Katie Numan
Doctor Coronado
ENGL 327
28 March 2016
Study
of Records of the Colony of New Plymouth in New England
The most studied of anthologies of Puritan and Colonial
texts are primarily comprised of detailed accounts from individuals on their
experiences related to the New World. Alternatively, collections of historical
documentation of legal proceedings in Colonial
America, which are not included within general anthologies, give a more
comprehensive or broad view of how the culture functioned. Rather than the
individualistic bias given through popular writings of the time, the study of
legal documents suggests a lack of bias, or at least generally accepted
Colonial thought, which acts as framework for other texts to be placed within. Amongst
these legal writings are the Records of the Colony of New Plymouth in NewEngland: Printed by the Order of the Legislature of the Commonwealth ofMassachusetts, edited by Nathaniel B. Shurtleff and David Pulsifer. Though these collections contain
multiple volumes to cover individual court cases from a range of offenses, narrowing
the scope to study court cases related to sexual misconduct is most beneficial
in gaining understanding of the culture, as sexuality ties so heavily to
religion, and can therefore be examined through multiple lens. Additionally,
the court records detail not only the specifics of the crimes themselves, but
also the assigned sentences or punishments. Similar acts may have completely
different consequences depending on the context of the situation—this only
gives readers more contextual understanding in learning about pre-1800 North
America. It is not the cases themselves that make the text important to
understanding, but the concept of applying what is generally the cultural
accepted thought, by law, to the individuals in that culture. Rather than the
popularly anthologized individual's reaction to general thought, this is the
general thought reacting to the individual.
However, these compendiums of information have only
become more heavily researched by scholars within the past century. The
increase in research only arose from a noticed deficiency by experts in the
field. In his article, Colonial Court Records and the Study of Early American
History: A Bibliographical Review, Michael
G. Kammen discusses the creation of published collections of Colonial court
records, and why their inclusion as a relevant area of study has been so
slow-coming. As an explanation, he suggests, "The notion has persisted
that after the Revolution judges undertook to decide what rules had been
adopted in colonial times, acting on the assumption that their function to
declare the law included a knowledge of its history" (Kammen 737). Since
court records were not readily available at the time, the assumption led to historians
finding the original cases to be of little relevance, as the same practices
were said to be held by more recent judges that had adopted Colonial thought.
The assumption that Colonial law mirrored
that of English law also cannot be accurately made. An additional criticism
that Kammen's review makes towards the lack of value of early American legal
records suggests that research
"...has shown that the terms, forms, and substantive law of early America
were not necessarily those known to the
king's courts... Much of early American law was thus derived from the districts
in England that produced the colonial migrations" (Kammen 738-739). If
Colonial law was formed from a multitude of different districts, and therefore
beliefs, it cannot be universally be defined as English law itself. Additionally,
even traditional English law at the time was split between secular law and
canon law. In her study on adultery in Stuart England, Veronika Christine
Pohlig makes the distinction between the two quite clear. While crimes of
sexual nature could be handled by either secular or ecclesiastical courts, the
existing records show much more activity in ecclesiastical courts than the
secular. In addition, "those records provide a rather good picture of
contemporary social structures as church courts catered to a rather wide social
spectrum since litigants and witnesses included servants, labourers, yeomen,
husbandmen and tradesmen as well as the occasional gentleman" (Pohlig
10-11). In lieu of a more standardized final verdict of cases, the socially
constructed courts of England had more conceptual punishments, often involving
penance or some form of public shaming, though forms of these do show up within
the documented Colonial records.
However, the most substantial difference
is the separation of courts. In the volumes of records edited by Shurtleff and
Pulsifer, the cases are those from a general court— not necessarily secular or
ecclesiastical, but more so a combination. As a generalized court, readers are
able to see how at the time religion, and more generally speaking social
structures, tied to government. It also
shifts away from trying to understand and emphasize the differences and
overlaps between American and English court systems, but instead to more closely
examine the implications of the cases within the realm of the period and the
culture. This can be seen through a comparative study of cases of similar
nature that have slight differences between them, which lead to completely
different sentences. Such is the case for two documented accounts of adultery.
This first of these, occurring on September 3, 1639 is as follows:
Mary, the wyfe of Robert Mendame, of
Duxborrow, four using dallyance diuers tymes with
Tinsin, an Indian, and after committing the act of vncleanesse with him, as by
his owne confession by seuerall
interpreters is made apparent, the Bench doth therefore censure the said Mary to be whipt as a carts tayle through the
townes streets, as to weare a badge
vpon her left sleeue during her aboad within this gouerment; and if shee shalbe found without abroad, the to
be burned in the face with a hott iron; and the said Tinsin, the Indian, to be well whipt with a halter
about his neck at the post, because it arose through
the allurement [and] inticement of the said Mary, that hee was drawne
therevnto. (Shurtleff 132)
In
this specific case punishments were assigned to both parties as they were
active participants in the alleged crime. However, when compared to another
case of adultery, one factor of the case leads to a much different result. The
second of these cases, which took place on December 7, 1641 reads as follows:
Forasmuch, as Thomas Bray, of
Yarmouth, a single person, and Anne, the wyfe of Francis Linceford, haue committed the act of adultery and
vncleanesse, and haue diuers tymes
layne in one bed together in the absence of her husband, which hath been confessed by both parties in the publike
Court, the Court doth censure them as followeth: That they both be seuerely whipt immediately at the publik post,
[and] that they shall weare
(whilst they remayne in the gouerment) two letters, namely, and AD, for Adulterers, daily, vpon the outside of
their vppermost garment, in a most emenent place thereof; and if they shalbe found at any tyme in any towne
or place within the gouerment without
them so worne vpon their vppermost garment as aforesaid, that then the
constable of the towne or place
shall take them, or wither of them, omitting so to weare the said two letters, and shall forthwith whip
them for their negligence, and shall cause them to be immediately put on againe, and so worne by them and either of
them... (Shurtleff 28).
While
both cases of adultery involve two willing participants, the outlier in the
first case is the fact that one of the alleged adulterers was an Indian. Because
of this, if Mary Mendame was found in public without the badge of her adultery
on her sleeve, she was to be branded on her face with a hot iron. For Anne
Bray, who committed the same crime and was subject to the same initial
punishment, if she were to not wear her badge of adultery, her secondary
punishment would be an additional whipping. Simply comparing these two cases
shows the significance of what is means to be a Colonist versus being an Indian.
Clearly, fraternizing with a Native was culturally accepted to be a more serious
offense. This thought is expanded from an individual perspective and applied as
a general thought.
These cases only represent a portion
of the cultural information that can be pulled out from early American court records
as a whole. To really get an understanding of the period, it is essential to have
a more historical frame to contextualize other texts. Though they may offer individual
thoughts that viewpoints, those very thoughts may not be reflective of the thoughts
of the society. Looking towards a more public documentation of a key part in how
Colonial America was governed and regulated is an effective way to achieving a more
general understanding.
Works
Cited
Kammen, Michael G.. “Colonial Court Records and the Study of
Early American History: A Bibliographical Review”. The American Historical Review70.3 (1965): 732–739. Web.
Pohlig, Veronika Christine. Adultery in Early Stuart England. Diss. Freie Universität Berlin, 2010.
Shurtleff, Nathaniel B, and David
Pulsifer. Records of the Colony of New Plymouth, in New England:
Printed by Order of the Legislature of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Boston: Press of W. White, 1855. Print.
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