The Hanging and Redemption of John Gordon: The True Story of Rhode Island's Last Execution
By Paul F. Caranci and Patrick T. Conley
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About this ebook
Paul F. Caranci
Paul F. Caranci is a third generation resident of Centredale, a neighborhood in North Providence. He has served as Rhode Island's Deputy Secretary of State since 2007, and served on the North Providence Town Council from 1994 to 2010. Caranci attended Providence College and Roger Williams University. Patrick T. Conley is the Historian Laureate of Rhode Island.
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The Hanging and Redemption of John Gordon - Paul F. Caranci
Island
SECTION I
THE CONFLUENCE OF EVENTS CREATES AN ATMOSPHERE CONDUCIVE TO AN AMERICAN MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE
Chapter 1
ROGER WILLIAMS ORGANIZES A NEW COLONY AND DELIVERS A ROYAL CHARTER WITH EARTH-SHATTERING IMPLICATIONS
Roger Williams’s life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony was beginning to unravel. Word had reached him that he was now in danger. He’d been tipped off that exile was imminent, but now he wasn’t so sure if the powers that be would settle for mere banishment. Roger Williams was starting to rub the Puritans of Massachusetts the wrong way, and he had reason to believe that he might be sent back to England, where his recent antics would mean certain imprisonment. He no longer had the luxury of time. He would need to leave the colony fast, even before the harsh cruelties of the New England winter could play out in favor of a more travel-conducive spring.
Six years earlier, a more optimistic Williams had boarded the English vessel Arbella for the two-month journey that delivered him to the shores of Salem in June 1630. It was the same town that fellow Englishman William Sprague had immigrated to only two years before. Williams’s arrival in the New World marked his departure from the corrupt church of Old England where King James tortured Catholics and Protestants alike, depending on his religion of choice at any given time. Puritans were simply dragged out of church and hanged. So much a part of government were the King’s religious beliefs that James went so far as to order the printing of his own translation of the Bible, one that preached total compliance to authority. Williams hoped that a new life in America would offer an opportunity to participate in the leadership of a reformed church in New England, where people were free to praise the god of their choice however they chose. In New England, he would be able to create a true Church of England; one not based on the myopic edicts of a single pope, but rather one more attendant to piety than politics or preferment.
Indeed, his impeccable reputation and extraordinary educational background immediately earned him an offer to become the deacon of the Puritan Church of Boston. This prestigious offering was an absolute indication of the high esteem with which the church establishment held this generous and well-versed immigrant. Yet Williams turned down the offer, believing that even the Puritan church in this new land wasn’t pure enough to satiate the moral aptitude of his most devout soul. Despite Governor Winthrop’s call for a pious city on the hill, Williams’s vision was for a slightly different type of city. His English mentor, Sir Edward Coke, arguably the greatest jurist to ever live, taught Williams much. Among his many lessons, Williams learned that a man’s home is his castle,
an analogy that likened the peasant to royal status in his most comfortable and safe place. Coke advocated that not even the king is above the law and applied the concept of habeas corpus to the king himself. Indeed, Coke was imprisoned, though eventually released, for his treasonous talk. The death of King James paved the way for Charles I to assume the throne. The new king agreed to Coke’s petition of rights, but almost before the ink of the covenant was dry, he violated its terms and decided to dissolve Parliament. The lawmakers, however, were able to pass all their resolutions before the king’s guards could break in and arrest them. Roger Williams observed all this and witnessed men being exposed to the cruelties of imprisonment rather than relent their fervor for their principals.
Williams had other influences in his life. While Coke was influential in shaping Williams’s thoughts, Sir Francis Bacon, Coke’s arch rival, taught Williams how to think. He was able to apply these qualities to the third major influence in his life: Holy Scripture. Williams realized that no one interpretation of the Bible is of greater value than the next. Williams brought all these distinctions with him to the new land.
As the Massachusetts winter of 1636 appeared with a fury, Williams and a small band of Loyalists stepped out into the bitterly cold, snowy night in a state of total apprehension. The barest essentials—food, clothing and shelter—were hard enough to acquire when one was established and had the months of summer to plan for winter’s onslaught. How would survival be possible on the run without the necessary preparations? Where would Williams and his followers end up, and what challenges and dangers would meet them there and along the way?
His first three years in the Bay Colony had gone reasonably well. Williams preached under the tutelage of Pastor Ralph Smith and began a long and sensitive relationship with the neighboring Indians. His wife, Mary, blessed him with their first child, and Roger continued to ponder the requirements of true separation.
Governor William Bradford of Plymouth found Williams engaging, describing him as Godly and zealous, having many special parts.
Yet as time passed, the governor grew concerned that Williams had perhaps become a bit more zealous than godly, writing in 1633 that he had fallen into some strange opinions which caused some controversy between the church and him.
Williams objected passionately to the monstrous and most inhumane conversions
forced on the Native Americans on both American continents. He denounced the European practices that he thought he had left behind and went even further, saying that English Americans also deserved better, using his pulpit to advocate the total separation of matters civil and ecclesiastical. He believed that while the state was expected to enforce the provisions of the second tablet of the ten commandments, those dealing with societal issues such as murder, perjury, thievery and the like, it had no business injecting itself into matters of belief such as placing God first in life, observing the Sabbath and other commandments contained within the first tablet.
This map shows the routes taken by Roger Williams on his journey from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, during his travels in the Bay Colony, and then on his journey to the Rhode Island Colony following his banishment from Massachusetts in 1636. Reprinted from Liberty of Conscience by Edwin S. Gaustad.
Williams failed to heed the several warnings of friends, civic and church leaders and the courts. He rejected opportunities to recant and failed to be silent despite the court’s initial attempts at leniency. Finally, the Puritan establishment could take no more. When the court reconvened in October 1635, it discussed Williams’s heresy, writing, Whereas Mr. Roger Williams, one of the elders of the church at Salem, hath broached & divulged diverse new & dangerous opinions, and whereas he had questioned and defamed both magisterial and clerical authority, and whereas he maintained his objectionable opinions without hint of repentance or retraction, it is therefore ordered, that the said Mr. Williams shall depart out of this jurisdiction within six weeks.
Failure to abide by the order would result in his forceful ejectment. Once again the court had shown Williams leniency, giving him six weeks to get his affairs in order before his banishment. Because his second child had just been born, those six weeks would have served him well. But while Williams refrained from speaking publicly of his beliefs, he continued his discourse with those who visited his home. Within a month, word of Williams’s continued disobedience spread to Boston. Williams was summoned back to court but was too ill to attend. In his absence, the court decided that Williams needed to be sent back to England immediately and dispatched a sea captain to Salem to arrest him and carry out the order. Friends within the government tipped him off, however, and when authorities arrived at the Williams home, they found it empty. Williams had fled about three days earlier.
On a bitterly cold January day in 1636, a very ill Roger Williams pressed into the freezing winds of winter and journeyed on foot through the dense snow toward what he hoped would represent a greener pasture. He relied on the guidance and assistance of savages
from the Wampanoag Indian tribe for fourteen long and torturous weeks, eventually arriving at the headwaters of Narragansett Bay. There he was cordially greeted by the local natives and accepted their spirited invitation to remain in peace. Through agreement with Narragansett Indian Sachems Meauntonomi and Caunaunicus, Williams was allowed to occupy a great deal of land, which was solidified through the granting of the oldest deed in the New World still known to exist. He called his new land Providence and sent for family and friends who shared his beliefs so that they might join him and share in his new home. Williams was determined to establish a settlement where the civil power should have no authority in spiritual matters and every man could be free to think for himself.
He wrote a compact used to govern his new settlement. He ignored the traditional language of the compacts of the period, which all noted that the colony was founded for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian religion. Williams’s language in the compact was, instead, entirely secular. Desiring the complete freedom of the soul, Williams’s compact called for soul liberty. His tiny settlement grew steadily with the influx of others who were under the displeasure of the Massachusetts Puritan government. News spread rapidly about this shelter for persons distressed of conscience
and created fear in the government of Massachusetts that his heresy might spread to the Bay Colony. For the next twenty-seven years, Williams and his followers fostered and strengthened their relationship with the Narragansett Indians and developed new local governments on the Island of Aquidneck and in the Providence Plantations that he established.
These governments served the residents of the colony well, but there were those who craved more. With intensified pressure from Massachusetts, Williams realized that without a new colonial charter granting English recognition to the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations—one that would provide a foundation for the colony’s government and an outline of the broad freedoms that the inhabitants of the colony enjoyed—the colony and its freedoms might be in jeopardy. Consequently, Williams and Dr. John Clarke were dispatched to England as Rhode Island’s agents. Williams returned to Rhode Island shortly thereafter, however, leaving Dr. Clarke to draft a new charter representing Williams’s desires and present it to England’s monarch, King Charles II, which Clarke did in July 1663. The brutal king, who had little tolerance for independent thought in old England, approved the charter, granting broad liberties to his subjects in New England. Clarke sailed for home with the document in hand and delivered it to the colony the following November. There, Captain George Baxter read the charter to the freemen of the Rhode Island Colony on November 24, 1663. The assembly voted to notify the king of their thanks and send a gratuity to Dr. Clarke.
The new governing document contained provisions unheard of in both the New and Old Worlds. The Royal Charter recognized the Native Americans as the rightful owners of the land and required colonists to purchase that land from the Indians. Another unique feature was the extensive protection of the rights of conscience granting religious freedom to inhabitants of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. The protection extended to include not only tolerance of religion but also complete freedom to practice the religion of choice free of government interference. Finally, the new charter offered democratic freedoms to this colony not found in any other. Residents of Rhode Island Colony would be allowed to make their own laws and elect their own leaders within very broad guidelines. This lively experiment defined the authority of executive and legislative branches, designated a number of representatives for each town and created the positions of governor, deputy governor and ten assistants that would initiate the new government.
Yet despite the good intentions of the written words, the notions of religious liberty and the spirit of toleration that were so eloquently and elaborately advocated by Roger Williams and enumerated in Rhode Island’s Royal Charter of 1663 stood in marked contrast to the bigotry and religious intolerance that existed in the 1840s. For some reason, the religious liberty that so distinguished the lively experiment was not sustained with the emergence of Irish immigration to Rhode Island.
Chapter 2
THE SPRAGUE FAMILY
An Accumulation of Financial Wealth and Immense Political Power
When Tristram Sprague was born in October 1550, politically motivated arrests and prosecutions by the English Crown over religious differences were still commonplace. The self-serving persecutions made infamous during the reign of King Henry VIII didn’t end with his death in 1547. In fact, they continued and, if possible, worsened under the leadership of the successors who vied for his throne of supremacy.
These were the conditions that flourished when twenty-five-year-old Tristram Sprague took Elizabeth Colt of Puddletown as his wife. A year later, the couple gave birth to a son, Edward. The Spragues were fullers by trade, an ancient craft that is an essential part of finishing newly woven cloth. The seemingly endless supply of fleece from the sheep and cattle that thrived in the lush, rolling green landscape of meadows and tillage that graced the countryside of the county of Dorset in Upwey, England, allowed the family business to flourish. Despite their wealth and prosperity in the small seaport hamlet, Tristram and his wife witnessed the brutality of the persecutions and wanted better for their son.
When Edward grew to adulthood, he married Christian Holland, and the two moved into a Dorchester mill house near the River Wey, a small stream that worked the mill for fulling. From accounts, it appears that Edward died in 1614 at the age of forty, leaving behind his wife and six children all under the age of twenty-one. With their father now gone, three of his sons—Ralph, Richard and nineteen-year-old William—chose to journey to America in the interests of the Massachusetts Bay Company, each paying his own transportation. The three, along with Governor John Endecott, boarded the Abigail in early July 1628 for the treacherous journey to America.
The group arrived on the shores of Naumkeag (Salem), Massachusetts, three months later on September 6, 1628, and settled in Charlestown. According to Thomas Prince’s Chronology, all three, and a few others, were employed by Governor Endicot to explore and take possession of the country westward. They