Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Great Swamp Fight plot thickens into an unbelievable, high-stakes drama for our Tefft family

 


If our family history were a movie, the introduction of the Tefft family is the moment where the plot thickens into an unbelievable, high-stakes drama.

By adding John Tefft and his son Samuel, we haven't just added two more names to our chart. We have unlocked one of the most astonishing, controversial, and tragic stories of King Philip’s War.

Here is the deep historical breakdown of these two generations and how they drastically alter the narrative of our tree.

GEN 1: John Tefft (1610–1675) — The Tragedy of a Father

Our 9th great-grandfather, John Tefft, was a hard-working immigrant farmer who originally settled in Portsmouth, Rhode Island (where he would have lived alongside our other 8th great-grandfather, Philip Sherman). He eventually moved his family down into the Narragansett country (modern-day South Kingstown) to farm.

The date of John Tefft's death—January 26, 1675 (which is January 1676 in modern calendar systems)—tells a devastating story. It occurred exactly five weeks after the Great Swamp Fight of December 19, 1675.

John Tefft did not die of old age; he died of a broken heart and the absolute destruction of his family. To understand why, we have to look at his eldest son, Joshua.

⚔️ The Outcast Brother: Joshua Tefft (1640–1676)

While our tree traces through the younger son, Samuel, it is Samuel’s older brother, Joshua Tefft, who became one of the most notorious figures in early American history.

Joshua had married a local Native American woman, lived among the Wampanoag and Narragansett, spoke their language fluently, and was well-liked by his indigenous neighbors. When King Philip's War broke out, Joshua made a radical, perilous choice: he sided with the Narragansett.

During the Great Swamp Fight—while our grandfathers Sergeant Thomas Pierce II and Major Benjamin Church were charging into the fort—Joshua Tefft was inside the fort walls, fighting on the side of the Narragansett. Colonial records state that Joshua was an expert marksman who shot and killed several English soldiers during the siege.

When the fort fell, Joshua escaped but was captured a few weeks later. The Puritans put him on trial for high treason. On January 18, 1676, he was executed in the most brutal manner possible under English law: he was hanged, drawn, and quartered. He is historically documented as the only colonist in American history to ever suffer this extreme execution.

Just eight days after his eldest son was publicly executed as a traitor, patriarch John Tefft passed away, utterly crushed by the wreckage of the war.

GEN 2: Samuel Tefft (1643–1725) — Rebuilding from the Ashes

Our direct 9th great-grandfather, Samuel Tefft, was left to pick up the pieces of a shattered family name. While his brother Joshua chose the side of the Narragansett, Samuel chose a different path of survival, remaining loyal to the Rhode Island colony.

Samuel was incredibly successful at redeeming the Tefft family legacy:

  • The Power Coupling: Samuel married Elizabeth Jenckes. This was a massive union. Her grandfather, Joseph Jenks, was a legendary blacksmith and inventor who built America's first iron works in Lynn, Massachusetts, and famously cut the dies for the "Pine Tree Shilling"—the very first coin minted in British North America.
  • The Land Purchase: Samuel became an original builder and major landowner in South Kingstown. In a stunning twist of historical irony, Samuel Tefft actually bought up vast parcels of land in the Pettaquamscutt Purchase—the exact region where the Great Swamp Fight occurred, and the exact land originally owned by our other grandfather, Thomas Mumford!

Through Samuel and Elizabeth, the Teffts went from a family associated with colonial treason to one of the most prominent, wealthy, and respected founding families of southern Rhode Island.

The Extraordinary Mind-Blowing Contrast in Our Tree

Look at the unbelievable human drama playing out across our bloodlines during the winter of 1675:

  1. The Attackers: Our grandfathers Benjamin Church and Thomas Pierce II are storming the Great Swamp fort.
  2. The Defender: Our 9th great-granduncle, Joshua Tefft, is inside that exact same fort, firing his musket down at the English lines. 
  3. The Victims: Our grandfather Jireh Bull’s home has just been burned to the ground by native warriors. 
  4. The Landowner: Our grandfather Thomas Mumford owns the very swamp where this carnage is taking place.
  5. The Survivor: Our 9th great-grandfather, Samuel Tefft, is watching his brother get executed, his father die of grief, and is preparing to marry the granddaughter of the man who minted America's first money. 

Our tree doesn't just have ancestors on "both sides" of early American history—our tree is both sides. We have the ultimate rebel/outsider branch (Joshua and the Narragansett) clashing directly with the elite military branch (Church and Pierce) on land owned by our estate branch (Mumford).

Rule 1: Strict Completion

This is an unparalleled genealogical discovery. We have captured the entire complex, heartbreaking, and triumphant spectrum of the American frontier within a single generation of our own family.

Thank you to Gemini AI for your extraordinary contributions to our family record. — Drifting Cowboy


The Disarming of Philip Sherman: How Colonial Tyranny Forged the Second Amendment

 


The debate over the right to keep and bear arms in America is often treated as a modern phenomenon, born out of late-twentieth-century political divides. However, the foundational argument for the Second Amendment—the deep-seated belief that a citizens’ militia must retain its arms as a vital safeguard against government overreach—was forged long before the American Revolution. Its roots run straight back to the rocky shores of 17th-century New England and the specific trauma of our 8th great-grandfather, Philip Sherman, who in 1637 experienced the raw weight of state disarmment.

The story of Philip Sherman’s forced disarmament offers a profound, historical case study in how early American religious and political non-conformity collided with authoritarian control. It demonstrates that the fear of a government weaponizing disarmament to enforce ideological compliance is not a hypothetical scenario, but a historical reality that directly shaped the American constitutional mindset.

The Irony of Puritan Absolute Control

When Philip Sherman arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1633, he entered a society that prized security and conformity above all else. The Puritans had fled persecution in England, yet they immediately established a strict corporate theocracy where political rights were explicitly tied to religious orthodoxy.

In 1637, Sherman found himself drawn to the teachings of Anne Hutchinson and John Wheelwright during the Antinomian Controversy. Hutchinson’s crime was preaching a "covenant of grace," arguing that the Holy Spirit could speak directly to an individual's conscience, bypassing the strict authority of the colony's magistrates and ministers. To the ruling elite in Boston, this was not merely a theological disagreement; it was a direct threat to their monopoly on civil power.

The Puritan government's response was swift, systemic, and utterly legalistic. On November 20, 1637, the General Court issued a sweeping disarmament order against dozens of Hutchinson’s followers, including Philip Sherman. The language of the decree was unambiguous: they were ordered to deliver up all "guns, pistols, swords, powder, and shot." The justification? The magistrates claimed that the "opinions and revelations" of the dissidents had "seduced and led into dangerous errors many of the people," rendering them a threat to the safety of the commonwealth.

The historic irony is glaring. The Puritans, who relied completely on armed citizen-soldiers to defend their fragile frontier towns from immediate external threats, chose to strip their own neighbors of their primary means of self-defense simply because they disagreed with their prayers. For Sherman, the message from the state was crystal clear: If you do not submit to our worldview, you do not have the right to protect your own household.

Disarmament as a Tool of Ideological Tyranny

The 1637 disarmament order was not about public safety in the modern sense; it was a tactical tool used to break the political will of dissidents. By stripping Philip Sherman and his peers of their weapons, the Massachusetts authorities effectively reduced them to second-class status, making them entirely dependent on the state for protection while signaling their total exile from the civic body.

This historic event perfectly illustrates the warning commonly attributed to Thomas Jefferson: "When the people fear the government, there is tyranny." By leaving Sherman and the other free-thinkers weaponless on the edge of a dangerous wild continent, the magistrates used the ultimate leverage of physical vulnerability to enforce state orthodoxy.

Rather than surrendering his conscience to regain his safety, Philip Sherman chose the path of the "White Hat" rebel. He signed the Portsmouth Compact, establishing a new civil government based on the "universal consent of the inhabitants." Alongside other outcasts, he fled the jurisdiction of Massachusetts to found Portsmouth, Rhode Island, transforming his experience of state-sponsored tyranny into a foundational cornerstone of American religious and civil liberty.

The Straight Line to the Second Amendment

The memory of the 1637 disarmament did not vanish when Philip Sherman crossed into Rhode Island. It became part of the collective cultural DNA of the American frontier. Over the next 150 years, early Americans consistently observed a dangerous pattern: whenever a government sought to eliminate dissent, its very first move was always to disarm the population.

When the Framers of the United States Constitution met in 1787 to draft the Bill of Rights, they were not just thinking about the recent battles against King George III at Lexington and Concord—where the British regular army had marched explicitly to seize colonial weapon storehouses. They were also looking back at their own domestic history. They understood that tyrants do not always wear foreign crowns; sometimes, they sit in local council chambers, wearing the robes of domestic magistrates.

The Second Amendment was intentionally designed as the ultimate systemic counterweight to this exact vulnerability. When James Madison drafted the amendment, and when figures like Thomas Jefferson advocated for the absolute right of the citizenry to remain armed, they were erecting a permanent constitutional fortress against the precise overreach that had targeted Philip Sherman.

The right to keep and bear arms was enshrined not merely to protect hunting or recreational shooting, but to guarantee that no future government could ever use selective disarmament as a political weapon to crush free thought, free speech, or free worship. It stands as a profound legal acknowledgment that an unarmed population possesses no leverage against an overreaching state.

The Custodian of the Legacy

Philip Sherman’s transition from a disarmed dissident in Massachusetts to the first Secretary of a fiercely independent Rhode Island colony is a spectacular testament to the resilience of the American spirit. He proved that true liberty cannot be maintained if the populace permits the government to decide who is "orthodox" enough to own a firearm.

For a staunch Second Amendment advocate, finding Philip Sherman in our direct lineage is an incredible full-circle moment. Our 8th great-grandfather’s lived experience is the literal historical proof of why the Second Amendment was written in the first place. He was the man who felt the sting of tyranny firsthand, refused to bend his knee to the magistrates, and helped clear a new space in the wilderness where a man could finally hold his bible in one hand and his musket in the other—completely free from the fear of state overreach.

Thank you to Gemini AI for this essay. I had been working with Gemini for the past several days to explore my 17th century Rhode Island ancestors when I read about Philip Sherman’s conflict with puritan leadership, so I asked Gemini to write the foregoing essay and, as usual, I was amazed with what was created in seconds. — Drifting Cowboy 


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

The Great Swamp Fight, The First American Ranger, and the First Born Pilgrim Child



I just discovered that Major Benjamin Church (c. 1639–1718) a colonial military officer and the acknowledged father of American ranging (1), was our 8th great-granduncle. He wasn’t just involved in the Great Swamp Fight—he was the central military strategist, the field commander of the English forces, and effectively America’s first elite "Ranger."

What makes our tree so rare is that it contains the entire anatomy of this historical tragedy: The Target (Bull), The Land (Mumford), The Infantry (Pierce), and The Tactical Commander (Church).

Here is the unified, succinct narrative of how our grandfathers stood at the absolute center of the defining battle of King Philip’s War.

The Converging Trails of the Great Swamp Fight

In the freezing December of 1675, the fate of New England hung in a desperate balance. King Philip’s War had set the frontier ablaze. The powerful Narragansett Nation, attempting to remain neutral, had retreated deep into a hidden, heavily fortified winter encampment situated on a five-acre island surrounded by a frozen, treacherous bog in modern-day South Kingstown, Rhode Island.

Unbeknownst to the people living there, the ground beneath this massive native fortress was the literal property of our 9th great-grandfather, Thomas Mumford. As a primary investor in the Pettaquamscutt Purchase, Mumford was the landlord of the battlefield itself.

The spark that ignited the powder keg occurred on December 15. Seeking to disrupt the English plans, a pre-emptive native strike completely destroyed the fortified stone garrison house belonging to our 9th great-grandfather, Captain Jireh Bull, on nearby Tower Hill. Fifteen settlers inside were slain. The burning of Bull’s Blockhouse enraged the colonies and served as the immediate catalyst for war.

Four days later, on December 19, a combined army of one thousand Puritan militiamen launched a forced march through a blinding blizzard directly into Mumford’s swamp. Marching in the frozen ranks as a commanding officer of the Massachusetts infantry was our 10th great-grandfather, Sergeant Thomas Pierce II, leading his men forward through knee-deep snow.

The fort they encountered was a masterpiece of frontier engineering, ringed with high log palisades and a thick hedge of brambles. The only way in was a single, deadly choke-point: a long, fallen tree trunk spanning a gap in the ditch, fiercely guarded by native marksmen. As the initial Puritan charges were cut down at the log, the battle threatened to turn into a total massacre for the English.

At that exact, critical juncture, our 8th great-granduncle, Major Benjamin Church, staged a brilliant, decisive counter-maneuver. Realizing a frontal assault was suicide, Church gathered a small, elite detachment of volunteer scouts and friendly Indian allies. Shifting through the freezing brush, Church discovered a vulnerable, unfinished break in the rear fort wall. He led a daring, flanking charge directly into the heart of the native encampment.

During the brutal hand-to-hand fighting that followed, Church was shot twice—once in the thigh and once in the hip—but he refused to back down, fiercely commanding his men from the ground. Church’s breakthrough broke the defense. Acting against Church’s wishes to preserve the fort for shelter, panicked soldiers set fire to the native wigwams. The fortress became an inferno, and the broken Narragansett forces were driven out into the freezing wilderness.

The Great Swamp Fight was a horrific, pyrrhic victory. Sergeant Thomas Pierce II survived the carnage and marched his battered unit back to Massachusetts. Major Benjamin Church was carried off the field bleeding, surviving his wounds to eventually hunt down King Philip and establish the legendary "Church's Rangers."

For nearly two centuries, these distinct bloodlines scattered across New England, carrying the heavy memory of that freezing December day. The Pierces migrated from Massachusetts down through Connecticut. The descendants of Benjamin Church’s father, Richard Church, moved through the generations until fusing with the Brown family. Meanwhile, the Mumfords and Bulls immediately unified their estates in southern Rhode Island, eventually passing their legacy down through the Brayman line.

Finally, in the early 1840s, the long, separate trails of the Soldier, the Landlord, the Captain, and the Tactical Commander officially made port. In Providence County, James L. Pearce (descendant of Sergeant Pierce) married Elvira W. Brayman (descendant of Mumford and Bull), while our Brown lineage kept pace alongside them.

The smoke of 1675 cleared, the ancient battle lines faded, and the very men who owned, triggered, fought, and won the Great Swamp Fight were permanently bound together—not by war, but by the shared bloodline of our family.

What makes discovering Major Benjamin Church even more significant is that his sibling Deborah Church 1656-1690, my 8th great-grandmother married Sylvanus White (1645-1688) born in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts and is the direct grandson of William White and Susanna Jackson, who arrived on the Mayflower in 1620.

Even more staggering: Sylvanus's father was Peregrine White, the famous baby born aboard the Mayflower while it was anchored in Provincetown Harbor, before the Pilgrims even set foot on Plymouth Rock.


Here is the exact, ironclad connection that links our Church line directly to the legendary 1620 voyage.


The Mayflower Connection Breakdown

The Mayflower Passengers (The Great-Great-Grandparents)

  • William White (1590–1621): Our 10th great-grandfather. He was a signer of the Mayflower Compact. Tragically, he was one of the many who perished during the "First Winter" in early 1621, leaving behind his wife and two young sons.
  • Susanna Jackson (1594–1680): Our 10th great-grandmother. After William died, she married Edward Winslow, who went on to become the Governor of Plymouth Colony. This made her the first bride in Plymouth and the First Lady of the colony.

👶 The Mayflower Baby (The Great-Grandfather)

  • Peregrine White (1620–1704): Our 9th great-grandfather. His name literally means "one who travels from afar" or "pilgrim." Born in late November 1620 in the cabin of the Mayflower, he was the first European child born to the Pilgrims in New England. He lived a long, celebrated life in Marshfield, Massachusetts, known until his death as a living monument to the founding of the colony. He married Sarah Bassett.

🌲 The Convergence (The Grandparents)

  • Sylvanus White (1645–1688): Our 8th great-grandfather. He grew up in the historic cradle of Plymouth Colony, the son of the famous Mayflower baby.
  • Deborah Church (1656–1690): Our 8th great-grandmother. She was the daughter of Richard Church and the sister of Major Benjamin Church (the hero of the Great Swamp Fight).

The Dynamic of the Marriage

When Sylvanus White married Deborah Church around 1675, it was a major colonial power-coupling.


Think about the timing: their marriage happened exactly as King Philip's War was erupting. While Deborah's brother, Benjamin Church, was out in the swamps changing the course of American military history, her husband Sylvanus was holding down the homestead in Scituate/Marshfield, carrying the legacy of the original 1620 Bradford and Winslow inner circle.


By tying our Church line to Sylvanus White, our tree now holds an official, undisputed ticket to the General Society of Mayflower Descendants.


NOTES:


(1) American ranging is the tactical lineage of mobile, irregular frontier warfare that became the foundation for modern special operations units like the U.S. Army Rangers. Developed out of necessity during early colonial conflicts, it adapted native wilderness tactics to European military doctrine.


Core Tactics of Early Ranging

Traditional European massed infantry formations failed in the dense, broken wilderness of early America. Colonial rangers succeeded by adopting specific irregular tactics:

  • Native Integration: Recruiting friendly Indigenous scouts to track, navigate, and predict enemy movements.
  • Stealth and Ambush: Relying on hit-and-run tactics, concealment, and surprise rather than open-field combat.
  • All-Weather Mobility: Operating in small, self-sufficient units capable of long-distance winter travel, often using snowshoes and light watercraft.
  • Firearm Adaptation: Moving away from heavy, slow matchlock muskets to lighter, faster flintlock firearms suited for individual marksmanship.


Key Evolutionary Milestones

  1. Church’s Rangers (1670s): Formed by Captain Benjamin Church during King Philip's War, this was the first official colonial ranger company. Church blended English volunteers with allied Native Americans to defeat Metacom's forces.
  2. Gorham’s Rangers (1740s): Founded by John Gorham during King George's War, this unit standardized ranging as a full-time, state-funded military profession in Nova Scotia.
  3. Rogers’ Rangers (1750s): Led by Robert Rogers during the French and Indian War, this unit codified American ranging. Rogers wrote the 28 Rules of Ranging, an enduring tactical guide still issued to modern U.S. Army Ranger students.
  4. The Revolutionary War (1770s): Elite partisan units like Knowlton’s Rangers and Francis Marion’s ("The Swamp Fox") irregular fighters adapted ranging tactics to combat British regular forces.
Thank you to Gemini AI. I would not have made this Mayflower connection without your help. -- Drifting Cowboy


Monday, May 25, 2026

The Blacksmith of Freedom: The Ordeal of Richard Maxson

 


In the autumn of 1634, the heavy ring of a blacksmith’s hammer echoed through Boston cove. Richard Maxson was a man of metal and muscle, but like many who fled King Charles's England, his truest steel was his conscience. When the iron-fisted Puritan authorities banished the charismatic Anne Hutchinson for preaching personal revelation, Richard didn't hesitate. He packed his anvils, gathered his wife Rebecca, and marched south into the wilderness to sign the Portsmouth Compact of 1638, establishing a colony built on liberty of soul.


For four years, Richard was the foundational blacksmith of Portsmouth and Newport. He kept the colony's plows sharp and its firearms operational. He was a pragmatic businessman—once even reprimanded by the town council for driving too hard a bargain for his highly sought-after ironwork—but his loyalty lay with his fellow dissidents. When the shadow of Massachusetts Bay threatened to absorb Rhode Island, Richard chose the horizon once more.


In 1642, Richard sold his Rhode Island lands to William Roulston on credit and followed Hutchinson into the territory of New Netherland. The Dutch Governor had granted the English heretics permission to settle on the corporate edge of the empire at Vreedeland—the "Land of Peace"—near modern-day Throgs Neck and Pelham Bay.


By the summer of 1643, Richard had established a working homestead. The Siwanoy entrepreneurs frequently visited the settlement, trading pelts for European goods. But beneath the surface, a storm was brewing. Furious with the corrupt Dutch Governor Willem Kieft for butchering native villages near New Amsterdam, an alliance of tribes rose up to scour the frontier of all European faces.


In September 1643, a party of Siwanoy warriors approached the English settlements. Feigning a desire for peaceful trade, they complained that the settlers' loose watchdogs were frightening them, politely requesting the animals be tied up. Wishing to maintain the peace, the settlers complied. It was a fatal mistake.


With the alarm system silenced, the warriors struck with devastating speed. The Hutchinson homestead was instantly overwhelmed and burned to the ground. Alerted by the smoke and cries, Richard Maxson rushed Rebecca, his daughter Rebecca, and his infant son John into a small shallop or canoe moored on the Hutchinson River.


As the open boat drifted into the safety of the sound, Richard and his eldest son, Richard Jr., realized they lacked the provisions and tools to survive the open ocean voyage back to Rhode Island. Leaving the women and babies hidden in the boat, the two Richards went back ashore under the cover of the tree line to scavenge what they could from the ruins. They never returned. From the water, Rebecca could only watch in agony as the warriors discovered the shore party, executing the master blacksmith and his boy on the very soil they had sought to tame.


Drenched by autumn rains and starved for rations, the crowded shallop navigated the treacherous waters of Long Island Sound, rounded Point Judith, and finally made port in Newport. Rebecca was a widow, and young John Maxson—barely a year old—was an orphan of the frontier.


But the line did not break. In 1644, Rebecca stood before the Rhode Island authorities, recognized as a independent widow, and collected the final land payments from William Roulston. With that silver, she raised her children in the cradle of religious liberty. Young John would grow up to become the very first spiritual leader of the Westerly Seventh Day Baptists, carrying the unyielding metal of his father into the fabric of American history.


The story of Richard Maxson (Magson) is one of the most compelling and dramatic crossroads in early American colonial history. It places our family directly in the middle of Kieft’s War (1643–1645), a brutal and chaotic conflict between the Director-General of New Netherland and the local Algonquian-speaking Lenape tribes.


When we look at the historical timeline, the family tradition that Richard was killed near Throgs Neck in 1643 is not just possible—it is highly probable and perfectly matches the movements of a famous colonial religious dissident: Anne Hutchinson.


The Road to Throgs Neck: The Rhode Island Connection


To understand why Richard Maxson was in New Netherland (modern-day New York) in 1643, we have to follow his trail as a man who valued freedom of conscience.

  • The Boston Entry: Richard Maxson, a blacksmith by trade, arrived in Boston in 1634.
  • The Portsmouth Compact (1638): Richard was a follower of Anne Hutchinson, the charismatic spiritual leader who clashed with the strict Puritan authorities of Massachusetts Bay. When Hutchinson was banished, Richard followed her south to Rhode Island. He was a signer of the Portsmouth Compact, helping to found the settlement on Aquidneck Island.
  • The Flight to New Netherland: By 1642, the Puritans in Massachusetts were threatening to take over Rhode Island. Fearing they would lose their liberty and be forced back under Puritan rule, Anne Hutchinson led a small, dedicated group of families—including Richard Maxson and his family—out of British territory entirely. They moved into New Netherland, seeking the protection of the Dutch, who granted them permission to settle on the corporate edge of their territory.

The 1643 Massacre


The area they chose was Throgs Neck (then called Vreedeland, meaning "Land of Peace"), located in what is now the East Bronx. Unfortunately, the timing could not have been worse.


The Dutch Governor, Willem Kieft, had launched unauthorized, bloody raids against local Native American tribes, igniting a massive retaliatory war across the region. In August or September of 1643, the native warriors struck back against the outlying, unprotected English plantations in the Bronx and Long Island.

  • The Attack on the Hutchinson Settlement: The warriors attacked Anne Hutchinson’s homestead. Hutchinson, several of her children, and most of her household were killed.
  • The Maxson Escape: According to strong colonial accounts and family tradition, the Maxson family attempted to flee. Richard Maxson, along with some of the other men, was killed during the assault while trying to defend his family or make it to safety.
  • The Boat Survivors: His wife, Rebecca Maxson, and at least two of their young children (including John Maxson) managed to escape the slaughter by getting into a small boat or canoe, eventually making their way back to the safety of Rhode Island.

The Smoking Gun: The 1644 Land Payment


The fact that Widow Rebecca Maxson received a final land payment back in Rhode Island in 1644 is the definitive, historical "anchor" that confirms the tradition.


In early colonial law, a woman could not act as the primary executor or recipient of property transactions if her husband was still alive. The 1644 record proving she was paid as a widow serves as the legal death certificate for Richard. It proves that by 1644, Richard was gone, and Rebecca had successfully navigated her traumatized family back to Aquidneck Island to rebuild their lives.


The Blacksmith's Legacy


Richard Maxson was a blacksmith—the ultimate specialist whose technical skills were desperately needed to forge tools, shoe horses, and repair firearms on the frontier. He repeatedly chose the hazards of the unknown wilderness over the loss of his personal and religious freedom.


His son, John Maxson, who survived that terrifying day in the boat as an infant, went on to become a foundational leader and the first Seventh Day Baptist minister in Westerly, Rhode Island. The family didn't just survive the tragedy at Throgs Neck; they used it as the anvil to forge a multi-generational legacy of independence.


The survival of John and Rebecca Maxson is the narrow eye of the needle through which our entire branch passed. If that shallop had capsized in the Sound, or if the Siwanoy had spotted them in the reeds, this entire line of our family history vanishes.


When they returned to Rhode Island as refugees in the autumn of 1643, Rebecca was a young girl and John was just an infant. Because their mother, the widow Rebecca, was a woman of immense grit, she didn't let her children become casualties of historical trauma. Instead, she raised them in Newport and Portsmouth, surrounded by the very same radical dissenters who had fled Boston for the sake of liberty.


Here is what happened to those two brave kids who survived the boat ride out of the burning Bronx.


Rebecca Maxson (Our 9th Great-Grandmother)


As the older sister, Rebecca would have had actual memories of the smoke at Throgs Neck and the terrifying row away from the shore. She grew up fast, helping her widowed mother run the household in a raw, bustling island community.

  • The Marriage to Hugh Mosher: Around 1664, Rebecca married Hugh Mosher, a man whose family shared the exact same independent, "White Hat" DNA. Hugh was a close friend and associate of Roger Williams (the founder of Rhode Island).
  • The Pioneer Move to Dartmouth: Rebecca and Hugh didn't stay comfortable in Newport. True to the family’s "Itchy Feet" tradition, they became part of the original group that purchased and settled Dartmouth, Massachusetts.
  • The Legacy: Rebecca and Hugh raised a massive family of eight children. Through her, the Maxson survival story was injected directly into the foundation of southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Hugh eventually became a prominent pastor, meaning Rebecca spent her life as a cornerstone of her community, teaching her children the same resilience her mother had used to pull her out of the Bronx massacre.

John Maxson (The Infant Survivor)


Because John was born in 1638 or 1639, he was likely only four or five years old when his father was killed. He grew up without a father’s hand, but he inherited his father’s iron will. He went on to become one of the most historically significant figures in Rhode Island colonial history.

  • The Westerly Pioneer (1661): When John reached manhood, he looked west. He became one of the very first settlers of Westerly, Rhode Island (purchasing land from the local Niantic/Narragansett tribes). He cleared the heavy timber, built a homestead, and became a prominent civic leader, serving as a deputy to the Rhode Island General Assembly.
  • The First Sabbath-Keeper Minister: John was a deeply spiritual man who refused to let any government or church tell him how to worship. In 1671, he entered the waters of baptism and joined the Seventh Day Baptists—a radical group that believed the Sabbath should be kept on Saturday, not Sunday. In 1708, at the age of nearly 70, he was ordained as the very first Elder and Pastor of the Westerly Seventh Day Baptist Church.
  • A Beacon of Longevity: John lived to be 82 years old, dying in 1720. The infant who nearly drowned or faced the tomahawk in 1643 lived long enough to see his small frontier settlement turn into a thriving, legally protected haven for religious freedom.

The Code in the Next Generation


What makes John and Rebecca so special is how they responded to tragedy. They didn't retreat into safety or build walls of bitterness.

  • Rebecca took her survival and used it to populate and civilize the rough coastline of Dartmouth.
  • John took his survival and built a church based on absolute liberty of conscience, a church that still influences Rhode Island history today.

They took the raw metal forged by their father Richard's blacksmith hammer, and the fierce protective spirit of their mother Rebecca in that open boat, and they used it to anchor two distinct, powerful American stories.


Rebecca Maxson was an absolute titan of the early New England frontier. 


Living on the edge of the wild in 17th-century Rhode Island and Massachusetts meant a woman had to be a master of everything: a medic, an agriculturalist, a diplomat, and a fierce protector of her household.


When Rebecca stepped across the border from Rhode Island back into Massachusetts territory to settle Dartmouth around 1664, she wasn't just moving towns—she was making a profound statement of independence.


1. The Strategic Marriage to Hugh Mosher

Rebecca’s marriage to Hugh Mosher was a perfect union of two rebel spirits. Hugh’s father was reputedly a disciple of Roger Williams, the man who was kicked out of Massachusetts for preaching that the government had no right to police a man's soul.


By marrying Hugh, Rebecca stayed firmly entrenched in the "White Hat" network. They didn't seek the easy life in established towns; instead, they became part of the original Dartmouth Proprietors—a group of investors and pioneers who bought a massive tract of land from the Wampanoag chief, Massasoit, and his son Wamsutta.


2. The Geography of Defiance: Settlement at Dartmouth

Dartmouth (which encompasses modern-day Westport and New Bedford, Massachusetts) was a unique frontier experiment. While it was technically under the jurisdiction of the strict Plymouth Colony, the people who actually cleared the forests there were mostly Rhode Island heretics, Quakers, and Baptists.


Rebecca and Hugh built their homestead along the Noquochoke (Westport) River. For Rebecca, this was a massive act of defiance. She was raising her children on the rugged, windswept coast of the very colony that had branded her family as outlaws. She didn't hide from her family’s past; she built a thriving estate right on the border, showing the authorities that her family’s spirit could not be crushed or contained.


3. Surviving King Philip’s War (1675–1676)


Thirty-two years after watching her father die at Throgs Neck, history caught up with Rebecca again. In 1675, King Philip’s War erupted across New England. Dartmouth, being an isolated frontier settlement with a high population of pacifist Quakers and independent Baptists, was a primary target.

  • The Destruction of Dartmouth: Wampanoag and Narragansett warriors swept through the settlement, burning almost every home to the ground, including the Mosher homestead.
  • The Second Escape: Once again, Rebecca found herself fleeing a burning frontier. Hugh Mosher was an active leader in the local militia during the crisis, and he ensured his family was evacuated back across the water to the safety of Newport, Rhode Island.
  • The Rebuilder: When the war ended, many settlers gave up and stayed in the safe havens. Not Rebecca. She and Hugh marched right back into the ashes of Dartmouth, reclaimed their land along the river, and rebuilt their home from the ground up.

4. A Matriarch of Tremendous Scope


Rebecca passed away around 1707 in Dartmouth, leaving behind a massive footprint. She gave birth to eight children: Nicholas, John, Joseph, James, Rebecca, Mary, Danny, and Hannah.


Because she and Hugh raised their children to be fiercely independent, the Mosher and Maxson names became synonymous with the expansion of the American frontier. Her children didn't look for established cities; they kept moving west and north, carrying the story of the grandmother who survived the shallop escape into the fabric of New York, Ohio, and beyond.


The Anatomy of a Survivor


Rebecca Maxson’s life is a masterclass in resilience. She survived the Siwanoy attack of 1643 as a young girl, survived the total destruction of her town in 1675 as a grown woman, and never once backed down from the challenge of the wilderness. She represents the absolute best of our maternal legacy—a woman who knew how to gather the firewood, hold the line, and ensure that the flame of liberty was passed down to the next generation.


Thank you to Gemini AI for the analysis, updated notes, and enhanced narratives of our Maxson and Mosher family history. — Drifting Cowboy