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1600 - 1682 (82 years)
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Name |
Thomas OLNEY [1] |
- Thomas Olney, the ancestor of the Olneys in America, had his birthplace in the city of Hertford, Hertfordshire, England; which city formed a part of the Parish of St. Albans, the seat of one of the most ancient monasteries, and long celebrated in English history as the center of spiritual influence. Of his early life we know nothing. he received a "Permit to emigrate to New England," April 2, 1635, and came to Salem, Mass., by the ship Planter. He was appointed a surveyor in january, 1636, and granted forty acres of land at Jeffrey Creek, now known as Manchester, near Salem. He was made a freeman the same year, and early associated with those who accepted the peculiar views of Roger Williams. With a number of others he was excluded from the colony, March 12, 1638. Previous to this, however, in company with Williams, he visited Narragansett Bay while seeking some place where they might live outside the jurisdiction of Massachusetts Colony, and had decided upon the west side of the Seekonk River. Accordingly, with eleven others, they formed a new settlement at the head of the bay which they named Providence, in grateful remembrance of their deliverance from their enemies. They thus became the "Original Thirteen Proprietors of Providence," having purchased their rights from the Indians. In July, 1639, he and his wife and their companions were excluded from the church at Salem, "because they wholly refused to hear the church, denying it, and were re-baptized."
His prominence in the Colony is shown by the various duties he was called to perform.
In 1638 he was chosen the first Treasurer.
In 1647 he was chosen commissioner to form a Town Government.
In 1648 he was chosen assistant for Providence, and held the office almost continuously until 1663.
In 1655, with Roger Williams and Thomas Harris, he was chosen a judge of the Justices Court.
In 1656, he was chosen to treat with Massachusetts Bay about the Pawtuxet lands.
In 1663 his name appears among the grantees of the Royal Charter of Charles II.
In the same year he was chosen an assistant under the new Charter.
He was one of the founders of the First Baptist Church in Providence, and at one time the acting pastor or minister. He was the leader in a schism in the church upon the question of the "laying on of hands," about 1652-4.
He was evidently a man of stern and decided opinions, who did not hesitate to advance his views among his neighbors. Of him, in his occupation as surveyor, it is said," as he entered upon the surrounding lands with his field book, chain and compass, and mystic words, with the peculiar dignity of official characters of that day, he may well have inspired the Indians with profound awe, and led them to feel that no Indian could henceforth dwell upon that part of their tribal property again." [1]
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Birth |
1600 |
Hertford, Hertfordshire, England [1] |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
1682 |
Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island [1] |
Person ID |
I73757 |
Main Tree |
Last Modified |
9 Apr 2014 |
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Sources |
- [S5763] James H. Olney of Providence, R.I.,1889, A Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas Olney, an Original Proprietor of Providence, R.I., who came from England in 1635.
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