Massachusetts History
The Earliest Colonies
The coast of what
is now Massachusetts was probably
skirted by Norsemen in the 11th
century, and Europeans of various
nationalities (but mostly English)
sailed offshore in the late 16th and
early 17th centuries Settlement began
when the Pilgrims arrived on the
Mayflower and landed, in 1620, at a
point they named Plymouth (for their
port of embarkation in England).
Their first governor, John Carver,
died the next year, but under his
successor, William Bradford, the
Plymouth Colony took firm hold.
Weathering early difficulties, the
colony eventually prospered.
The agreement that the Pilgrims had
with their financial backers required them to live together in a
tight community for seven years.
But the Pilgrims of Plymouth were
not the only early settlers. Other
Englishmen also established fishing
and trading posts nearby as early as
1622.
Andrew Weston (1622) settled at Wessagusset (now Weymouth) and Thomas Wollaston (1625) settled at Mt. Wollaston, which was renamed Merry Mount (and is now Quincy) when Thomas Morton took charge. The fishing post established (1623) on Cape Ann by Roger Conant failed, but in 1626 he founded Naumkeag (Salem), which in 1628 became the nucleus of a Puritan colony led by John Endecott of the New England Company and chartered by the private Council for New England.
In 1630, new
settlers began arriving in droves,
and the towns of the Massachusetts
Bay Colony, and others, began to
grow rapidly.
The stories of
the Pilgrims and many of these other
settlements, will be told in
separate articles. This map of the
current counties of Massachusetts
will help you to visualize where
your ancestors may have lived, but
bear in mind there were no counties
or state divisions in the earliest
years of settlement.

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