Featured Ancestor:
Richard Norman, New World Explorer
10th Great Grandfather of Kelly Dunn (Lockwood)
Richard Norman, Kelly’s 10x Great Grandfather came to America as an employee of Dorchester Co., a group of capitalists and adventurers who established a small colony known as the Essex colony at Cape Ann, Massachusetts in 1623. Later area of the Essex colony would the town of Salem.
He may have not been a member of the original settlement but we know that he and his family were among those, who, upon failure of the Cape Ann venture moved to Naumkeag in 1626 under the leadership of Roget Conant and were established there upon arrival of the Endicott migration in 1628. Richard Brackenburg of Beverly, age 80, testified in 1680 that when “we came ashore at the place now called Salem, we found living there Old Goodman Norman and his son and others who owned what they came over on the account of a Company in England called by the name of Dorchester Co. of Dor. Merchants: they had sundry houses built in Salem – and they declared they had a house built at Cape Ann of the Dor. com.” These pre-Endicott settlers became known in Salem history as the “old planters”.
The Old Planters of Massachusetts were settlers of lands on Massachusetts Bay that were not part of the two major settlements in the area, the Plymouth Colony (1620), and the Massachusetts Bay Colony (begun 1628, expanded significantly starting in 1630).
Early English settlement attempts in North America
In 1607 a Plymouth Company expedition led by George Popham and partially financed by Sir Ferdinando Gorges founded Popham Colony in Maine, which lasted one year before being abandoned. During that year the colonists built a seaworthy boat, the Virginia pinnace.
In Massachusetts, the ‘old planters’ proved through their hard work that settlement was possible; subsequent to this, there was a major influx of ‘new planters’ that continued over a decade.[1] The early expansions centered around Plymouth and what is now Essex County, Massachusetts but eventually spawned the westward movements.
Plymouth
Two early areas of settlement were Plymouth (c 1620) and Nantasket (c 1621). The Plymouth Colony began with the Mayflower’s landing and is a well-known story. The Nantasket settlement followed soon after that of Plymouth. Roger Conant was at these two settlements before going north to Cape Ann.
Essex
The Essex colony started at Cape Ann in 1623 with a party led by Thomas Gardner and John Tylly. For this party, there were two ships with 32 people who were to settle the area commercially. About a year later, this party was joined by a group from Plymouth led by Roger Conant. These efforts were funded by the Dorchester Company, which withdrew its funding after 1625. In 1626, some of the original party, as many left to return to England or to go south, moved the settlement, in hopes of finding more success, to Naumkeag. This settlement worked out and became Salem.[2]
According to the Essex Institute, the list of old planters, in 1626, who were in Cape Ann before the move were as follows:
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Roger Conant – Governor, John Lyford – Minister (went to Virginia, instead of Naumkeag), John Woodbury, Humphrey Woodbury, John Balch, Peter Palfray, Walter Knight, William Allen,[3] Thomas Gray, John Tylly, Thomas Gardner, Richard Norman (and his son), William Jeffrey, and Capt. William Trask.[4]