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John
Alden
BIRTH: About
1599, probably Harwich, Essex, England.
MARRIAGE: Priscilla Mullins, about 1623, Plymouth, daughter of William
and Alice Mullins.William and Alice Mullins.DEATH: 12 September 1687,
Duxbury.CHILDREN: Elizabeth, John, Joseph, Priscilla, Jonathan, Sarah,
Ruth, Mary, Rebecca, and David
John Alden
appears to have originated from an Alden family residing in Harwich, Essex,
England, that was related by marriage to the Mayflower's master Christopher
Jones. He was about 21 years old when he was hired to be the cooper, or
barrel-maker, for the Mayflower's voyage to America. He was given the
option to stay in America, or return to England; he decided to stay.
At Plymouth, he quickly rose up from his common seaman status to a prominent
member of the Colony. About 1622 or 1623, he married Priscilla, the orphaned
daughter of William and Alice Mullins. They had their first child, Elizabeth,
around 1624, and would have nine more children over the next twenty years.
John Alden was one of the earliest freemen in the Colony, and was elected
an assistant to the governor and Plymouth Court as early as 1631, and
was regularly re-elected throughout the 1630s. He also became involved
in administering the trading activities of the Colony on the Kennebec
River, and in 1634 witnessed a trading dispute escalate into a double-killing,
as Moses Talbot of Plymouth Colony was shot at point-blank range by trespasser
John Hocking, who was then shot and killed when other Plymouth men returned
fire. John Alden was held in custody by the neighboring Massachusetts
Bay Colony for a few days while the two colonies debated who had jurisdiction
to investigate the murders. Myles Standish eventually came to the Bay
Colony to provide Plymouth's answer in the matter.
Alden, and several other families, including the Standish family, founded
the town of Duxbury in the 1630s and took up residence there. Alden served
as Duxbury's deputy to the Plymouth Court throughout the 1640s, and served
on several committees, including the Committee on Kennebec Trade, and
sat on several Councils of War. He also served as colony treasurer. In
the 1650s, he build the house at left, in Duxbury, which still stands
today. By the 1660s, Alden's frequent public service, combined with his
large family of wife and ten children, began to cause his estate to languish,
so the Plymouth Court provided him a number of land grants and cash grants
to better provide for his family. Throughout the 1670s, Alden began distributing
his land holdings to his surviving sons. He died in 1687 at the age of
89, one of the last surviving Mayflower passengers.
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