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Myles
Standish
BIRTH: Traditionally
1584 or 1587, and probably in Lancashire, England.
MARRIAGE:
* Rose, maiden name unknown, sometime before 1620.
* Barbara, maiden name unknown, about 1623, Plymouth.
Death: 3 October
1656, Duxbury.
Children:
Charles (died young), Alexander, John, Myles, Lora, Josias, and Charles.
Myles Standish
was born probably in Lancashire, England, probably in the vicinity of
Chorley and Duxbury. There have been several attempts, generally unsuccessful,
to place his origins on the Isle of Man, but the weight of the historical
evidence leans towards the more probable Lancashire origin.
Myles Standish
is alleged to have joined Queen Elizabeth's army and attained the rank
of Lieutenant, but the documentation for this claim was lost in the 1920s
without having been published or transcribed, so may be suspect. In any
case, Standish was certainly a part of Queen Elizabeth's army, and was
stantioned for a time in Holland where he eventually met and became well
acquainted with John Robinson and the Pilgrims who were living in Leiden.
Standish was hired by the Pilgrims to be their military captain, to establish
and coordinate the Colony's defense against both foreign (French, Spanish,
Dutch) and domestic (Native American) threats.
Standish led
or participated in all the early exploratory missions sent out to explore
Cape Cod, and was heavily involved in selecting the site where the Pilgrims
would settle. He was one of the few who did not get sick at all the first
winter, and is recorded as having greatly helped and cared for those who
were sick. He organized the deployment of the colony's cannons and the
construction of the fort at Plymouth. He led both trading expeditions
and military expeditions to the various Indian groups in the region. He
led the party that went in pursuit of the alleged killers of Squanto (who
was later discovered to be safe). He led the revenge attacks on the Indians
in the Massachusetts Bay after they were caught in a conspiracy planning
to attack and destroy the Plymouth and Wessagussett colonies; several
Indians were killed or executed, for which Standish received some criticism,
even from his friends, for being too heavy-handed.
Standish was
heavily involved in numerous aspects of Plymouth Colony, from defense
to keeping the law. He was on the receiving end of John Billington's verbal
wrath in 1621 (Billington refused to follow the captain's orders), and
was called a "silly boy" in a letter that was sent out during
the Oldham-Lyford scandal of 1624, and was noted for his short stature
and for his quick temper. He was sent to arrest Thomas Morton in 1628,
for which he received the nickname "Captain Shrimp" from Morton.
William Hubbard reported Standish's temper was like a "chimney soon
fired".
Despite the
heavy criticism by his enemies, Standish was well respected within the
Plymouth Colony, and held a number of positions of authority. He made
several trips to England to bring trading goods back and to negotiate
with the Merchant Adventurers who had financially sponsored the joint-stock
company that funded the Pilgrims' voyage. In the mid-1630s, Standish moved
his family and helped found the town of Duxbury, which may have been named
after his ancestral home. Standish was an heir to a fairly sizeable estate
in Lancashire, but his lands were lost during the English Civil War, and
neither he nor his son Alexander were ever able to legally regain control
of the estate.
Myles Standish's
first wife Rose came with him on the Mayflower, and died the first winter.
His second wife, Barbara, arrived on the ship Anne in 1623, and they were
apparently married before the year was out. Nothing is known about either
of his wives: there is absolutely no indication they were his cousins,
as has sometimes been claimed.
Standish lived out his later years in Duxbury, dying in 1656 "after
his suffering of much dolorous pain," apparently from kidney stones.
.
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