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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars John Winthrop Remembered, October 23, 2003
By 
This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
Thanks to an absent minded John Winthrop falling into a foul smelling peat bog and surviving (which he took as a sign that he should emigrate to the colonies) the settlers of the Massachusets Bay Company were blessed with a practical and efficient administrator. Elected Governor many times over, John Winthrop is portrayed as an honest and god fearing a man as any patriotic American would want.
Although a good third of the book describes Winthrop's life in England, it is justified and necessary to see the religious and social preparations for his career in America. Once he came to America, his life was devoted to the preservation of his religion, his family and his colony.
Those readers familiar with Boston and surroundings will enjoy the detail in this biography; the streets he lived on, the configuarion of the city, its growth during Winthrop's lifetime.
And how easy it is to forget how little in the way of goods and services was available to the settlers in the 17th century. John Winthrop was not in the first wave of New Englanders in Plymouth, but even 10 years later he had to bring with him wheat, barley, oats, beans and peas for cultivation, potatoes, hop roots, hemp seed, tame turkeys and rabbits, linen and woolen cloth, bottles, ladles, spoons and kettles, among a long list of other essentials.
In spite of harsh conditions and personal tragedies, Winthrop prevails and the reader will learn much about this "forgotten" Founding Father in this compelling and interesting biography.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not such a bad guy, after all..., January 23, 2004
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W. Gross "winkg" (Portland, OR United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
This is a well-written and fresh look at John Winthrop, first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Bremer derives his view of Winthrop from the "Model of Christian Charity" sermon, which Winthrop delivered sometime around his emigration to North America. Rather than the stern, unbending, and judgemental character that is the common perception, Bremer shows Winthrop as a pragmatic leader who often worked behind the scenes to reconcile diverging points of view. As portrayed in this book, Winthrop was a man of humility who strove to include anyone with a "spark of godliness" into the community.

At 385 pages of text, the book moved along quickly. I was sorry to get to the end.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scholarly, Readable, Excellent Biography, May 11, 2004
By 
M. Walker "mcwalker" (Princeton, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
Bremer has brought us a sensitive and balanced portrayal of Winthrop, one that is at the same time truly gripping. One of the significant contributions of the book is Bremer's attention to Winthrop's forty or so years in England prior to coming to New England, which helps create the sense of organic development and shows points of continuity between English Puritanism and that of the New England colonies. The relationship between Bremer's presentation and other scholarly opinions is covered in many of the endnotes, which makes it useful to the scholar but not burdensome for the average reader. Scholars, history buffs, and even those just interested in the human experience of life, will find this book rewarding. Highly recommended.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not just some blue stocking pilgrim, February 17, 2005
This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father

by Francis J. Bremer

Oxford University Press, published 2003

Millerstown University Professor Francis Bremmer's John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father is the first major work on the Massachusetts's governor in over fifty years. It is an engaging and comprehensive volume serving as the author's attempt to provide a more balanced view of Winthrop than has been seen in other works. Bremer writes, "The Winthrop of modern histories has been constructed to suit particular agendas. It is time for biography that is interested primarily in John Winthrop himself." (pg. xvi) Bremer is well qualified to take on this task, as he is the editor of John Winthrop's papers for the Massachusetts' Historical Society.

The narrative traces all of Winthrop's known ancestors in England. Almost a century before John was born, his grandfather, Adam, was a successful London cloth merchant. Adam profited handsomely from Henry VIII's reformation of the church. He purchased monastery lands from the government and established the family's seat in Suffolk. It was to this estate that Adam retired during the Catholic restoration of Mary I. The Winthrops were staunch Protestants and the move was designed to prevent retribution from the Marian government. The estate was to be the family's headquarters until John's departure for the new world in 1630.

The family estate was located in the Stour Valley, which was a hotbed of reformed Protestantism. Bremer deliberately avoids using the term Puritan because he feels that it carries to strong a connotation to the modern reader. "Godly" was the description used most often by the Winthrop family and their circle. Like many others in Suffolk, the Winthrop's were non-conformists to the Anglican model and hoped for continued reforms of the church.

John Winthrop was born in 1588. He attended college at Cambridge for two years and left without taking a degree. While he considered entering the ministry, his early marriage and family obligation precluded that career path. In 1605, he married for the first time. From 1605 through 1630, John Winthrop lived the life of the minor gentry. He was involved in running his estate, raising his family and practicing law. In 1615, his first wife died in childbirth and Winthrop soon remarried. His new wife died a year later in childbirth; John married again in 1617 to his third wife, Margaret Tyndal.

Winthrop became involved with the civil government when he was appointed to the Court of Wards and Liveries. It was at this time he grew increasingly displeased with the corrupt state of the civil government. After considering emigration to Ireland, he and Margaret decided instead to join with members of the Massachusetts Bay Company and move to the new world. The venture was seen as a way to serve God and to make a profit. The founders of the company decided on John Winthrop as Governor for the colony. This is a reflection of the modest nature of the project in the eyes of the founders because, "if Massachusetts had been a larger, more important venture, he would not have been entrusted with the responsibility." (pg. 170)

As Governor, Winthrop was responsible for seeing the colonists through the bitter early years and for establishing order among the colonists. It was at the start of the emigrating that his famous "Christian Charity" sermon was given. He compared the colonists endeavors to a "city on a hill" that all could see. This biblical reference is Winthrop's most enduring literary legacy and is often quoted by politicians to this day.

Winthrop strove to live a good Christian life and to ensure the others the opportunity to so as well. He sought unity amongst the settlers but was willing to compromise and attempt to reach consensus. He was unwavering, however, in his principles and showed no reluctance to expel Roger Williams or Anne Hutchinson from the colony when their unorthodox theologies threatened the stability of the society.

Winthrop served as governor for 12 of the 19 years he lived in Massachusetts. He was untiring in his efforts to promote the growth of the colony. In the winter of 1649, he became ill and died. Bremer sums up the man and his accomplishments, "Zealous but not a zealot ... he helped to prevent his colony from being blown off course by the winds of extremism and from being wrecked on the rocks of fanaticism." (pg. 385)

Accessible to all levels of interested readers, John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father is a valuable portrait of an important figure in American History. Sources are extensive and meticulously documented. They primarily come from the records of the Courts of Assistants in Massachusetts Bay, Official Records of the Governor and Winthrop's own papers and journals. In addition, a host of sources from both sides of the Atlantic is employed in the work. The in-depth coverage of the Winthrop family background can be tedious to readers only interested in American events, but they provide needed insights into the English Reformation and the events that lead to colonization of New England. Bremer's work takes its place as the definitive biography of John Winthrop for the next fifty years.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars History Well Done!, April 23, 2004
By 
David Arndt (Grand Rapids, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful book. The author demonstrates a rich, nuanced command of the period and the players. I especially appreciate how he works to portray the characters from their own perspective instead of juding people who lived four centuries ago by todays ideas. I appreciate that he goes to great length to provide historical context. Indeed, he provides so much context, beginning with the subject's grandfather, that the book starts out a little slowly. But once the book reaches the point of Winthrop's departure for America, it remains compelling up to the end. A wonderful book for a more complete picture of the settlement of our country and a valuable addition to a balanced view of the puritans.
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4.0 out of 5 stars He shouldn't be forgotten, January 17, 2012
John Winthrop's life, told in detail by the author, gives a vivid impression of how he arrived at the life choices he made, how he postulated his beliefs, and how his world view was formed. He brought these attributes to the shores of America in the 17th century and helped form the world views of many of the people who would become our earliest political, military, and religious leaders.

You hear musicians site the Beatles or David Bowie as their inspiration and the music they were most influenced by. John Winthrop was to the early colonists what John Lennon was to the early rockers. And God and Jesus Christ were never off his lips for long.

John Winthrop drew immeasurable strength from his faith and a constancy of purpose unmatched (and hard to imagine) in today's political field. He never feared he was making the right decision because he had prayed on it fervently, and he had begged God to help him make the right decision, and he was unequivocally certain that God was true to him at all times.

If there's any uncertainty that the American Revolution, and by extension, the United States of America was founded on and guided by Christian faith, reading this book removes all doubt. This man was a powerful influence on the people who would be in power when the founding fathers were born, as well as the parents of the founding fathers. Growing up and being predisposed by these influences confirms that our first leaders were obviously founded in the Christian faith and based much of their decision making on the tenets of Christianity.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Fresh insight, December 21, 2008
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This is an interesting view of Puritanism focused on one pious but imperfect man. The insight into the times and the religious and social environment is helpful in understanding the American Puritan roots. The author has done much research into the English back story which opens up the area of study considerably. The writing style is not always gracious so I gave the book only four stars. In other respects it is first rate. Above all the overview is great. That is, things are given a good perspective and I can find no fake drama. The facts are allowed to speak for themselves.
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8 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic!, June 12, 2003
By 
Heather Christo (North Attleboro, MA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (Hardcover)
A magical rememberance of our past! Very well written. I highly recommend this book.
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John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father
John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father by Francis J. Bremer (Hardcover - June 16, 2003)
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