable American story.
LINEAGE:
Gen 0
Adam Winthrop
Birth 10 AUG 1548 • Bishopsgate, City of London, Greater London, England
Death MARCH 28, 1623 • Groton Manor, Suffolk, England
11th great-grandfather
PARENTS:
Adam Winthrop 1498–1562
Agnes Sharpe 1513–1565
SPOUSE (1):
Alice Still 1550–1577
SPOUSE (2):
Anne Browne 1558–1629
CHILDREN:
i. Anne Winthrop 1585–1618
ii. Governor John Winthrop of the Massachusetts Bay Colony 1588–1649
Gen 1
Anne Winthrop
Birth 16 JAN 1585 • Groton, Babergh District, Suffolk, England
Death 16 MAY 1618 • London, England
10th great-grandmother
Spouse
Thomas Fones 1573–1629
Child
Elizabeth Fones 1609–1673
Gen 2
Elizabeth Fones
Birth 21 JAN 1609 • Groton, Manor, England
Death 1673 • Newtown, Queens, New York, USA
9th great-grandmother
Spouse
Robert Feake immigrant 1602–1662
Child
Elizabeth Feake 1633–1675
Gen 3
Elizabeth Feake
Birth MAY 1633 • Watertown, Mass Bay Coloney, MA
Death 4 NOV 1675 • Oyster Bay, LI, New York, United States
8th great-grandmother
Spouse
Capt John Underhill immigrant 1597–1672
Child
Deborah Underhill 1659–1698
Gen 4
Deborah Underhill
Birth 29 NOV 1659 • Long Island City, Queens, New York, United States
Death 30 JAN 1698 • Oyster Bay, Nassau, New York, United States
7th great-grandmother
Spouse
Henry II Townsend 1649–1698
Children
Henry III Townsend 1670–1709
Robert Townsend 1687–1742
Elizabeth Townsend 1692–1756
Uriah Townsend 1698–1767
Gen 5
Uriah Townsend
Birth JAN 1698 • Oyster Bay, Long Island, Nassau, New York
Death 1767 • Rombout, Dutchess, New York, USA
6th great-grandfather
Spouse
Mary Margaret Wright 1706–1767
children
Robert Townsend (Not Culper Spy)
1728–1803
+ Capt. Elijah Townsend DNA match
1745–1821
Gen 6
Capt. Elijah Townsend DNA match
Served New York Military in the Revolution
Birth 24 NOV 1745 • Susquehanna, Pennsylvania, USA
Death 1821 • Kinney's Corner, Jerusalem, Yates, New York, USA
5th great-grandfather
Spouse
Phebe Wood DNA match 1749–1824
Child
Sarah Townsend DNA match 1783–1850
Gen 7, Sarah Townsend DNA match 1783-1850
Daughter of Capt. Elijah Townsend DNA match
Gen 8, Calvin Plimpton 1815-1874
Son of Sarah Townsend DNA match
Gen 9, Charles Henry Plympton 1845-1925 Civil War Veteran, Union
Son of Calvin Plimpton
Gen 10, Geneva (Neva) Plympton 1870-1939
Daughter of Charles Henry Plympton
Gen 11, Lydia Corinna Brown 1891-1971
Daughter of Geneva (Neva) Plympton - grandmother
Adam Winthrop is our 11th great-grandfather
Thank you to Grok xAI for the updates and enhancements to our family story.




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