Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 16, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
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Thursday, February 16, 2006
Evidence of the Use of Thomas Pell's Insignia To Seal a Letter from Lion
Gardiner in 1636
Students of Pelham history know that long
before he acquired the lands that became the Manor of Pelham from local
Native Americans, Thomas Pell served as a surgeon at the tiny settlement
of Fort Saybrook at the mouth of the Connecticut River under the
leadership of Lion Gardiner. There is interesting evidence that in 1636,
during the time Pell was at the small settlement, a letter sent by Lion
Gardiner to John Winthrop, Jr. was sealed with the Pell family insignia.
Today's Historic Pelham Blog posting provides information about this
evidence.
Lion Gardiner was born in 1599. He served in
the army of the Prince of Orange in the Low Countries as a military
engineer responsible for designing fortifications.
He and his wife, Mary Wilemson Gardiner,
emigrated to Boston, Massachusetts in late 1635. The following spring,
he, his wife and a small group of settlers left the Boston area for the
mouth of the Connecticut River where they built a fort and lived for
four years. Among the settlers at Fort Saybrook was Thomas Pell.
During the settlers' time at the Fort, the
Pequot War began. The settlers successfully defended the Fort from
attack in the spring of 1637. In May of that year, Gardiner, John Mason
and John Underhill were authorized to undertake an expedition against
Pequot Native Americans and, on May 26, slaughtered an entire village of
Pequots nearly exterminating the tribe.
In the book "Lion Gardiner and His
Descendants" editd by Curtiss C. Gardiner and published by A. Whipple of
St. Louis, MO in 1890, there is an interesting discussion of a letter
that Lion Gardiner sent to John Winthrop, Jr., Connecticut's first
governor, on November 6, 1636. Facsimiles of the seal and Lion
Gardiner's signature from the letter appear immediately below.

The author points out that he was unaware of any family
insignia borne by Lion Gardiner, his son, his grandson nor his great
grandson. (Pg. xviii). Yet, the above-referenced letter contains a seal.
Additionally, according to the author, the same seal was affixed to a
letter by John Higginson, the Chaplain of the Fort, during his Chaplaincy.
(Id.) The author notes that there is evidence that "early
colonists were accustomed to stamp their letters with any seal
conveniently at hand; therefore, the mere fact that a letter of that
period should be found stamped with a certain seal does not of itself
furnish sufficient ground for presuming that particular seal was the
family insignia of the person who stamped the letter." (Pg. xix).
The author next notes evidence of particular interest to those who are
students of Thomas Pell. He wrote:
"Thomas Pell, the surgeon of the fort at Saybrooke, was of the family of
Pell of Walter Willoughby, Lincolnshire, England; and his family insignia
were: ARMS -- Ermine on a canton azure a pelican vulning herself.
CREST--On a chaplet vert flowered or a pelican of the first, vulned gules.
Granted Oct. 19, 1594. . . . It will be observed that the Pell family
crest, above described, is an exact description of the seal stamped on
Lion Gardiner's Saybrooke letter." (Pg. xix).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
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http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:48 AM
Comment
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Posting for February 16, 2006.
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